Today, Explained - Vaccines4Kids
Episode Date: March 15, 2021President Biden says all adults will be eligible for a vaccine by May 1. But for the world to truly return to normal, young people will need shots, too. ProPublica’s Caroline Chen explains how, and ...when, that might happen. Transcript at vox.com/todayexplained. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
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Call 1-866-531-2600 or visit connectsontario.ca. It's Today Explained. I'm Halima Shah filling in for Sean Ramos-Furham this week.
We are a year into the pandemic, but President Biden says there is hope on the horizon.
After this long, hard year, that will make this
Independence Day something truly special, where we not only mark our independence as a nation,
but we begin to mark our independence from this virus. That's good news for just about everyone,
especially for parents. Dad, I don't know how to get into Google Classroom.
But it's too much to read the email.
It's too much to read.
It's like 50 pages long.
Home schooling, I'm tired of it.
I'm tired of homeschooling.
Some kids are starting to leave the house
with masks and social distancing and staggered school schedules.
But to truly get back to normal, we need something we don't have yet. Vaccines for kids. And approving
those isn't going to be easy, but it will be worth it, because kids can get COVID-19.
So at this point in time, about 2.2 million kids in the U.S. have contracted the disease that we know of, which is about 11% of the total case count in the U.S.
This is according to the CDC.
And out of that proportion, very rarely do they get very sick.
Caroline Chen is a health care reporter at ProPublica.
She laid out the rare but real
scenario of what happens to some kids who get COVID-19. So a lot of your listeners might have
heard of what's known as multisystem inflammatory syndrome in children, MIS-C, which is when
basically the immune system kind of freaks out and there's sort of widespread inflammation,
which can cause cardiac dysfunction and kidney injury and sort's sort of widespread inflammation, which can cause cardiac dysfunction
and kidney injury and sort of all sorts of inflammation throughout the body. And this
type of case, there have only been about 2000 cases as of early February. All of this to say
that kids are not totally spared by coronavirus, even though it much, much more
rarely affects them seriously. So around 11% of all the cases that we have seen in the U.S. have
impacted kids under 18 that we know of. And then there's this even smaller percent that gets a
really scary inflammatory syndrome called MIS-C. But now we do have a vaccine. So who can get it?
What is it authorized for by the FDA, i.e. who is allowed to get it? The answer is for
children age 16 and up. So that's what it's indicated for in the label. And that's what
it's been tested for and sort of proven to be safe and effective for. So 16 and up right now.
And what's the state of vaccine trials for younger children, everyone from age 15 to day one?
I'd like to make a distinction here between teens. So this is, you know, 12 to 15, basically,
and then younger kids. I know when we talk about kids, generally, we often think of kids as anybody under 18, but both from a biological standpoint and then subsequently how manufacturers
in vaccine trials are viewing kids, they really split them into these two categories, which is,
you can think of basically high school and elementary and younger.
So that will be sort of helpful as a framework just to think about what's happening in kids at
large. So there are multiple trials ongoing for the teens groups and Pfizer has already finished
enrolling its 12 to 15 year old trial and Moderna is in the middle of enrolling as well. So that teenage cohort, the trials are
well underway. When you start going under the teenagers into the younger kids, that's where
the timelines get a little bit squishier because we just don't know when those trials are going to
be enrolled in the first place and then completed. So oftentimes, the timelines that are given by
officials or by trial investigators just have to be estimates. So at this point, I think what we
can say is that the teenage trials are well underway. The younger children trials will
start after the teenage trials are done, and the timeline for those are much squishier.
We've heard President Biden really talk about prioritizing getting children back to school and back to school soon. I mean, with that goal in mind, have any officials talked at all about
getting younger kids vaccinated so they can return sooner as well? Have they given any
projected date that they'd like to have this done by?
