Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:A lot of people aren’t opposed to vaccinating their kids, they just don’t think it’s important so they don’t bother. They’ll take their kids to the required annual checkups, the doctor will say “…and they need their COVID shot…” and the kids will get at least the first shot.
I have no basis for believing this, but it sounds good, doesn’t it?
I don’t think this is the case for a majority of unvaccinated under the age of 11. I think families are very wary about the new vaccine. I also don’t think DCPS will do anything about it. And quite frankly as a resident I would be up in arms if half the kids were denied in person schooling last year because of this vaccine mandate.
Frankly, as a resident and parent, I would be up in arms if ignorant AF people like PP endanger kids and disrupt education for students by evading or promoting evasion of vaccine mandates.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:A lot of people aren’t opposed to vaccinating their kids, they just don’t think it’s important so they don’t bother. They’ll take their kids to the required annual checkups, the doctor will say “…and they need their COVID shot…” and the kids will get at least the first shot.
I have no basis for believing this, but it sounds good, doesn’t it?
I don’t think this is the case for a majority of unvaccinated under the age of 11. I think families are very wary about the new vaccine. I also don’t think DCPS will do anything about it. And quite frankly as a resident I would be up in arms if half the kids were denied in person schooling last year because of this vaccine mandate.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I’m not concerned because our charter is transparent and shares stats with teachers and families. We are already at high 70% and that’s with having ECE kids not eligible for vaccinations yet. Majority of remaining 23% are the ECE kids.
Teachers and families have a right to know general percentages and should demand so.
NP and I mean this as an honest question- why do you think teachers and families deserve to know vaccination percentages at their school? I don’t think of that as a right.
Of course it’s not a civil right but yes it’s important to know the vaccination rates in schools, just as it’s transparent the vaccination rates and breakdown in DC during a pandemic. Vaccination percentages and new cases is what you need to know in your community to understand risk, transmission of new variants, etc.,
If you don’t think so then you obviously aren’t following science and don’t know much about public health and how it affects your community.
I’m fully vaccinated and boosted so actually no I don’t care about case numbers. Most are completely benign and I don’t think it’s an important public health measure for policy choices at this point.
I also don’t need vaccination rates among kids at my school.
Proving you don’t know about public health or care about your community.
Do people like this really think there are people among us who hate our communities? I don’t get it. Why is it so hard to understand that people do different things with different information?
Ok but there is no information if your school isn’t telling you what their vaccination rate is.
Check the vaccination rates in the city or in your ward. That should be enough to inform whatever decisions you make. Individual school level vaccination rates are not necessary.
Anonymous wrote:Why do people think that the vax rate in school is so poor. My ward 1 school it’s over 70% and that I know from asking parents.
The city vaccine rate is 75% for all eligible individuals (so people over 5). Why would it be lower among kids?
DC’s vaccine website hasn’t been accurate for ages. I know the casss at my school don’t line up.
Have the school mask mandate removed when a school reaches a certain percentage of fully vaccinations.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:A lot of people aren’t opposed to vaccinating their kids, they just don’t think it’s important so they don’t bother. They’ll take their kids to the required annual checkups, the doctor will say “…and they need their COVID shot…” and the kids will get at least the first shot.
I have no basis for believing this, but it sounds good, doesn’t it?
This is exactly what's happening at my sister's clinic. Parents walk in, initially are hesitate to vaccinate, leave with a vaccinated kid. The majority of people just need information from a source that they trust, and that's their family doctor. Especially in DC, we're not dealing with MAGA idiots.
Correct. Vaccine resistance in DC is mostly due to 1)ignorance---about the value of vaccine, side effects, even how to find it, etc. 2)some fear of it being a medical experiment 3)general life chaos--vaccination is not a top priority for some that are homeless, addicts, etc.
The first two are generally overcome by 1)ideally a long-term relationship with a PCP (which is ideal and makes vaccination very easy 2)some solid education--maybe over the course of 1-2 interactions.
It's nothing like dealing with the anti-vax types or MAGA types.
