Brimhall Pediatrics
Our pediatricians Dr. Belinda Santos-Senar and Dr. Lyndon A. Senar are committed to providing high
We are honored to have one of our dedicated pediatricians nominated for "Best Pediatrician" award in our community. Your support has always been the cornerstone of our practice, and we would be immensely grateful for your vote. Thank you for considering us for this honor!
PLEASE VOTE BY USING THE LINK until Feb 13.
https://heritage.secondstreetapp.com/og/039e8307-c864-4418-b6a2-5832b332142b/gallery/408909067
Brimhall Pediatrics Our pediatricians Dr. Belinda Santos-Senar and Dr. Lyndon A. Senar are committed to providing high
Our very own Dr Belinda Santos-Senar was nominated for this year’s best pediatrician in Kern County! Pls vote if you agree!!
Check out Dr. Belinda Santos-Senar MD - Brimhall Pediatrics. Participate in the Readers' Choice Awards to help pick the best of the best in Kern County.
It’s the season for cough, colds and fever! !
Fever: When to Call the Pediatrician A fever is a common sign of illness in children. Under certain circumstances of high fever, you should contact your child's pediatrician immediately. Learn more here.
Inclined Sleepers, Crib Bumpers & Other Baby Registry Items to Avoid Some popular baby products are not necessary and can, in fact, be dangerous for infants. The AAP offers information about sometimes deadly products like baby nests or inclined sleepers and crib bumpers that should stay off the baby registry.
Public health success story: 25 years of varicella vaccination program Continuing efforts are needed to ensure vaccination coverage remains high.
Some brain development games to play with toddlers!
Tansu YEĞEN on Twitter “Some brain developments games to play with the children”
We’ve gotten so many calls due to the Similac formula recall , pls watch video to know if your baby’s formula is part of it !!
2022 Similac Formula Recall Information from a pediatrician about the 2022 Similac formula recall: what we know, how to identify if your child's formula has been recalled and what formu...
COVID boosters approved by CDC for ages 12-15!! Pls call for appointment!!
Due to the surging Covid cases we are only allowing 1 parent per child except for moms who had Csection w/ newborn!!
Vaccines for 5-11 year olds: Your FDA meeting cliff notes
Today VRBPAC (an external scientific advisory committee to the FDA) voted in favor of the Pfizer COVID19 vaccine for 5-11 year olds. VRBPAC was the second stop in a long process to get the vaccine authorized for emergency use.
(This is copy and pasted from my newsletter. There are lots of figures and data sources and hyperlinks. For better viewing go here: https://yourlocalepidemiologist.substack.com/p/vaccines-for-5-11-year-olds-fda-meeting?justPublished=true)
This was a much anticipated meeting for two reasons:
1. Originally, the FDA hinted they would not consider an EUA for kids 8300 COVID19 hospitalizations of 5-11 year olds
-Over 30% of 5-11 year olds hospitalized did not have an underlying condition.
-When compared to other kids, 5-11 year olds had the least number of hospitalizations. But, starting in August, they had the highest rate since the beginning of the pandemic.
-Once hospitalized, 1/3 of kids ended up in the ICU.
-There were exceedingly low (only 9) hospitalizations for flu during 2020-2021. At the same time, there were significantly higher COVID19 hospitalizations. Had mitigation measures (masks, closed schools) not been in place, these numbers would have been much higher.
-MIS-C (multisystem inflammatory syndrome in children) is highest among 5-11 year olds. This is a condition where different body parts can become inflamed, including the heart, lungs, kidneys, brain, skin, eyes, or gastrointestinal organs. There’s been 5,217 MIS-C cases reported as of October 4, 2021. 60-70% of patients are admitted to ICU and 1-2% died.
Death: There have been 94 5-11 year olds that have died from COVID19. For context, this places COVID19 as the 8th leading cause of death for this age group. More recently (during Delta), COVID19 jumped to the 6th leading cause of death in this age group.