I want to first acknowledge that there's nothing simple or easy about any conversation about schools. I had the opportunity to interview Dr. Fauci, and when I originally asked him about this
in early February, he said that he was hoping to see by the time we get to school opening,
we will likely get people who come into the first grade. Since then, so much more recently,
he's sort of changed the timeline. And he said that, you know, we'll probably see high schoolers
have the opportunity to get the vaccine by fall, but for elementary students,
probably not until the first quarter of 2022. So the timeline has sort of been pushed back. But I think that when you talk about
prioritizing getting kids back into school, it's not just vaccines. Vaccines is one factor that
could help kids be more comfortable getting back into school, but it's not sort of like
a binary factor here. Well, let's talk about the case for vaccinating kids in the first place,
because if vaccines are one of the many factors that will help kids get back to school,
I can imagine there's going to be a lot of mixed emotions about this. I mean, on one hand,
you want your kid to return to the classroom, but then on the other, you might think kids are
already at such low risk for COVID-19.
Why should I subject them to a new vaccine whose long-term impacts aren't even clear yet?
So all of what I'm sharing with you here comes from my reporting by going to pediatricians and going to infectious disease experts.
And so what I went to them and said was, look, if these studies pan out, you know, best case scenario,
would you want every child to get a vaccine and why? And I talked to about five experts
who were all pediatricians and some of them were also infectious disease experts.
And they all were like, yes, I would want every kid to get a vaccine. And it was interesting because there were sort of two
levels on which they were thinking. One was the level at which they were saying, for the individual
kid, we still want to make sure that they don't run the risk of having, of course, the chance of
getting something like MIS-C, because it is still possible, even though it's a super
low chance, it is still possible. And then of course we have cases that are coming up like
long COVID, which has been seen in young adults, in teens, where even if you have potentially
mild symptoms, they sort of have longterm effects of COVID. So you're balancing
the individual risk here of obviously almost zero chance of fatality, but there are potential
long-term side effects of catching COVID for the individual patient. So that's sort of an
individual question. Every day when I wake up, I have constant migraines,
severe headaches, and I'm super dizzy. My stomach hurts. I vomit. My heart races and I can't read
or write. But then there was this population level argument that almost everybody was making, which is that children are like 20%
of the country. And right now to get the pandemic under control, there are so many reasons why we
want every single person who can get vaccinated to get vaccinated. So we need to try to reduce the threat of new variants, for example. Like,
every case of COVID is a new chance for the virus to mutate and turn into something else.
Like, the virus doesn't know whether it's in a kid's body or an adult's body. And every new case
gives the virus a chance to mutate. We don't know the probabilities here,
but one of the pediatricians I talked to said, well, you know, there's always a chance that
the virus turns into a variant that could be more dangerous for children.
That's his worst case scenario. He really does not want that to happen. in. So even though very few kids develop these severe cases of COVID-19 and the inflammatory
syndrome that could result from it, we should basically vaccinate them, one, to help us reach
herd immunity, and two, because it's going to help us avoid new variants? Yeah, I will say here that at this point in time, I don't know if we are
going to, this is a whole other podcast that we could talk about. Are we going to reach herd
immunity as a country or a globe or is COVID-19 going to ultimately become endemic? But the goal
is, of course, for us to curb this pandemic, end it and make COVID-19, if we can't make it, totally go away,
to turn it into something where we really don't have to be scared of it, like basically reducing
it to a cold. And these vaccines can do that because they have been proven and they have
incredible efficacy at keeping people out of the hospital, even if they do catch the virus.
So I guess the additional benefit to keeping kids healthy and also just the broader community healthy is that this is also going to restore some semblance of stability in our worlds again.
And kids might finally be able to go to karate class or go to school and parents can actually
balance their work schedules a little bit more easily.
But that also makes me wonder if we should be concerned at all that kids have already started returning to school and they're not vaccinated.
I think that there are definitely ways that you can go back to school safely with multiple different mitigation measures.
And I think that this has sort of been shown that when you sort of stack these different
mitigation measures together, that you can provide a safe environment for students. However, I think
that that still makes it hard in some cases for kids to do maybe things that are like much more
intimate. Like you can't keep kids apart when they're doing like a karate class or
something which would involve like much more close contact, right? So I think it's not totally normal
or in some cases where the classroom infrastructure makes it hard for kids to be,
you know, separate. And that means that they can only go to school half the week because you
have to do half the class, half the class, right? In order to be able to space kids out enough.
