W. K. Lis
Superstar
Some states in the United States of America are going more and more backwards...
From link.
Tennessee abandons vaccine outreach to minors — not just for COVID-19
From link.
The Tennessee Department of Health will halt all adolescent vaccine outreach – not just for coronavirus, but all diseases – amid pressure from Republican state lawmakers, according to an internal report and agency emails obtained by the Tennessean. If the health department must issue any information about vaccines, staff are instructed to strip the agency logo off the documents.
The health department will also stop all COVID-19 vaccine events on school property, despite holding at least one such event this month. The decisions to end vaccine outreach and school events come directly from Health Commissioner Dr. Lisa Piercey, the internal report states.
Additionally, the health department will take steps to ensure it no longer sends postcards or other notices reminding teenagers to get their second dose of the coronavirus vaccines. Postcards will still be sent to adults, but teens will be excluded from the mailing list so the postcards are not “potentially interpreted as solicitation to minors,” the report states.
These changes to Tennessee’s vaccination strategy, detailed in an COVID-19 report distributed to health department staff on Friday, then reiterated in a mass email on Monday, illustrate how the state government continues to dial back efforts to vaccinate minors against coronavirus. This state's approach to vaccinations will not only lessen efforts to inoculate young people against coronavirus, it could also hamper the capacity to vaccinate adults and protect children from other infectious diseases.
And these changes will take effect just as the coronavirus pandemic shows new signs of spread in Tennessee. After months of declining infections, the average number of new cases per day has more than doubled in the past two weeks – from 177 to 418. The average test positivity rate has jumped from 2.2% to 5.4% in the same time period.
The state is also detecting a growing number of infections from the delta variant, a more transmissible form of coronavirus sparking outbreaks among unvaccinated populations in Arkansas and Missouri. Tennessee’s count of known delta variant cases rose from 27 on June 24 to 125 as of last Thursday, according to state virus data. The true count is likely much higher because testing of the variant is performed sparingly.
The changes to Tennessee's vaccination strategy will impact the majority of the Volunteer State, which lags behind most of the nation in the race to immunity. Only 38% of Tennesseans are fully vaccinated, and at the current pace the state won't be 50% vaccinated until March, according to health department estimates. The agency holds responsibility for public health in 89 of Tennessee’s 95 counties, excluding major metropolitan areas where local agencies wield more authority.
'No proactive outreach regarding routine vaccines'
After the health department's internal COVID-19 report was circulated on Friday, the rollback of vaccine outreach was further detailed in a Monday email from agency Chief Medical Officer Dr. Tim Jones.
Jones told staff they should conduct "no proactive outreach regarding routine vaccines" and "no outreach whatsoever regarding the HPV vaccine."
Staff were also told not to do any "pre-planning" for flu shots events at schools. Any information released about back-to-school vaccinations should come from the Tennessee Department of Education, not the Tennessee Department of Health, Jones wrote.
"Any kinds of informational sheets or other materials that we make available for dissemination should have the TDH logo removed," Jones wrote.
The health department did not confirm nor dispute the existence of Jones’ email. In a written statement, department spokesperson Sarah Tanksley credited the state’s past outreach for high vaccination rates among children — for example, 95% of kindergarteners were fully vaccinated last school year.
Tanksley said the agency is now responding to “an intense national conversation that is affecting how many families evaluate vaccinations in general," and is planning more market research into the roots of vaccine hesitancy.
“Tennessee is on solid footing when it comes to childhood immunizations and will continue to keep information and programming in place for parents,” Tanksley said. “We are simply mindful of how certain tactics could hurt that progress.”
Normally, the health department regularly advocates for vaccinating kids against many diseases without controversy.
For example, in 2019 the department published at least 15 tweets that either explicitly recommended minors be vaccinated or featured a child in a pro-vaccine image or video. The agency's outreach campaign recommended vaccination against flu, measles, mumps, rubella and human papillomavirus, or HPV, among others.
Decisions to ratchet back outreach comes amid pressure from conservative lawmakers, who have embraced misinformation about the coronavirus vaccine, said Dr. Michelle Fiscus, Tennessee's former top vaccine official.
Fiscus was fired without explanation on Monday. Fiscus said she was scapegoated to appease lawmakers, who had described routine vaccine outreach as “reprehensible.”
“This is a failure of public health to protect the people of Tennessee and that is what is ‘reprehensible,’ Fiscus said Monday. “When the people elected and appointed to lead this state put their political gains ahead of the public good, they have betrayed the people who have trusted them with their lives.”
After this story published online, the Tennessee Chapter of the American Academy of Pediatrics issued a statement offering a “strong and enduring endorsement” of vaccines. The organization also celebrated Fiscus as a “tireless champion for children and vaccines.”
"Actions that weaken Tennessee’s overall public health readiness are clearly a step in the wrong direction at the wrong time,” said chapter President Dr. Anna Morad in the statement.
No more COVID-19 vaccine events at schools
Until now, the county health officials under the purview of the Department of Health have sometimes used schools as venues for coronavirus vaccination drives, and at least some of those events have primarily served adults, not minors.
For example, two weeks ago health officials held a two-day vaccination drive at Woodlawn Elementary School, outside of Clarksville. Under the agency’s new rules, events like this will no longer be permitted across most of the state.
This shift is worrisome to Brian Haile, the CEO of Neighborhood Health, a group of nonprofit clinics providing vaccines in and around Nashville.
In many rural Tennessee counties, school gymnasiums are one of the few venues large enough to hold a vaccination event indoors, with air conditioning, with enough space for social distancing, Haile said.
“I’m not saying it’s impossible,” Haile said, “but one of the things this is going to do is really limit access to vaccines in rural areas.”
Tanksley, the health department spokesperson, confirmed the agency would end COVID-19 vaccination events at schools, in a part because of low demand, and said “no decisions had been made” about offering other vaccines at schools.
Tanksley said the agency ended events on school property “out of an abundance of caution” because vaccination efforts were “perceived by some to give the wrong impression regarding parental consent.”
“While the location may change,” Tanksley said, “the effort to vaccinate individuals who choose to receive it continues.
When asked about the decision stop sending vaccine reminder postcards to teenagers, Tankley said the health department always intended these postcards to go to their parents and was taking new steps to ensure they were never sent to minors.