Long COVID19: 7-8% of kids experience long COVID19. The following symptoms occur among kids for more than 4 weeks: fatigue, headache, insomnia, trouble concentrating, muscle and joint pain, and cough. There are also impacts on quality of life: Limitations of physical activity, feeling distressed about symptoms, mental health challenges, decreased school attendance/participation.
Secondary outcomes
-In-person school: COVID-19 in children leads to lost in-person learning and other adverse outcomes. This has resulted in 2,074 schools closed, 1,069,116 of students and 68,718 teachers affected.
-Transmission: Kids also significantly contribute to the spread of the virus. Secondary transmission from young school age children can and does occur in both household and school settings
***Clinical Trial Results***
The clinical trial was organized into two cohorts:
1. 2,268 trial participants (including 1,518 vaccine recipients) followed for at least two months past the 2nd dose
2. A “safety expansion” group of an additional 2,379 participants (1,500 vaccine recipients) followed for a median of 2.4 weeks after the second dose. This was done per the FDAs request “to allow for more robust assessment of serious adverse events and other adverse events of interest”.
First Pfizer presented their results. Then the FDA presented their results. The FDA always analyzes data themselves to ensure there is no conflict of interest. This is normal practice.
***Safety***
During the clinical trial, the most common adverse events (AEs) was fatigue (39%), followed by headache (28%) and muscle pain (12%).
-Most AEs were mild or moderate and resolved 1-2 days after
-Interestingly, fever and chills was less frequent compared to older kids/adults
-Adverse reactions was higher for dose 2 compared to dose 1
There are two other adverse events linked to the vaccine:
1. Lymphadenopathy (swelling of lymph nodes): 13 vaccine participants vs. 1 placebo participant. We saw this in adult clinical trials too.
2. Hypersensitivity: Such as rash and dermatitis after the vaccine compared to the placebo
There were 5 severe adverse events. None were linked to the vaccine:
-Ingestion of a penny (1 person in the vaccine group)
-Fractures (2 people in the vaccine group and 1 in the placebo)
-Infective arthritis (one person in vaccine group)
There were no cases of myocarditis (heart inflammation), anaphylaxis or deaths among ages 5-11 in the clinical trials.
***Effectiveness***
Does the vaccine work for 5-11 year olds? The FDA required Pfizer to prove immunobridging. Pfizer also included data on two other outcomes:
Immunobridging: This is a process that compares antibodies among 5-11 year olds to another age group (in this case 16-25 year olds) in which the efficacy of a vaccine is already established. The clinical trial found that antibody numbers were comparable to the older age group. In other words, the vaccine works.
Effectiveness against Delta: Pfizer also included data on a subsample of participants’ (34 participants) to assess the effectiveness of the vaccine-induced antibodies on specific variants. The vaccine worked great against Delta.
COVID19 disease: Pfizer also showed efficacy. During the clinical trial there were 19 cases of COVID19: 3 cases in the vaccine group and 16 cases in the placebo group. This equates to a 90.7% efficacy.
***Myocarditis***
No myocarditis cases were reported in the clinical trial. This is great news but expected. The clinical trials were not nearly large enough to capture such a rare event.
Myocarditis is the principal concern that people have with mRNA vaccines with children. So, CDC presented everything we know about vaccine-induced myocarditis. Key take home points:
1. Myocarditis is a true safety signal, but rare. There have been 877 cases of vaccine-induced myocarditis among 12-29 year olds (out of more than 100,000,000 vaccinated). Of these, 829 were hospitalized and 77% recovered. At the time of analysis, 5 people were in the ICU. No myocarditis cases reported and investigated by the CDC have resulted in death.
2. Not all myocarditis should be treated the same. Classic myocarditis (opposed to vaccine-induced myocarditis) has a relatively high mortality rate and can even result in sudden death. Classic myocarditis also impacts on how well the heart pumps blood (called ejection fraction). We don’t see mortality or ejection fraction reduction with vaccine-induced myocarditis. It’s a much more mild form of disease.
