But with his juvenile diabetes putting him at greater risk of
complications if he contracts the virus - and with so much of his
young life already shaped by the pandemic - she is ready for him to
receive the vaccine as soon as he is eligible.
"I'm a parent who is concerned about the food I put in their bodies,
about anything I put in their bodies," said Smithers, 43, who lives
in the San Francisco suburb of Albany and has two other children,
ages 13 and 4. "But this seems like the best choice to keep him
safe."
Monday's announcement from Pfizer and BioNTech that a low dose of
their coronavirus vaccine proved safe and effective for children
ages 5 to 11 in a clinical trial has come as a relief to many
parents anxiously awaiting the chance to protect their children.
The highly contagious Delta variant of the virus has collided with
the start of the U.S. academic year, sending infections among young
children soaring - including many cases requiring hospitalization -
and forcing thousands of schools to shut for days or even weeks.
The companies said they plan to file for regulatory authorization as
soon as possible for a 10-microgram dose for children ages 5 to 11
after it led to a strong immune response in a 2,268-participant
trial. The vaccine at its original 30-microgram strength is already
approved on an emergency basis for children 12 to 15. Health
officials believe that the lower dose could be approved for younger
children by the end of October.
Some parents have expressed hesitancy about the vaccine for their
young children, citing the lack of large-scale studies and long-term
data on its effects on that population. There are around 29 million
U.S. children ages 5 to 11.
"Many are parents who themselves have been vaccinated – and their
kids are vaccinated for everything else – but are just concerned
about a brand-new vaccine," said Shen Nagel, a pediatrician in the
Denver area. "They also have the mindset that children are at lower
risk of serious disease."
About four in 10 parents of children ages 5 to 11 said they would
"wait and see" how the vaccine worked before giving it to their
kids, according to polling data published by the Kaiser Family
Foundation in August. One-quarter said they would "definitely not"
get their children vaccinated, while another quarter said they would
do so "right away."
In interviews, pediatricians and public health experts said parents
appear to be growing less hesitant as time goes on.
Nancy Lataitis, another pediatrician in the Denver area, said some
pandemic-weary parents have realized that vaccination may be the
only way to avoid school disruptions.
"Schools are imposing quarantines, closing down," she said. "They're
hearing about teachers who got sick."
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Jill Goldstein, 50, had to pull
her 8-year-old daughter from her New York City
elementary school on the second day of the
school year after another child tested positive,
triggering a mandatory 10-day quarantine for the
class. Goldstein said she would
get her daughter vaccinated but acknowledged she might not be "first
in line."
"I just want to make sure the benefit outweighs the risk," she said.
"I understand the benefit is not just for her but for the community,
and I'm taking that into account as well."
RISK ASSESSMENT
Los Angeles, home to the nation's second largest school district,
has already mandated vaccines for students 12 and up.
Slightly more than 50% of U.S. children ages 12 to 15 have gotten at
least one shot, according to federal data, lower than any other
eligible age group.
While children remain at lower risk, close to 500 have died from
COVID-19, putting it in the top-10 causes of pediatric deaths, said
Sean O'Leary, vice chair of the American Academy of Pediatrics'
infectious diseases committee.
In some areas with high rates of infection, pediatric hospitals have
been overwhelmed.
O'Leary said there is no reason to expect the vaccine to pose any
particular risk for younger children.
"These vaccines have probably been evaluated for safety better than
any other medicine in history," he said. He noted that vaccines
historically do not carry long-term side effects. Adverse reactions
tend to occur soon after vaccination, not months later.
It remains possible that the vaccine could cause some rare side
effects in children that cannot be detected in a relatively small
study. But that is not a reason to avoid vaccines, said Arthur
Reingold, chair of epidemiology at the University of
California-Berkeley School of Public Health.
"People say, 'I'd like more follow-up...I want more study,'" he
said. "It's all logical and rational - and a completely impossible
thing to ask for."
Adrienne Day, a journalist in Brooklyn, definitely plans to
vaccinate her 7-year-old daughter, saying she trusts the science
behind it.
"To me," she said, "it's just like getting the measles, mumps and
rubella vaccine or the flu shot."
(Reporting by Joseph Ax and Sharon Bernstein; Additional reporting
by Jason Lange; Editing by Colleen Jenkins and Bill Berkrot)
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