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    Tips to help make getting a COVID-19 vaccine less scary for kids

an adult white woman, perhaps a mother, leaning down to comfort a child, a little white girl in a pink shirt, looking sad

Families may be able to gather more safely now that the Food and Drug Administration granted emergency use authorization for the Pfizer COVID-19 vaccine in children 5‒11. Mayo Clinic and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention's Advisory Committee on Immunizations Practices strongly recommend that children 5‒11 be vaccinated for COVID-19.

Mayo Clinic will offer vaccines for children in this age group, beginning Friday, Nov. 5.

Watch: Dr. Jacobson offers tips on how to ease fears kids 5-11 may have about getting the COVID-19 vaccine.

Journalists: Soundbites with Dr. Robert Jacobson are in the downloads at the bottom of the post. Please courtesy "Robert Jacobson, M.D./Pediatric and Adolescent Medicine/Mayo Clinic."

Dr. Robert M. Jacobson, a pediatrician and vaccine researcher with the Mayo Clinic Children's Center, offers a few tips on how to ease any fears or anxiety young children may have about getting vaccinated:

Don't surprise children with vaccination.

Children should not first hear about the vaccination when they show up at a provider's office or a pharmacy. Usually, I recommend parents talk to their children in the days before that the vaccination comes up.

Talk with children about the vaccine and answer their questions.

Explain to children that the pain of the injection will come and go, but the benefits will be long-lasting. Teach them that the vaccine teaches the body to defend against the germs and the harm they do.

If you or your children have a question that you're not handling well, that you're not getting the answers that you need, or your child is not understanding, consult your child's health care provider. He or she should be a part of your decision-making of how you pursue preventive care for you and your family. This is an important issue. We are suffering a pandemic right now. Your children, and their livelihoods, are at risk. So get that health care provider involved if you get stumped.

Be a good example.

Be an example to your children by getting vaccinated, staying up to date on your vaccinations and sharing your experience with them. These are all things that you can do to prepare your children for getting vaccinated for COVID-19 and other vaccinations a child will be due for.

Celebrate the vaccination.

Demonstrating appreciation for your child getting vaccinated goes a long way to reward a 5- to 11-year-old. You need to remember that developmentally these children are looking to demonstrate some mastery, to be grown up. Talking to them about how this is this a step of maturity, how this is grown up of them, this is mature ― those are words that reward children 5–11 that they're doing the right thing.

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For the safety of its patients, staff and visitors, Mayo Clinic has strict masking policies in place. Anyone shown without a mask was either recorded prior to COVID-19 or recorded in a nonpatient care area where social distancing and other safety protocols were followed.

Information in this post was accurate at the time of its posting. Due to the fluid nature of the COVID-19 pandemic, scientific understanding, along with guidelines and recommendations, may have changed since the original publication date

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