Meet the Other Phone. Flexible and made to last.

Meet the Other Phone.
Flexible and made to last.

Buy now

Please or to access all these features

Covid

Mumsnet doesn't verify the qualifications of users. If you have medical concerns, please consult a healthcare professional.

Are you letting child have the vaccine?

484 replies

GiveMeAUserName123 · 25/08/2021 21:55

I was just wondering if you have a child/ren between the ages of 12-16, that don’t have any medical conditions, or live with family members that are more at risk, will you be letting them have the vaccine?

My eldest will be turning 12 in the winter and I imagine will be given the choice to have it. I don’t think I want her too (I’ve had mine) but obviously it’s her body and her choice which is something that is held in high regard at home, so won’t voice against it, but if she does choose to have it, is she too young to decide something like this, as I’m not sure a child could really understand the full risk/benefit side of things.

How are you feeling about it in general?

OP posts:
AlexaShutUp · 29/08/2021 11:02

And that applies to your experience too.

Well, yes, obviously. That's why I said "these anecdotes" in my earlier post. I was very clearly including my own experience in that.

Geamhradh · 29/08/2021 22:10

@bumbleymummy

The Green Pass is either vaccination, or negative test or previous infection. (I think iirc you are in the EU, so am guessing it's the same?) The green pass issued on a neg test isn't really a green pass as you don't get the QR or the official registration, and if course it lasts for just 48 hours.

Italy is now at 79% of all over 12s with at least one dose of vaccination. That will go up pdq in September as over 12s could only book their vaccination from June onwards so are now getting their second doses.

ollyollyoxenfree · 29/08/2021 23:17

@Jorriss

And the idea that their "research into the vaccine" done on the internet is superior to the research done by multiple virologists, the world over, is laughable

Oh well. You can go ahead and get your children vaccinated can't you. And others will make their own decisions about their own children. Not much you'll be able to do about that really if people decide they won't be going ahead with it. 🤷

This is what people want though?

Haven't seen a single poster demanding that all children must be vaccinated, just that their child in the age 12-15 bracket has the option of having it, given the context of rising cases, schools starting back, and the fact that pretty much the entire Western world has started offering it to this age group.

1dayatatime · 30/08/2021 00:09

In May, the WHO director-general Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus called the prioritisation of low-risk groups, such as children, in rich countries a "moral catastrophe".

He said: "I understand why some countries want to vaccinate their children and adolescents, but right now I urge them to reconsider and to instead donate vaccines to COVAX."

Many countries are struggling to control the spread of the virus with limited vaccine supply. Less than 30% of the population in Paraguay, Colombia and Peru have received even one dose and are recording some of the highest rates of COVID deaths.

Warhertisuff · 30/08/2021 08:42

[quote MRex]Posted too soon...

A few people self-reporting themselves as PhD who decided not to be vaccinated and did not change their minds, does not change the overall pattern that lower educational attainment aligns with higher vaccine hesitancy.

Meanwhile, back in the UK, where we didn't have vaccines turned into a political issue because all major parties support vaccination...
Again we see higher education levels = lower vaccine hesitancy: www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0889159121001100.

Same findings in other countries too e.g. Qatar: www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8235273/.[/quote]
This is just a hypothesis but I'm thinking the link between educational level
and vaccine hesitancy isn't a direct causal relationship.

Vaccines have been heavily promoted by the Government and other senior health professionals, almost all of which are highly educated.

Those who are similarly more highly educated have more affinity with those with a similar level of education, which leads to greater trust, and consequently greater vaccine uptake.

ClaraHedgehogs · 13/11/2021 21:14

Nope, I’ve put off my 13 year old having it for the time-being. It’s really up to her as much as it’s up to me and she’s said she doesn’t want it and to be fair, I wouldn’t be over the moon if she got it 🤷🏼‍♀️

CarrieBlue · 13/11/2021 22:13

My 12yo has hers today, I just wish she and her brother were allowed the full schedule and have their second - the vaccinator today seemed convinced that they will be able to get a second dose soon, so fingers crossed for us!

Pettyargument · 14/11/2021 04:21

I live in NZ. My sons aged 14 and 16 are vaccinated as are all of their friends. It’s been approved in this age group for ages here

Refractory · 14/11/2021 07:04

Nope, the statistics have been misreported by right wing US media, it's really important to go back to the source rather than biased media.
This is the actual researcher summary: ^www.upmc.com/media/news/072621-king-mejia-vaccine-hesitancy^
Generally, COVID-19 vaccine hesitancy was higher among the young (ages 18-24), non-Asian people and less educated (high school diploma or less) adults, and those with Ph.D.s, with a history of a positive COVID-19 test, not worried about serious illness from COVID-19 and living in regions with greater support for Donald Trump in the 2020 election.
The PhD disparity reported is that those with PhD who originally answered they would not be vaccinated were less likely to change their minds than those of lower educational attainment.

Incorrect. The actual study (not the summary) analyses educational attainment as an independent variable, results here:

www.medrxiv.org/content/10.1101/2021.07.20.21260795v3.full-text

PhD hesitancy does remain fixed, as you say, but it is also higher than levels reported for university and masters degree educated.

New posts on this thread. Refresh page
Swipe left for the next trending thread