Start the school year strong: Prevent illness in children


PHOTO CREDIT: StatePoint Media

The excitement of a new school year unfolds each year when families flood the superstore aisles to buy classroom supplies, tape afterschool schedules on the fridge and organize carpools with friends.

Common to each family is a desire for children to remain healthy, active and ready to learn.

To prepare children and teens to be at their best — physically, mentally, socially and emotionally — the American Academy of Pediatrics recommends regular visits with the pediatrician, as well as immunizations that help keep all family members healthy.

Recent outbreaks of measles, a highly contagious disease, have shown how quickly some infectious diseases can spread within a community.

“The best way to strengthen a child’s immune system and keep them healthy is by getting them vaccinated,” said pediatrician David M. Higgins. “An illness like measles can keep children home and away from school and activities for days. Immunizations allow children to enjoy learning, playing and getting together with friends and family.”

As of June, a total of 151 U.S. measles cases were reported this year-to-date in 21 different states, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. These recent measles outbreaks have affected unvaccinated people. Choosing to not vaccinate your children not only leaves them susceptible to measles, but also exposes other children to this potentially serious disease. This includes infants who are too young to be vaccinated and those who are unable to be vaccinated due to other health conditions.

“Everyone in our community deserves to be healthy, and part of being healthy means getting immunized for all illnesses, including influenza and COVID-19 and, if eligible, respiratory syncytial virus,” Higgins said. “It benefits all of us if every child in our community is vaccinated because it means that all of us are more likely to be healthy.”

Families also can stop the spread of infection by encouraging hand-washing with children throughout the day.

Help or remind them to wash their hands:

• Before eating (including snacks).

• After a trip to the bathroom.

• Whenever they come in from playing outdoors.

• After touching an animal, like a family pet.

• After sneezing or coughing if they cover their mouth.

• When someone in the household is ill.

The AAP calls for the immunization of all children and adolescents according to its policy, Recommended Immunization Schedules for Children and Adolescents Aged 18 Years or Younger, United States.

More information can be found at healthychildren.org.

“Your pediatrician can answer any questions about recommended vaccines and when your child needs them,” Higgins said. “There is a schedule for their recommended timing because that is when research has shown they are most effective during a child’s development.”

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