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The Conversation

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Many Americans take public health for granted – at least the elements of it that have generally been working well. After all, those parts are often invisible by design. If public health policies are on point, nobody but the professionals needs to think about the hows and whys.

But over the past few months, federal health officials have scrambled the well-oiled system that the U.S. has relied on for more than 20 years to make sure that seasonal vaccines are available in the fall for whoever needs or wants to get them.

One major source of confusion hitting parents and caregivers as they get ready to send their children back to school: Should children get an updated COVID-19 vaccine – and will they even have the option?

David Higgins, assistant professor of pediatrics at the University of Colorado Anschutz Medical Campus, lays it all out: how the process normally works, why it’s been upended this year, and how parents and caregivers can make decisions for children amid the uncertainty.

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Alla Katsnelson

Associate Health Editor

The coordinated process for recommending and ensuring access to vaccines has been disrupted. Thomas Barwick/DigitalVision via Getty Images

COVID-19 vaccines for kids are mired in uncertainty amid conflicting federal guidance

David Higgins, University of Colorado Anschutz Medical Campus

Abrupt policy changes and confusing public messaging have injected confusion in back-to-school vaccine protocols.

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