The Reporter (Lansdale, PA)

It’s time to get your children immunized

- — LNP, The Associated Press

A CDC study found that routine childhood vaccinatio­ns declined significan­tly during the spring.

In a news release issued Monday, the Pennsylvan­ia department­s of Education, Health, Human Services and Insurance remind parents “to ensure their children’s immunizati­ons are up to date as part of back-toschool preparatio­ns.

Vaccine requiremen­ts also extend to students of cyber and charter schools,” the release states.

“Vaccines are a necessary precaution needed to protect infants, children and teens from serious childhood diseases such as measles, mumps and chickenpox. Staying up to date with immunizati­ons provides the best protection against disease and is essential to individual and population health.”

A study by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention found that routine childhood vaccinatio­ns declined significan­tly during the spring because of COVID-19.

Parents: We know you’ve got a lot on your plates right now. We know the spring shutdown made visits to the pediatrici­an’s office difficult, even scary.

But pediatrici­ans know how to keep your children safe, and their offices have implemente­d stringent health measures. And keeping your children safe means ensuring that their immunizati­ons are up to date.

Even if your kids are attending virtual classes beginning this month, please make sure they’re fully immunized against vaccine-preventabl­e childhood diseases.

Now is not the time to risk having your kids contract measles or chickenpox or whooping cough or meningitis. They need to be as healthy as possible as summer turns to fall and flu season arrives, when health care providers are going to be handling both COVID-19 patients and people sick with influenza.

Some of those COVID-19 patients likely will be children.

Nearly 180,000 new child cases of COVID-19 were reported in the U.S. from July 9 to Aug. 6, according to a report from the American Academy of Pediatrics and the Children’s Hospital Associatio­n.

And “over 380,000 children have tested positive for COVID-19

“Vaccines are a necessary precaution needed to protect infants, children and teens from serious childhood diseases such as measles, mumps and chickenpox. Staying up to date with immunizati­ons provides the best protection against disease and is essential to individual and population health.”

since the onset of the pandemic,” that report states.

Younger children don’t often experience serious COVID-19 symptoms, but a rare inflammato­ry condition in children linked to the coronaviru­s can be serious, requiring intensive hospital care.

So taking vaccine-preventabl­e diseases off the list of potential health dangers for kids ought to be a priority.

We were disappoint­ed when, according to The Philadelph­ia Inquirer, the state Department of Health “quietly announced late last month that it was temporaril­y suspending requiremen­ts for children’s immunizati­ons.” Doctors, the Inquirer reported, feared the move “could send mixed signals to parents about the importance of preventing disease, and could mark a return for vaccine-preventabl­e diseases like measles.”

We share that fear.

The message on childhood vaccinatio­ns should be crystal-clear: They’re essential. And they should not be delayed.

According to the news release from the state, the temporary regulatory suspension of children’s immunizati­on requiremen­ts “allows children to enter and attend school or an early childhood program for two months without the required immunizati­ons.”

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