how vaccine misinformation made children vulnerable to the Omicron variant

Infertility, “non-vaccinated milk”, stillbirths, rashes… Rumors circulate about the vaccination of children, which does not encourage parents to have them vaccinated

Covid-19 caused cascading deaths in American adults for two years, largely sparing children, but the lightning spread of the Omicron variant led to records of pediatric infections and hospitalizations, misinformation around vaccines accentuating the risks involved.

Fear that serums have been developed too quickly, rumors about an impact of injections on fertility… Wassim Ballan, doctor at Phoenix Children’s Hospital, assures us that fighting misinformation is now part of his job. “Unfortunately, most of the time when we talk to a family about these things, the child is already in the hospital,” he laments.

Parents need to understand that vaccines are “the most important tool to protect themselves,” he says, especially to prevent severe forms of the disease, such as multisystem inflammatory syndrome in children (MIS-C), a rare and dangerous complication that does not occur until several weeks after infection.

Twelve babies in intensive care

Only 27% of children aged 5 to 11 received a first dose of vaccine in the United States while pediatric hospitalizations reached a record 914 per day in January, a dramatic increase from the previous peak of 342 in September 2021.

In the first week of January 2022, Texas Children’s Hospital in Houston recorded twelve babies in intensive care with Covid-19. Infants are too young to receive the vaccine, but Kathryn Gray, a doctor at Brigham and Women’s Hospital in Boston, says a growing body of research indicates that vaccination during pregnancy leads to the transmission of antibodies to babies, giving them temporary protection.

However, many pregnant women are hesitant to get immunized because they were excluded from initial clinical trials. Dr. Gray is among the professionals monitoring the development of the situation. “So far, there have been no red flags” in the data, she says, adding that she “confidently” assures her patients that getting vaccinated during pregnancy is safe for both mother and child. baby.

Social media and misinformation

Health authorities around the world are saying the same thing, but the initial lack of data continues to be exploited by vaccine opponents on social media. Posts on Facebook and Twitter claim that cases of stillbirths have spiked since pregnant women got vaccinated, although lack of protection against the virus is a far greater risk.

According to epidemiologists Carla DeSisto and Sascha Ellington of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), of the 1.2 million births in the United States, the data did not suggest “evidence that the stillbirth rate has been higher during the pandemic.”

Their work, however, revealed the risks for a pregnant woman to contract Covid-19. “Compared to pregnant people without Covid-19, pregnant people with Covid are more likely to develop a pregnancy with a dangerous outcome, including premature births or stillborn babies”, underline the researchers.

“Unvaccinated milk”

Breastfeeding has also been the target of misinformation, with posts alleging babies have developed rashes or died after being fed by vaccinated mothers. The perinatology Society for Maternal-Fetal Medicine has however recommended vaccination for breastfeeding people and indicates that there is no reason to stop breastfeeding after having been vaccinated.

Misinformation proliferates in private Facebook groups where parents trade and sell breast milk, moderators said. On the page of one of these groups which has more than 10,500 subscribers, a New York mother, Bethany Bristow, spotted requests for “unvaccinated milk”. Along with other moderators, she decided to ban such requests.

On the contrary, studies have shown that milk from vaccinated mothers has certain benefits, according to Laura Ward, co-director of the Center for Medical Breastfeeding at Cincinnati Children’s Hospital. “Antibodies have been detected in the breast milk of vaccinated breastfeeding women. This means that breastfed infants might have some protection against Covid-19 if their mother has received the vaccine,” she notes.

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