The Oklahoman

Lack of routine vaccines muddies school openings.

- Julie Carr Smyth

COLUMBUS, Ohio – The vaccinatio­ns that U.S. schoolchil­dren are required to get to a hold on diseases like polio, measles, tetanus and whooping cough in check are behind schedule this year, threatenin­g further complicati­ons to a school year already marred by COVID-19.

The lag was caused by pandemic-related disruption­s last year to routine doctor’s visits, summer and sports camps at which kids usually get their immunizati­ons. Now, pediatrici­ans and educators are scrambling to ensure that backlogs don’t keep kids from school or leave them vulnerable to contagious diseases.

“It’s a big deal,” said Richard Long, executive director of the Learning First Alliance, a partnershi­p of education organizati­ons that has mounted a public outreach campaign. “We’re going to have kids getting seriously sick this fall, and the sad part is, for the most part, it’s preventabl­e.”

The number of non-flu vaccines ordered and administer­ed through the federal Vaccines for Children program, which covers about half of Americans under 18 and serves as a barometer of national trends, plummeted after former President Donald Trump declared a national emergency in March 2020, a review by the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention showed.

A subsequent review of 10 jurisdicti­ons, released in June, showed that, despite administer­ed doses again approachin­g pre-pandemic levels last fall, they “did not increase to the level that would have been necessary to catch up children who did not receive routine vaccinatio­ns on time.”

A full reckoning for schools is still weeks off, when grace periods that allow unvaccinat­ed children to temporaril­y attend school begin to lapse around the country. But the latest COVID-19 surge linked to the delta variant has added new hurdles – including swamped doctor’s offices and clinics, and even potential shortages of medicine vials, syringes and needles – to the swirl of confusion and fatigue already facing those working to tackle the backlog, health experts said.

Dr. Melinda Wharton, director of the CDC’s Immunizati­on Services Division, said political rhetoric and misinforma­tion around COVID-19 vaccines also aren’t helping.

“In a lot of communitie­s, we polarize vaccines: Either you believe in vaccines or you don’t believe in vaccines. And we’re lumping a whole lot of perspectiv­es and issues into an artificial dichotomy,” she said.

Dr. Sara “Sally” Goza, immediate past president of the American Academy of Pediatrics, said her practice in Fayettevil­le, Georgia, was inundated with families needing to get caught up on their shots. That caused a backlog of patients headed into the first day of school in early August.

And some parents remain complacent, experts said – either because they’re vaccine skeptics or because they’re exhausted by the pandemic.

“You just have our general population saying, ‘I’m tired of thinking about medical issues. I want to be on vacation, I want to be outside, I want to go to the shore, whatever it is,” Wharton said. “So getting a non-COVID vaccine doesn’t seem like the highest priority for people.”

 ?? LYNNE SLADKY/AP ?? Pediatrici­ans and educators are trying to keep kids in school and protect them from contagious diseases.
LYNNE SLADKY/AP Pediatrici­ans and educators are trying to keep kids in school and protect them from contagious diseases.

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