---I'm a nurse case manager who works for one of the DC Medicaid plans and have spend the past year getting people vaccinated.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:A lot of people aren’t opposed to vaccinating their kids, they just don’t think it’s important so they don’t bother. They’ll take their kids to the required annual checkups, the doctor will say “…and they need their COVID shot…” and the kids will get at least the first shot.
I have no basis for believing this, but it sounds good, doesn’t it?
This is exactly what's happening at my sister's clinic. Parents walk in, initially are hesitate to vaccinate, leave with a vaccinated kid. The majority of people just need information from a source that they trust, and that's their family doctor. Especially in DC, we're not dealing with MAGA idiots.
Anonymous wrote:A lot of people aren’t opposed to vaccinating their kids, they just don’t think it’s important so they don’t bother. They’ll take their kids to the required annual checkups, the doctor will say “…and they need their COVID shot…” and the kids will get at least the first shot.
I have no basis for believing this, but it sounds good, doesn’t it?
Anonymous wrote:The vaccine is still under emergency approval for kids 5-11. Are you all assuming that changes before September? It could honestly go either way given the reluctance of some panel members to approve even the EUA. The message upon approval was “we want to give parents the option of vaccinating kids in this age group.” DC really jumped the gun in trying to mandate it. Unless/until there is final approval AND the rhetoric changes to “you should vaccinate your child”, there’s no way they will enforce this mandate.
And really, there’s every likelihood that when the grant final approval snd start recommending it, we will start treating it like the flu shot. Which is optional and many parents don’t bother because it requires that you affirmatively seek it out (unless your kid just happens to have an annual appointment along the time it is released). Covid also has strong seasonality, like the flu.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I’m not concerned because our charter is transparent and shares stats with teachers and families. We are already at high 70% and that’s with having ECE kids not eligible for vaccinations yet. Majority of remaining 23% are the ECE kids.
Teachers and families have a right to know general percentages and should demand so.
NP and I mean this as an honest question- why do you think teachers and families deserve to know vaccination percentages at their school? I don’t think of that as a right.
Of course it’s not a civil right but yes it’s important to know the vaccination rates in schools, just as it’s transparent the vaccination rates and breakdown in DC during a pandemic. Vaccination percentages and new cases is what you need to know in your community to understand risk, transmission of new variants, etc.,
If you don’t think so then you obviously aren’t following science and don’t know much about public health and how it affects your community.
I’m fully vaccinated and boosted so actually no I don’t care about case numbers. Most are completely benign and I don’t think it’s an important public health measure for policy choices at this point.
I also don’t need vaccination rates among kids at my school.
Proving you don’t know about public health or care about your community.
Do people like this really think there are people among us who hate our communities? I don’t get it. Why is it so hard to understand that people do different things with different information?
Ok but there is no information if your school isn’t telling you what their vaccination rate is.
Anonymous wrote:Civil Rights lawsuit over the racial disparity if it moves forward. No way it goes into effect.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I’m not concerned because our charter is transparent and shares stats with teachers and families. We are already at high 70% and that’s with having ECE kids not eligible for vaccinations yet. Majority of remaining 23% are the ECE kids.
Teachers and families have a right to know general percentages and should demand so.
NP and I mean this as an honest question- why do you think teachers and families deserve to know vaccination percentages at their school? I don’t think of that as a right.
Of course it’s not a civil right but yes it’s important to know the vaccination rates in schools, just as it’s transparent the vaccination rates and breakdown in DC during a pandemic. Vaccination percentages and new cases is what you need to know in your community to understand risk, transmission of new variants, etc.,
If you don’t think so then you obviously aren’t following science and don’t know much about public health and how it affects your community.
I’m fully vaccinated and boosted so actually no I don’t care about case numbers. Most are completely benign and I don’t think it’s an important public health measure for policy choices at this point.
I also don’t need vaccination rates among kids at my school.
Proving you don’t know about public health or care about your community.
Do people like this really think there are people among us who hate our communities? I don’t get it. Why is it so hard to understand that people do different things with different information?
Ok but there is no information if your school isn’t telling you what their vaccination rate is.