Tag: vaccination

Right now is the right time to vaccinate your child against COVID-19

This opinion piece originally appeared in the Topeka Capital-Journal on July 1, 2022. Gretchen Homan, M.D., is president of the Kansas Chapter of the American Academy of Pediatrics and former chair of the Immunize Kansas Coalition. David Jordan is president and CEO of the United Methodist Health Ministry Fund in Hutchinson. Pictured above is Elise, a Hutchinson teen who has long COVID.

With August around the corner, now’s the time to make sure our kids are protected from COVID-19 when they return to school. As parents, we want the best for our kids. It’s our responsibility to make decisions on their behalf to keep them healthy, safe and in a position to thrive.

We never expected parenting would involve a global pandemic, school closures, remote learning and protecting children who were not eligible for vaccines.

Thankfully, in recent weeks the U.S. Food and Drug Administration made it easier for all parents to protect their children from COVID-19 by authorizing vaccines for children ages 6 months through 4 years and boosters for children ages 5 through 11.

Thanks to established vaccine science, research, rigorous clinical trials, and ongoing safety monitoring, adults have been eligible to receive COVID-19 vaccines since December 2020. The results have been amazing — reduced risk of death, severe illness, hospitalization, and spread.

Adults helped us return to “normal,” but kids can keep us there. Children share viruses as easily as they share toys. Kids need protection from COVID-19, just as we protect them from other vaccine-preventable infections.

Following the same process, safe, effective vaccines and boosters have been available for children ages 5 to 17. Over 27 million children ages 5 through 17 have gotten a COVID vaccine.

The vaccines are safe and tested

Early on, we yearned for a return to “normal” and knew a vaccine was critical to achieving that goal. Thanks to established vaccine science, research, rigorous clinical trials, and ongoing safety monitoring, adults have been eligible to receive COVID-19 vaccines since December 2020.

The same rigorous authorization process was used for the vaccines for children under 5.

Children can get very sick from COVID-19

Much of what pediatricians do is preventive health care. Vaccines are a crucial part of that. Administered in a moment, vaccines can provide children with lasting protection from devastating illnesses.

To greatly reduce risks to our children, we must prioritize COVID-19 vaccination. However, in Kansas, only 25% of kids ages 5 through 11 and 53% of kids ages 12 through 17 have been fully vaccinated against COVID-19.

Since the beginning of the pandemic, children have accounted for about 19% of cases in the United States. Children are getting the virus.

Although the long-term effects of COVID-19 on the brain and organs are not entirely clear, we know some people, including children, suffer significant long-term complications that hinder their ability to live full lives. As parents, we should embrace the opportunity to vaccinate our children against COVID-19’s long-term effects.

Elise, a Hutchinson teen, was a healthy 15-year-old when she contracted COVID-19. After her quarantine ended, she returned to school. She didn’t make it through the day. She’d developed long COVID. She had no energy and was short of breath.

Seventeen months later, Elise is still attending school online. She can’t sit up for long periods of time without getting dizzy, and she uses a wheelchair to get around. Thankfully, she recently stopped using supplemental oxygen.

It’s normal to have questions about vaccinating your child. Doctors welcome them. If you have concerns about COVID-19 vaccines, please talk to your child’s doctor. We know appointments go quickly; a good way to prepare is to write your questions down beforehand and bring them with you.

As parents, we both chose to vaccinate our kids against COVID-19. We knew vaccination was critical to preventing illness, keeping them safe, and supporting healthy development.

Previous generations of parents were the first to vaccinate children against measles, rubella, and polio. When our children look back, they’ll realize how important it was for their parents to vaccinate them against COVID-19. Join us in doing everything we can to protect the health and well-being of our children.

You can find a COVID-19 vaccine near you at vaccines.gov or by calling (800) 232-0233.

Best way to get back to normal? Be fully vaccinated as you engage with the people around you.

This opinion piece by Health Fund President David Jordan originally appeared in the Topeka Capital-Journal on April 28, 2022.

Right now, it feels like the COVID pandemic is over.

We’re excited that things are getting back to normal. COVID infections, hospitalizations and deaths are way down. It’s safe enough in most communities to go maskless inside public places. We’re able to watch our kids’ ball games, visit loved ones and see friends more often.

But we’ve already gone back to normal a few times during this pandemic only to be hit by another wave of infections.

The even more contagious BA.2 version of the Omicron variant is fueling another wave of cases in Europe and Asia. Cases are already rising in the United States and parts of Kansas. This is raising concerns that another wave may follow here.

The pandemic has been particularly hard on rural communities. Compared with urban areas, rural areas have endured higher COVID infection and death rates. This is in part because people in rural areas are typically older, more likely to have underlying health conditions and often live far from health care facilities.

Our rural Kansas communities are also less protected because we’re less likely to be vaccinated. Currently, 61% of eligible Kansans are fully vaccinated, compared with the national rate of 66%. Overall, the vaccination rate in rural areas has lagged more urban areas.

Another wave of infections will also put more stress on our already stressed rural health care system. Many rural hospitals face staffing challenges; an influx of patients with COVID makes it harder to provide the care our rural communities need.

Now’s the time to prepare for another possible wave.

Those of us who live in rural communities pride ourselves on taking care of our own. We look out for our neighbors and lend a helping hand when they’re in need. We check on neighbors when they’re ill.

The best way we can help keep one another safe is by getting all the recommended doses of a COVID vaccine. We’re fortunate to have safe COVID vaccines that work really well to prevent serious infections, hospitalizations, and death. Getting vaccinated also helps protect children under 5 who can’t get vaccinated yet and our most vulnerable, immunocompromised neighbors.

Just as important, vaccination allows us to continue living our lives normally with reduced risk of serious illness.

Father Bob Schremmer spent 45 years as a minister in southwest Kansas. That time taught him to be grateful for your neighbors and your community. Schremmer thanks others for getting vaccinated so that those individuals, their families and their communities can be safe. Getting vaccinated is an act of charity that helps protect others who can’t get vaccinated and who rely on us for protection.

It’s normal to have questions about vaccines. Seek information from credible sources, such as your family doctor or other health care provider. They can answer your questions about vaccines and boosters. You can find information about vaccines in your area at vaccines.gov.

Dr. Bob Kraft’s patients in Salina have heard a lot about the COVID vaccines, and they’ve asked a lot of good questions before making their choice to get vaccinated.  Kraft says: “I’ll share with you the same thing I do with my patients: The COVID vaccine is safe, tested, and free. It’s the best way for us to get back to normal. Here in Kansas, a vaccine has been reserved for you.”

Webinar: Navigating Vaccine Hesitancy with Families

Childhood vaccination is a sensitive topic. Whether you’re discussing wellness vaccines or COVID-19 vaccines, it’s important to meet people with empathy and active listening. This webinar on navigating vaccine hesitancy with families was recorded on Tuesday, April 26, 2022.

Speakers included Dr. Gretchen Homan, president-elect for the Kansas Chapter of the American Academy of Pediatrics and former Immunize Kansas Coalition chair; Erica McGinley, nurse consultant for Child Care Aware of Kansas; and David Jordan, president and CEO of the United Methodist Health Ministry Fund.

Navigating Vaccine Hesitancy with Families webinar slides

Health Fund resources specific to COVID-19 vaccines

© United Methodist Health Ministry Fund