Close X
Saturday, November 23, 2024
ADVT 
National

School-based vaccination could be key: doctors

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 20 Jan, 2022 05:22 PM
  • School-based vaccination could be key: doctors

The province with the highest vaccination rate for five- to 11-year-old kids began providing the COVID-19 vaccine at schools as soon as it was approved for children, and some pediatricians say the strategy in Newfoundland and Labrador could serve as a lesson for other jurisdictions.

While nearly three-quarters of kids in the Atlantic province have had their first shot, Health Canada says the national average is less than half — a shortfall that in-school vaccination programs could help address, says pediatric infectious disease physician Karina Top.

Provinces including Saskatchewan, Quebec and Manitoba and most recently Ontario have begun offering vaccine clinics at select schools.

However, British Columbia has been a notable standout for not doing the same, even in communities with high COVID-19 cases. Alberta's health ministry said the province is not planning a school-based program for younger children after low uptake among 12- to 18-year-olds last year.

As hospitalizations fuelled by the Omicron variant climb to their highest levels in many areas, Top said infected children in the five- to 11-year age range are at risk of developing multisystem inflammatory syndrome, which could cause high fever, rash and myocarditis and pericarditis, or inflammation of the heart muscle and the lining outside the heart.

"That occurs usually a few weeks after the first COVID infection and those children are almost always hospitalized," Top said from Halifax, where she's also a researcher at the Canadian Center for Vaccinology.

"Many of them require intensive care, even though they recover. That condition is the most serious complication that we see in those young children and that can be prevented by vaccination."

While public health nurses provide Grade 6 students with routine in-school inoculations for measles, mumps and rubella each year, pediatric infectious disease physician Manish Sadarangani said it may be challenging to have enough resources to vaccinate nearly an entire elementary school.

However, targeted in-school programs may be reasonable in regions where vaccination rates are low, said Sadarangani, who is also director of the Vaccine Evaluation Center at BC Children's Hospital in Vancouver.

"It's definitely something that should be under consideration, on the table, in terms of the most efficient way to deliver COVID-19 vaccinations to this age group," he said, addingthat the collection of consent forms from parents would be an added logistical issue.

Andrew Furey, premier of Newfoundland and Labrador, said he worked with public health officials so vaccination clinics could be opened in schools as soon as Health Canada authorized a child vaccine last November.

Newfoundland and Labrador's health ministry said Thursday that 73 per cent of kids in that age range there have received a first dose, and that about 40 per cent of those shots were administered at schools.

That compares to child vaccine rates of 50 per cent in Ontario, 41.5 per cent in Alberta and 48 per cent in British Columbia, according to provincial data.

Newfoundland and Labrador removed as many barriers as possible to ramp up vaccination rates for young children, said Furey, who is also an orthopedic trauma surgeon with training in clinical epidemiology.

"We figured that it was more about accessibility than it was about acceptability," he said.

Parents can still get their kids vaccinated at mass vaccination sites but school-based programs are particularly helpful for those without access to transportation, Furey said of the clinics, held during school hours and open to parents who want to accompany their children.

Parents in some provinces, including Ontario and Manitoba, are not allowed at schools due to visitor restrictions.

Steve Buick, a spokesman for Alberta's health ministry, said the province has enough mass clinics to accommodate young children and is consulting a new vaccine hesitancy advisory committee in its efforts to encourage parents to get their kids vaccinated.

"In-school vaccination clinics for older children last year saw very limited uptake, with only about 4,000 total doses administered and 700 clinics cancelled for lack of participation, out of about 1,300 schools with children in the eligible age range," Buick said in a written statement.

In an effort to push up vaccination rates among young kids, three national non-profit organizations have joined forces by declaring Jan. 27 as National Kids and Vaccines Day, when they plan to bring together scientists, pediatricians and infectious disease specialists to offer online events for parents and children.

They include Children's Healthcare Canada, the Sandbox Project and ScienceUpFirst, which is hosting a town hall with panelists including the head of the Canadian Medical Association to answer questions from children and their caregivers.

Children's Healthcare Canada is scheduled to hold a physician-led educational session for health-care professionals providing vaccinations.

The organization's CEO Emily Gruenwoldt said getting five- to 11-year-old children vaccinated must be a priority across the country.

"This needs to be the next point of emphasis for us in this battle against COVID-19," Gruenwoldt said.

"We know that there are parents out there who still have questions so we really need to make this information about the vaccine, its safety, its efficacy, its accessibility, as available as possible for these parents."

 

MORE National ARTICLES

1,308 COVID19 cases for Tuesday

1,308 COVID19 cases for Tuesday
There are 6,348 active cases of COVID-19 in the province, and 220,741 people who tested positive have recovered. Of the active cases, 192 individuals are in hospital and 76 are in intensive care. The remaining people are recovering at home in self-isolation.

1,308 COVID19 cases for Tuesday

British Columbians need to prepare for harsh winter

British Columbians need to prepare for harsh winter
A series of strong storms will clash with cold Arctic air throughout B.C. during the holidays, according to Environment and Climate Change Canada. Periods of heavy and blowing snow, freezing rain and very cold weather are likely in many parts of B.C. between now and New Year’s Day.

British Columbians need to prepare for harsh winter

End 'duty to report' for CAF misconduct: Report

End 'duty to report' for CAF misconduct: Report
The Canadian Armed Forces is facing fresh calls to create an “explicit exception” for victims of sexual misconduct and their confidantes from having to report incidents to their commanders.

End 'duty to report' for CAF misconduct: Report

Days numbered for plastic straws in Canada

Days numbered for plastic straws in Canada
Environment Minister Steven Guilbeault published draft regulations Tuesday outlining how Canada will ban the manufacture, sale and import of these items, along with plastic cutlery, stir sticks, straws and six-pack rings, by the end of next year.

Days numbered for plastic straws in Canada

Feds file challenge to softwood lumber duties

Feds file challenge to softwood lumber duties
The federal Liberals have put the White House on notice that Canada will officially challenge the legality of an American decision to hike duties on softwood lumber heading south of the border. The government is filing the grievance under the recently renewed North American free trade pact.

Feds file challenge to softwood lumber duties

Liberals look to tamp down on investment homes

Liberals look to tamp down on investment homes
Canada’s housing minister says the federal government plans to take a tougher stand on investment properties to help cool housing prices. The broad strokes of the agenda were outlined in the mandate letter the prime minister gave to Housing Minister Ahmed Hussen.

Liberals look to tamp down on investment homes