Luckily, we rarely see these kinds of little tombstones any longer. Thanks to pediatric vaccination, one of the greatest public health successes of the 20th century, we have all but eliminated diphtheria — along with polio, measles, Haemophilus influenzae type b and more — from the United States.
Indeed, in 2021, Covid was among the top 10 causes of death for American children and young adults every month (except June, for 5 to 14-year-olds, when it dropped to the 11th spot but
remained in the top 10 for adolescents). As of this month, almost 40,000 Covid-19 associated hospitalizations were
registered in 25 states (data is not available from the other states). We are just beginning to learn about the nature and frequency of the long-term consequences of Covid among children.
This is why the development, testing and eventual distribution of a pediatric vaccine against Covid-19 — with the goal of preventing severe illness, long-term symptoms and deaths — was so welcomed by parents, physicians and public health professionals alike. Here was a chance to offer our kids a way back toward normal. And this illustrates why Florida’s guidance is so misguided.
Let me be clear about the facts. The Covid-19 vaccine currently under emergency use authorization in the US for kids 5 and up — a two-dose Pfizer/BioNTech series — is
effective at preventing the worst outcomes: severe illness, hospitalization and death.
Study after study shows that the kids who get
hospitalized for Covid-19 are, by and large, those who are unvaccinated. Even during the Omicron wave, when the vaccines became somewhat less effective in preventing a SARS-CoV-2 infection, preliminary analyses
supported that vaccinated kids were still much less likely to have these most severe outcomes.
Equally important, these vaccines are safe for kids. Almost
20 million doses of the Pfizer Covid-19 vaccine have been given to 5 to 11-year-olds, and another 30 million ages 12 to 17. Of these, only a handful
have had allergic reactions. Very few children ages 12 to 17, and even fewer 5 to 11,
have been reported to experience the rare side effect of myocarditis; these cases were generally mild and self-resolving.
Compare that to the known effects of Covid-19, which the vaccine can prevent: the tens of thousands of children hospitalized, the
over 1,000 children dead, the unknown numbers who will struggle with long Covid — and severe,
life-changing myocarditis and other heart disorders. Some studies estimate that the risk of myocarditis among youth after a Covid-19 infection is
100 times higher than the risk after vaccination.
Finally, the Florida Department of Health
claims that only “children with underlying conditions are the best candidates for COVID-19 vaccination.” But, aside from the ableism of this claim, it’s important to remember all the reasons that this is silly. Almost
20% of American children are obese — a leading risk factor for poor outcomes after an infection; never mind the untold more with diabetes, cancer and the multitude of other risk factors. Moreover, even healthy children get sick: One study last summer
reported that a third of pediatric Covid-19 hospitalizations were among youth with no pre-existing high-risk conditions.
All of these reasons are why I enthusiastically vaccinated my own children against Covid-19. (P.S. They’re both fine.) It’s also why countries across the world — including the UK, which was initially reluctant to vaccinate kids — are urging all children 5 or older to get their Covid-19 shots.
Here in the US, at a time when we are asking the public to take an increasingly individualistic role in the control of Covid-19, let’s not undermine these effective protections available to our children. We should celebrate, not denigrate, vaccines. Let’s let common sense, compassion and respect for the data prevail.
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