Whilst many other countries and cities are clarmouring to secure the supply of COVID‐19 vaccines to protect their population, the vaccination uptake rate remains low in Hong Kong despite the… Click to show full abstract
Whilst many other countries and cities are clarmouring to secure the supply of COVID‐19 vaccines to protect their population, the vaccination uptake rate remains low in Hong Kong despite the abundance of supply. In mid June 2021, 5 months after the launch of the COVID‐19 vaccine in Hong Kong, only 28.2% of the total population have been fully vaccinated with two doses. Vaccination hesitancy is a major hurdle to achieving a sufficiently high vaccine coverage rate (c.70%) for population immunity to effectively suppress the COVID‐19 pandemic. Worldwide, young children have experienced lower rates of infection. Older children have a rate of infection similar to the population as a whole. Also, children have milder symptoms and are at lower risk of severe disease than adults. In the United States approximately a third of hospitalized children were admitted to the intensive care unit, while a European multinational study of hospitalized children found that about 8% of children admitted to a hospital needed intensive care. Approximately 0.7% of children in the European study died, but the actual mortality rate was lower since milder cases that did not seek medical help were excluded in the study. Locally, despite four waves of outbreaks and tremendous psychosocial disruptions, Hong Kong has been less hit than cities and nations elswhere. Thus far, only some 1200 cases were reported and 200 people died, with the majorty cases being imported. Children and persons younger than 18 years represented 10% of these cases. There have been no pediatric deaths and only two non‐Chinese children had required brief pediatric intensive care. Most available data do not differentiate between children and students. The Media plays an important role in delivering accurate and reliable public health information during vaccination campaigns. On the other hand, the “adverse events” reported in the news will need to be interpreted with caution. For example, recent reports includes a 22‐year‐old Hong Kong medical student who suffered stroke, cerebral haemorrhage and facial paralysis 4 days after receiving the second dose of Comirnaty vaccine; a young medical student who died of COVID‐19 after the first dose of vaccination in India; a medical student in France who passed away days after receiving the AstraZeneca vaccine. In all of these cases, the causality between vaccination and the patient's condition is still under investigation and not established at the time of reporting. These media reports on death following vaccination in medical students can have the detrimental effect of aggravating the public's vaccination hesitancy. Amidst these “mortality” reports, Hong Kong has extended its COVID‐19 vaccination programme to children aged 12 and above for the first time, as the government pursues a broader campaign across the city to incentivise its 7.5 million residents to get vaccinated. Children of that age group will be eligible to receive the Fosun Pharma/BioNTech Comirnaty messenger RNA vaccine, although residents who wish to receive the Sinovac CoronaVac vaccine still have to be older than 18 of age. Wilson and Wiysonge found a significant relationship between organisation on social media and public doubts of vaccine safety, and a substantial relationship between foreign disinformation campaigns and declining vaccination coverage. Therefore, global widespread use of social media should be enhanced to disseminate scientifically sound information to a greater audience to counteract vaccine hesitancy. It is also important to promote and update institutional websites that have proven to be effective in reducing vaccine hesitancy. Vaccine‐associated anaphylaxis is a concern. Allergist/immunologist plays a major role in the delivery of specialized therapy of COVID‐19 and in educating the public with regard to the importance of COVID‐19 vaccines. Physicians will need to arm themselves with the latest evidence to counsel anxious students and their parents if the vaccination program is to be successfully promoted. In the United States, more than 2% of the entire children population have been diagnosed with COVID‐19, according to the latest data from the American Academy of Pediatrics. Adolescent and young adult students are generally spared from serious sequelae of COVID‐19, and hence were previously considered as low priority for vaccination. However, mortality and severe morbidity with multisystem hyperinflammatory involvements have been widely reported in young persons and adults. At the same time, since children and young adults also play a key role in the spread of the
               
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