Why you shouldn't wait.
Across the nation, parents are canceling their children's routine checkups and vaccination appointments because they worry about a more imminent concern — getting infected by the coronavirus at their pediatrician's office. Some parents have even delayed the first-time vaccines for their infants for fear of contracting COVID-19.
That's because delaying immunizations during this pandemic could lead to an outbreak of a vaccine-preventable illness like pertussis, a respiratory infection more commonly known as whooping cough that, he noted, would"be a nightmare" in this current climate. The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention has long recommended that children be vaccinated against 14 illnesses — from chicken pox to polio — in their first three years of life. Yet long before the coronavirus made the news, pediatricians have had a difficult time keeping parents from delaying their child's vaccine schedules. In fact, thethat one-third of children between 19 and 35 months didn't receive vaccines on time.
He added that, say, the HPV booster given one year later could be delayed but that the 16-year meningitis booster shouldn't be postponed.It's not only missed vaccinations that are a concern.
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