Upper row, from L-R: Business journalist Mimi Ong; Dr Lulu Bravo, Executive Director of the Philippine Foundation for Vaccination; and Dr. Maria Corazon Dumlao, Chief of the Department of Education’s Bureau of Learner Support Services – School Health Division.
Middle row, from L-R: Dr Nina Gloriani, Chairperson of the Vaccine Expert Panel, Technical Working Group for COVID-19 Vaccines, Department of Science and Technology; Dr Benny Atienza, President of the Philippine Medical Association; and Enrique Gonzalez, Founder and Chairman of IPB/Family Vaccines Specialty Clinics.
Bottom row, from L-R: Journalist and entrepreneur Niña Corpuz; Dr Eric Tayag, Director of the National Epidemiology Center, Department of Health; and Miguel Bermundo, Senior Manager of Sustainability and Social Responsibility, Globe Telecom.
With the long
Christmas holiday’s tradition of gathering entire clans together, PMA President
Dr. Benny Atienza remarked that their younger members should also receive
protection against COVID-19. He expressed his “hope that children be vaccinated
and we encourage parents, barangays, and LGUs to join us in our National
Vaccination Day. Public and private entities are working as one to disseminate
benefits of vaccination.”
Dr. Atienza added
that vaccine hesitancy can be overcome by continuous dissemination of correct
medical information to all demographics, young and old: “The PMA believes in
teaching empowerment. We will continue implementing innovative activities that
will raise standard health education among young children and their respective
communities.”
Dr. Lulu Bravo, Executive Director of the Philippine Foundation for Vaccination (PFV), agreed about teaching children about vaccination at an early age because “they can lead us to the end of this pandemic.” She further urged the adult members of society, especially the parents, to “be a hero, by saving your lives and your loved ones through vaccination.”
Reason for children vaccination
There are pressing if little-known, medical reasons to include children and teens in COVID-19
vaccination. Although perceived as “more
low risk, they can get very sick with COVID-19. They can also get short and long-term
complications,” explained Dr. Nina G. Gloriani, Chairperson of the Vaccine
Expert Panel, Technical Working Group for COVID-19 Vaccines, Department of
Science and Technology. “Children can spread COVID-19 via droplets. We have to
underscore the fact that unvaccinated children can be asymptomatic.”
Dr. Gloriani added
that COVID-19 children vaccination had already started with those who have
comorbidities, focusing first on the 16-17-year-olds, and then proceeding to
the 12-to-14-year-old demographic. She also acknowledged that “almost 50% of
the targeted Filipino individuals have received their first doses, 74 million
doses in total. The more recent is 103 million jabs. The number of jabs a day
is a million in the NCR. “
Dr. Eric Tayag,
Director of the National Epidemiology Center in the Department of Health (DOH), added that the vaccination of children
should be ongoing, not just against COVID-19 but also “preventable diseases. We
are having catch-up vaccinations on measles, diphtheria, and hemophilia. We protect
the children when we vaccinate them.”
National
recovery
Enrique Gonzalez,
Founder and Chairman of IPB/Family Vaccines Specialty Clinics (FVSC), affirmed
that “Ensuring the safety of vaccines to children is of prime importance.” He also pointed out that SinoVac, the vaccine
his company distributes, is doing a global trial on children’s COVID-19
vaccination in several countries. The more agile regulators in nations like
Malaysia, Hong Kong, and Chile have been using SinoVac under the Emergency Use Agreement, acting
“quickly in ensuring that kids are protected when they go back to school.”
Gonzalez gave
another insight on the importance of quick mass vaccination, saying: “It is
critical to helping the country recover and get back on its feet. Vaccines prevent severe symptoms and
hospitalization. It is important that the public continue to have access to
vaccines so we can achieve and maintain herd immunity.”
Prior to the
pandemic, FVSC has been at the forefront of inoculation against infectious diseases
to the marginalized, subsidizing 50,000 vaccinations for the rural poor across
more than 18 provinces.
Accomplished
journalist Niña Corpuz gave her perspective on vaccination as a mother of three
kids. Addressing the understandable
fears of parents, she said that “webinars and access to experts and research
show that there is no reason to be hesitant. If vaccines come out for
younglings, I would be among the first to give vaccines to my children.”
Education vs. fake news
Finally, amidst the
gradual reopening of onsite classes in the country, Dr. Maria Corazon C.
Dumlao, Chief of the Department of Education’s Bureau of Learner Support
Services – School Health Division, affirmed their support for “pediatric
vaccinations against COVID-19. Immunization activities are being conducted with
learners continue during the pandemic.”
Other initiatives include allowing schools to become vaccination sites
and coming up with strategies related to vaccination campaigns.
Miguel Bermundo,
Senior Manager of Sustainability and Social Responsibility of Globe Telecom,
agreed that education and fighting vaccine disinformation are vital to
increasing COVID-19 vaccine uptake.
Through their many platforms, programs, and partnerships with groups
like the UNICEF, "we use our digital resources and network to fight harm
against kids online and the proliferation of fake news.”
As the National
Vaccination Day approaches, Dr. Bravo exhorted the public to be well-informed
and join a health advocacy which can provide a better life for themselves and
their families: “We should prepare for a pandemic preparedness plan---this will
not be the last. We should value experts' opinions. Be a vaccine advocate,
someone who can lead us to restore vaccine confidence and fight vaccine hesitancy.”
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