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'Now is the time' for students aged 12 to 17 to get vaccinated before school, expert says

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TORONTO -

With September around the corner, some doctors are urging parents of children aged 12 to 17 to get vaccinated in time to build full immunity before school starts again.

鈥淚f you look at the minimum interval of time between vaccines, plus factor in that you're not considered fully vaccinated until two weeks after your second dose, now is the time to get vaccinated,鈥 explained infectious disease expert Dr. Isaac Bogoch in a telephone interview Tuesday with CTVNews.ca.

Bogoch urged 鈥渟chool-age children out there鈥 who are eligible for vaccination and want to get the jab -- along with parents -- that this is the time to do it, as 鈥渋t鈥檚 never been easier.鈥

鈥淚t's never been easier to get a COVID-19 vaccine in Canada,鈥 Bogoch said, referencing Canada鈥檚 recent glut of supply. 鈥淚 appreciate some people might not watch the news cycle as closely as others and may just recall headlines of scarcity and long lines鈥but] that just doesn't exist right now.鈥

In Ontario, provincial data shows fewer residents in the 12 to 17 age cohort were signing up for a first shot over the month of July, with a demand for a first dose increasing by only 13 per cent 鈥 while demand for a second dose in that age range shot up by 500 per cent.

With six weeks until students are back in school, Ontario鈥檚 data shows 65 per cent of youth aged 12 to 17 have received one dose of a COVID-19 vaccine, while 42 per cent have been fully immunized, with the that vaccinated and unvaccinated students will have different sets of rules when schools starts up again.

Nationally, shows that just under 70 per cent of children aged 12 to 17 have received at least one dose, with 43 per cent partially vaccinated and 26 per cent fully vaccinated.

Bogoch said he recognizes that some find vaccinating children against COVID-19 a touchy subject, but hopes 鈥減arents and people will hopefully look at good data and high quality information and think about the benefits, the risks, the context of where they live and hopefully they choose to get vaccinated.鈥

鈥淚'm not here to arm wrestle anybody, I鈥檓 just here to have an open discussion about what the vaccines do, what COVID-19 does, what people's true risk of exposure is - not just today or tomorrow, but over time -- who their close contacts are, including vulnerable populations that may or may not be vaccinated,鈥 Bogoch continued.

Bogoch said that 鈥渨hen it all boils down鈥 the data favours getting vaccinated. While ultimately it鈥檚 an individual choice, he said 鈥渋t鈥檚 pretty clear that most people are choosing to get it 鈥揫but] people have to come to that decision on their own.鈥

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With files from 愛污传媒鈥 Queens Park Bureau Chief and Video Journalist Colin D鈥橫ello 

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