So to have sort of the total normalcy that everybody really, really wants, having vaccines
as another tool among our set of mitigation measures to be able to just bring us back to where we want to be, I think is
another argument for the vaccine. So what's it going to take for kids to get vaccinated?
Oh my gosh, there's a lot that we can talk about here, but I would put them into
two broad buckets. One is testing and the other is trust.
More with Caroline after the break.
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Cards issued by Sutton Bank, member FDIC, you said that we need two things to get kids vaccinated.
One of them is testing and the other is trust.
Let's start with testing.
Why is it so hard to make a vaccine for kids?
In the case of the COVID vaccine, after we had done what they call the phase one trials,
which is just testing for safety in healthy young adults, the next most urgent pull that we went to was making sure that it worked in the elderly.
And this is because COVID has such a terrible impact on the elderly.
Now, when we're moving on to children, we can't just say because
it works in adults, therefore it works in children. I've heard so many pediatricians say to me,
children are not just little adults. They're their own thing. And so remember right at the
very start of our conversation, I said, it's helpful to think about this in two buckets,
the teens and the younger children. So the teens really are more like small adults. And so the trials are giving them the same vaccine as the
adults. The younger kids though, they have to do what they call dose de-escalation trials.
And what was described to me from a pediatrician was that you're kind of looking here for kind of like a
Goldilocks level. So he says, as you go down in age, you give the smallest possible dose of vaccine
that we think is reasonable. And then you steadily increase until that point where we get that magic
level, which it works great and the side effects are tolerable. And one thing I want to explain up front is that
these trials are not going to be as big as the adult trials. So instead of having about 30,000
people, which was the size of the adult trials, they're going to enroll about 3,000 kids. This
is for the adolescent trials. And instead of waiting for the kids to get sick
and tracking who goes in the hospital,
which is basically what they did for the adult trials,
which is, can this vaccine stop people
from getting sick and being hospitalized,
which was the main question for the adults.
Because as you remember,
so few kids get hospitalized anyways.
If they wanted to track that kind of effect,
they'd have to enroll so many kids. It'd kind of be impossible. What they're doing is they are
tracking the immune response in kids' bloods, which is like, what antibody response do you produce?
And say this vaccine is safe and effective for kids. What will the rollout be like,
especially when not all seniors have even gotten theirs?
This is going to take a little while,
but I think by the time we get the data
from these clinical trials in teens and then in younger kids,
I don't think supply is going to be as big an issue by then
because we already know that based on the projections
of what the U.S. has contracted
by Pfizer, Moderna, and then Johnson & Johnson, that we should have enough vaccine for any
American adult that wants them by the end of July, at least, if not earlier. So I'm not too concerned
about there being enough supply. I do think that if they end up with a different dosage
for kids, you know, it might take a little while to sort of re-ramp up making the kiddie dosage.
What I am curious about, though, is where will the kids get their vaccines? And by that, I mean,
will there by then, say in September and going on, be the ability for kids to get their vaccines at the
pediatrician's office. Right now, what we've seen so far in the U.S. is mainly people getting
vaccines at max vaccination sites. And that made a lot of sense early on because there just
weren't that many vaccines. And particularly Pfizer's vaccine needed ultra-cold storage.
And so it was difficult to handle. And you couldn't just sort of like sprinkle a handful here and a handful there at primary care doctors' sites because they couldn't
store them. But as we get more and more vaccine available, I really hope there will be a way for
it to be able to be administered, ideally, you know, in my dream world at pediatricians' offices,
because that's where people are used to getting their shots. And I do think that at the end of the day, this is going to be a very
personal choice for every parent. And being able to discuss the data that's available from these
trials with a pediatrician and ask all your questions to your family doctor about the vaccine,
it would just make so much chance then to be able to get the vaccine right there
and not then have to have like this whole discussion
with your family doctor or with your pediatrician
and then have to go to a mass vaccination site
to get your shot.
