Soon, virtually all adults who want to get vaccinated will have been able to get a shot. But children will need to wait longer.

What does that mean for family activities, vacations and daily life? @DLeonhardt takes a look at the risks and options. 
nyti.ms/2QMcwr9
There is no risk-free option available to parents in the coming months.

Children cannot be vaccinated yet. Yet keeping them at home — away from their friends, activities, schools and extended family — can harm them, as multiple studies have suggested. nyti.ms/2QMcwr9
Covid-19 has killed about 16 times more Americans than the flu would in a typical year. nyti.ms/2QMcwr9
Covid’s effect on children has been fundamentally different from its effect on adults. For children, Covid looks much more like the kind of risk that society has long tolerated, without upending daily life. nyti.ms/2QMcwr9
Of course, many parents aren’t worried only about death or hospitalization with Covid-19. They are also anxious about chronic long-term effects, like potential neurological or cardiac damage. nyti.ms/2QMcwr9
Children "are much less likely than adults to contract virtually every worrisome version or symptom of the disease," notes @DLeonhardt. "So what should your family do once the adults in it are vaccinated?"

He helps you consider the options. nyti.ms/2QMcwr9
Children "are much less likely than adults to contract virtually every worrisome version or symptom of the disease," notes @DLeonhardt. "So what should your family do once the adults in it are vaccinated?"

He helps you consider the options. nyti.ms/2QMcwr9

• • •

Missing some Tweet in this thread? You can try to force a refresh
 

Keep Current with New York Times Opinion

New York Times Opinion Profile picture

Stay in touch and get notified when new unrolls are available from this author!

Read all threads

This Thread may be Removed Anytime!

PDF

Twitter may remove this content at anytime! Save it as PDF for later use!

Try unrolling a thread yourself!

how to unroll video
  1. Follow @ThreadReaderApp to mention us!

  2. From a Twitter thread mention us with a keyword "unroll"
@threadreaderapp unroll

Practice here first or read more on our help page!

More from @nytopinion

22 Apr
“Many families will soon face a complicated choice about how quickly to resume their pre-pandemic activities,” writes @DLeonhardt. “The answers will not be easy.”

What can you do when adults are vaccinated and kids are not? nyti.ms/3guJB5z
For adults, Covid-19 has exacted a brutal toll, one large enough to warrant the shutdown of much of daily life. The disease has killed about 16 times more Americans than the flu would in a typical year. nyti.ms/3guJB5z
In the U.S., Covid is among the top five causes of death among adults. Among kids, however, it ranks 10th.

“For the average kid, Covid is a negligible risk,” @AaronRichterman told @DLeonhardt. nyti.ms/3guJB5z
Read 6 tweets
16 Apr
In Sunday Review, a look at the state where George Floyd and Daunte Wright were killed.

"While Minnesota is a great place to live for white people, for Black people, it’s just like everywhere else — and sometimes worse," writes scholar Samuel L. Myers Jr. nyti.ms/3dqUPpM
“My great-grandparents joined in the great migration to land in Minneapolis, and over the years we’ve all seen how our neighbors choose to ignore the suffering of those of us who don’t look like them,” writes @JustinNXT. nyti.ms/3mSvsAp
"Minnesota has had a rude awakening to the fact that it is not above the fray," writes David Lawrence Grant. nyti.ms/32m8LuW
Read 6 tweets
4 Apr
"Americans expect to pay property taxes at the same rates as their neighbors. But across most of the United States, flat-rate property taxation is a sham," writes the editorial board. nyti.ms/3wt2hZ9
"Local governments are failing at the basic task of accurately assessing property values, and there is a clear and striking pattern: More expensive properties are undervalued, while less expensive properties are overvalued." nyti.ms/3wt2hZ9
Inequities in tax assessments are both very large and very common.

How bad is it where you live? You can look up your county to see: nyti.ms/3wt2hZ9
Read 5 tweets
26 Mar
Will we struggle to reach herd immunity?

“Logistical hurdles and missteps could drive slower vaccination campaigns. But states may also be falling behind because of high levels of vaccine hesitancy,” writes @Nat_Lash. nyti.ms/2P9DisU
We can look at the vaccine rollouts in Idaho, Florida and other states to see who has been vaccinated, how quickly and why.

They show why we are headed for pockets of herd immunity (oases) and swaths with low vaccination rates (deserts). nyti.ms/2P9DisU Image
In Florida, wealthier counties achieving much higher vaccination rates than lower-income counties.

Almost all seniors in wealthy St. Johns have been vaccinated. But in nearby Putnam, one of the state’s poorest counties, only half are. nyti.ms/2P9DisU Image
Read 6 tweets
20 Mar
Writer @mayjeong on the Asian women killed in the rampage near Atlanta this week: "As working women of color, they existed at the terrible nexus of race, gender and class." nyti.ms/3vHc0uk
"For now, we do not know whether the massage parlor workers who were killed would have considered themselves sex workers, and we may never know." nyti.ms/3vHc0uk
"The stereotype of the Asian woman as simultaneously hypersexualized and submissive is borne of centuries of Western imperialism." nyti.ms/3vHc0uk
Read 5 tweets
11 Mar
This week marks a year since the beginning of the coronavirus pandemic in the United States. Today, we're publishing "The Week Our Reality Broke," a series looking back at what we've lost, and what we've gained. nyti.ms/2PVNkOn
It’s understandable to miss pre-pandemic life, but “your nostalgia for the Before Times is in part a barometer of how well they were serving you, how much you’ve been able to ignore the sirens that have been blaring the whole time,” writes @lsjamison. nyti.ms/30EdGq1
Mutual aid kept communities going. “This summer, we saw thousands of our neighbors recognize the urgency of embracing mutualism over individualism,” write four mutual aid organizers and writers in Chicago. nyti.ms/3bziZ0g
Read 8 tweets

Did Thread Reader help you today?

Support us! We are indie developers!


This site is made by just two indie developers on a laptop doing marketing, support and development! Read more about the story.

Become a Premium Member ($3/month or $30/year) and get exclusive features!

Become Premium

Too expensive? Make a small donation by buying us coffee ($5) or help with server cost ($10)

Donate via Paypal Become our Patreon

Thank you for your support!

Follow Us on Twitter!