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How One Health Center Is Leading Chicago on Kid Covid Shots
Maria Lopez takes a picture of her daughters, Alondra (left) and Victoria Macias, after the two elementary school-age girls got their covid shots Nov. 4 at Esperanza Health Centers' mass vaccination site on the Chicago鈥檚 Southwest Side. (Giles Bruce for KHN)
Postcard From a Clinic

How One Health Center Is Leading Chicago on Kid Covid Shots

CHICAGO 鈥 As the medical assistant put on rubber gloves and readied the syringe, 5-year-old Victoria Macias, wearing a pink Minnie Mouse mask and white blouse, turned her head away and closed her eyes.

鈥淚t鈥檚 not going to hurt, OK? I鈥檒l hold your hand, I鈥檒l hold your hand,鈥 said her older sister, Alondra, 8. 鈥淒eep breath, deep breath.鈥

The medical assistant, Rachel Blancas, poked Victoria鈥檚 left arm for about a second. Victoria opened her eyes. And with that, the Macias sisters were among the first 5- to 11-year-olds to get the covid-19 vaccine in the Midwest鈥檚 largest city.

Their mom, Maria Lopez, took them out of school early last Thursday to stop by the mass immunization site on Chicago鈥檚 southwest side. 鈥淭hey have gotten every other vaccine available, so why not this one?鈥 said Lopez, 43, a real-estate broker.

, a nonprofit health provider that is operating the site, has been the top pediatric covid vaccine provider in Chicago, according to the city鈥檚 Department of Public Health, administering about 10,000 immunizations to 12- to 17-year-olds. Now that the Food and Drug Administration has authorized the Pfizer-BioNTech shot for kids ages 5-11, the organization鈥檚 efforts may provide lessons for other places in the U.S. that have struggled to vaccinate children.

鈥淧eople in the community trust us,鈥 said Veronica Flores, manager of covid response for Esperanza, which has five medical clinics that see patients regardless of insurance or immigration status. 鈥淲hen the pandemic started, we were one of the first ones doing testing.鈥

At one point, she noted, Esperanza was responsible for more than half of all covid tests done in the city. The federally qualified health center鈥檚 patient population, which is about 90% Hispanic, has doubled in the wake of covid.

Everyone who works with patients at Esperanza is bilingual. The immunization site and is open five days a week, including to people without appointments. The clinic will even pay for patients鈥 Uber rides to get vaccinated.

If parents or guardians have questions or concerns about the pediatric vaccine, Esperanza connects them to one of its doctors.

Dr. , pediatric medical director, seeks to reassure patients, telling them the shot, which is given at a lower dose than for teens and adults, has been found to be both for 5- to 11-year-olds. The relatively mild side effects may include pain at the injection site, headaches and fatigue that could last a day or two. In addition, he reminds them that children are at risk from the virus.

鈥淎round 2 million kids between 5 and 11 years old have been diagnosed with covid, and there鈥檚 been about 170 deaths,鈥 Minier said. 鈥淭hat’s still too many. If we have something that can help prevent death or any sort of morbidity for kids for covid, then we should do it.鈥

Cynthia Galvan, a medical assistant at Esperanza who lives nearby, brought her 10-year-old son, Andres, to get the shot Thursday. She hopes it will ensure her family has a better Thanksgiving than last year, when several of her relatives were sick with covid-19.

鈥淓veryone at home was already vaccinated, except him,鈥 said Cynthia, 34. 鈥淭here鈥檚 10 of us.鈥

of 58.2% for 12- to 17-year-olds is higher than the of about 50%, largely because of the work of community health centers like Esperanza, said city Health Commissioner Dr. . Not only are they familiar with the local languages and cultures, but they鈥檙e also the type of places where the whole family is likely to get immunizations, starting with grandparents last winter.

鈥淲e know the biggest predictor of whether a child gets a vaccine is whether the parent or guardian is vaccinated,鈥 Arwady said.

She still worries about the estimated 750,000 residents of the city without immunity to covid. Young Black Chicagoans have lagged behind other groups in getting the shot, and she鈥檚 concerned outbreaks could occur this winter among those unvaccinated networks.

鈥淥ne way or another, your immune system is likely to learn its covid lesson and probably over the next few months,鈥 Arwady said. 鈥淪o either that’s through the safer way of getting vaccinated or taking your chance of getting infected.鈥

The city is working to increase vaccine uptake by offering $100 gift cards, administering free shots at home to anyone who wants them, and giving all public school kids the day off this Friday to get immunized.

Last week, Esperanza Health Centers texted the families of each of its roughly 8,000 patients ages 5 to 11 to let their parents know the vaccine was available. The organization started distributing the shots to younger kids Wednesday morning, just hours after the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention . They will start giving out second doses in three weeks.

鈥淚 hate shots,鈥 said Benicio Decker, 7, as he played a game on an iPad in the clinic鈥檚 waiting area Thursday. 鈥淭he only time I like shots is when we get ice cream after.鈥

But the Chicago second grader said he was willing to withstand a little discomfort 鈥渂ecause I want to protect my family, me, my friends, my teacher.鈥

Benicio Decker holds tight to his favorite stuffed animal, “Bat Bear,” as medical assistant Rachel Blancas gives him a covid vaccine Nov. 4 at a mass clinic sponsored by Esperanza Health Centers in Chicago. (Giles Bruce for KHN)

On the brisk fall afternoon, families with young kids streamed in and out of the site, a 23,000-square-foot former gym with exposed ventilation, hanging fluorescent lights and a blue-speckled rubber floor. As Disney songs played over the loudspeakers, the children stopped to take pictures in front of astronaut-themed, balloon-covered photo backdrops the health center had set up.

鈥淭hey do a great job of making information available where people are,鈥 said Benicio鈥檚 mom, Esmie De Maria, 39. 鈥淭hey have flyers up at restaurants, laundromats, the grocery store. They鈥檙e not expecting people to come to them.鈥

Esperanza has also done pop-up vaccine clinics at local schools and parks.

De Maria said she didn鈥檛 run into waitlists as she had at other places in the city. She even enlisted the health center to teach vaccine workshops to her colleagues at a local neighborhood organization.

Esperanza is a trusted institution in a largely Hispanic part of the city, De Maria said 鈥 the health center鈥檚 name means 鈥渉ope鈥 in Spanish. and , Latinos have been less likely than whites and Asians to be immunized against the coronavirus, though that gap has been closing.

鈥淧eople of color have every right, historically, to be wary of vaccinations,鈥 said De Maria, noting that many women in her ancestral home of Puerto Rico were coerced into being . 鈥淚t鈥檚 embedded in our DNA to be skeptical.鈥

But she said she hopes everyone will consider getting immunized, for the good of the community. 鈥淭his isn鈥檛 just for him,鈥 she said, gesturing to Benicio.

Over at the vaccine station, Blancas, the medical assistant, told Benicio the shot would feel like a mosquito bite. 鈥淵ou鈥檙e being really brave. You鈥檙e earning that ice cream,鈥 his mom said.

When Blancas stuck Benicio鈥檚 arm with the needle, the boy, holding tight to his Batman teddy bear, let out a quiet 鈥淥w.鈥 Afterward, he said he鈥檇 just felt a little pinch.

鈥淵ou are officially vaccinated,鈥 his mother told him, as he sat playing with her phone in the observation area for 15 minutes to make sure he didn鈥檛 have any dangerous allergic reactions. 鈥淗e鈥檚 going to be one of the first kids at his school to get vaccinated. He鈥檚 a little superhero.鈥