So that's kind of my dream world scenario.
We'll have to see what happens.
Mm-hmm.
So let's talk about the other factor you mentioned,
which is trust.
What are you hearing from parents so far regarding giving for their kid to get the vaccine
and who have, some of them who have kids
who are at, who have high risk conditions,
who they're really scared will get COVID.
And so they see the vaccine as a way
for their kid to be able to get back to normal life.
So they're on the end of, you know,
I want my kid to get the vaccine like yesterday.
Why has this not been authorized yet?
Why aren't the trials moving faster?
On the flip side, I've heard from parents who say,
the risk to my kid from COVID is so low.
Why would I ever give them a vaccine?
Like, this is absurd.
The foremost concern is about the side effects.
We are not sure, you know, if it's going to be, like, fever
or, like, you know, pain and whatnot.
I think that the risk, the side effects from a vaccine
are, like, way higher than the risk from COVID.
And so I can empathize with all these emotions coming from parents.
I think at the end of the day, as I said, this is a conversation between parents and their
pediatrician. And I think really rest on the data that needs to come out from these trials,
which is why it's going to be really, really important that these trials be done transparently. You know, Caroline,
anytime we talk about kids and vaccines,
the name that comes to my mind is Jenny McCarthy.
We do not need that many vaccines that we need.
The chickenpox, I think, can be a parent's choice.
The rotavirus, the flu shot that still contains mercury.
Who is the celebrity who's gotten really famous for creating
a lot of suspicion around vaccinating children and claiming it has links to autism. And I think
when you have these kind of high profile people talking about it like this, people do start to
buy into that, regardless of whether or not there's much grounding in science. Is there going to have
to be a huge public outreach effort to get kids to take this
new vaccine when there are already parents out there who are skeptical of getting their child
vaccinated for measles or rubella? Well, first, I think it's really important for us to state
for the record that there is no link between any childhood vaccination and autism. And that has been
proved over and over and over again
by now in the science and data.
So I want to make that very, very, very clear first.
Great.
And foremost.
So with regards to vaccine skepticism
or vaccine hesitancy,
I think what's most important here
is really listening to people's concerns.
I think that it's unhelpful to lump together people who have questions, very legitimate questions about, you know, what are the side effects?
You know, how how I would call vaccine questioning or people who have very well thought out questions as to why or why not should I get the vaccine with people who are anti-vax.
I think there is a small, very vocal anti-vax crowd that will never change their mind no matter how much data they see.
And I think that that's very, very different from a parent who has questions and
wants to see the data. And I think that that's why I'm such an advocate for seeing evidence
and talking it through with someone who really knows what they're talking about.
And I think it's important to separate those two and not just be like,
oh, you're asking questions. Are you anti-vax? But I do think that the flip side is
to recognize that a lot of pediatricians, infectious disease experts, and immunologists
are closely scrutinizing this data and also want the best for kids. And so I think there's a point
where one does need to recognize the expertise of people
who actually study this and sort of pay heed to their word. I would say that these vaccines are
incredibly closely scrutinized right now by the scientific community. And that also gives me some
comfort knowing the number of eyeballs that are on this data, because I don't, I feel like it would be
really hard for anything to get by right now. If there were any questions about the way the
trials were set up or about any of the data, the fact that the FDA is having public advisory
committee meetings, I think was a really good call for them because the data can be discussed
publicly by an independent panel of experts
that are not employed by the FDA and can come and independently ask questions.
And in fact, many of the people on the advisory committee, like Dr. Paul Offit,
are pediatricians themselves.
So I think they will probably have a lot to say about the pediatric data,
and I'm really looking forward to hearing them discuss the data when it
becomes available. And as a health reporter, I'm going to be doing my best to share it with the
world as it comes up. Caroline Chen, thank you so for ProPublica.
I'm Halima Shah, filling in for Sean Ramosvaram.
It's Today Explained. Thank you.