3. Long term effects of vaccine-induced myocarditis. Kids tend to bounce back very well. A key study followed a subset of adolescents with vaccine-induced myocarditis. Adolescents fully recovered from symptoms and arrhythmias ~35 days. Data is limited, but continues to be studied. Unfortunately we are at the mercy of time.
4. Why is this happening? We don’t know yet. Only 2 of the myocarditis cases among children have been biopsied. We think genetics and hormones may play a role.
The FDA conducted an extensive benefit/risk assessment through a series of six models. Because we can’t see into the future, biostatisticians ran different scenarios based on varying three variables: COVID19 cases (pandemic could get worse or better); real world effectiveness of vaccines (we think this will be high, but could vary depending on waning and variants); and rate of vaccine-induced myocarditis among this age group (we think it will be lower than adolescents but we don’t know). All of these risks are deliberately conservative. In other words, they looked at worse case scenarios for myocarditis risk and vaccine efficacy. This is what they found…
-For five scenarios, the benefits of a vaccine clearly outweigh the risks of myocarditis:
—-Scenario 1: Used number of COVID19 cases on Sept 11, 2021
—-Scenario 2: Used number of COVID19 cases at the Delta peak (worse case scenario)
—-Scenario 4: Used a high real-world effectiveness of the vaccine
—-Scenario 5: Used high COVID-19 death rate
—-Scenario 6: Used a lower estimate of myocarditis rate than adolescents (this is the likely scenario given the impact of hormones on myocarditis and given classic myocarditis among this group is so low)
There was one scenario ( #3) where benefits didn’t outweigh risks. In this model, the FDA used the lowest level of COVID19 cases like we saw in June 2021. Using this, the model predicts more excess hospitalizations due to vaccine-related myocarditis compared to prevented hospitalizations due to COVID-19 in males and in both sexes combined. It’s important to keep in mind that there are benefits to the vaccine beyond hospitalization.
There was quite a bit of discussion around the limitations of the risk/benefit analysis. For 5 to 11 year olds, 18% of COVID19 hospitalizations are not COVID19 related. The FDA risk/benefit ratio didn’t take this into account. The risk/benefit analysis also did not take into account natural immunity protection.
***Discussion***
As you can imagine, there was a robust discussion among voting members:
Make it available to certain 5-11 year olds? Two members voiced frustration that this was a binary choice: all or nothing vaccine for 5-11 year olds. Some asked whether they could rephrase the question for specific kids, like obese or immunocompromised. Some pointed to the number than 42% of kids have natural protection and that vaccines may not help that much.
On the other hand, others pointed out that 32% of kids hospitalized don’t have a comorbidity, and we have no idea where the pandemic will go. We have a flu vaccine to prevent 100 deaths a year and kids are dying at higher rates from COVID19. And, most importantly, this isn’t a decision for VRBPAC. VRBPAC decides whether the vaccine is safe and effective. Defining the policy (i.e. who gets the vaccine) is ACIP’s job. If VRBPAC doesn’t authorize EUA for kids, then no kid can get the vaccine.
Should 11 year olds wait for the 12 year old dose? This was specifically asked by the members because of the 3 breakthrough cases in the clinical trial: 10, 10 and 11 years old. Pfizer said that the effectiveness of the smaller dose works the same whether you are 5 or 11. They think breakthrough cases were older because they were more exposed to the virus. Pfizer hasn’t tested this dose among 12 year olds. So, ultimately, they don’t know if parents should wait. CDC should weigh into this next week.
Does the vaccine prevent transmission? Pfizer did not assess asymptomatic disease (and thus transmission) in the clinical trials. So, technically, they don’t know. They do know that adult vaccines reduce transmission. But adults had a higher dosage, does this matter? We don’t know, but we hypothesize that pediatric vaccines reduce transmission to some degree.
***Vote***
So, VRBPAC needed to vote: “Based on the totality of scientific evidence available, do the benefits of the PfizerBioNTech COVID-19 Vaccine when administered as a 2-dose series (10 µg each dose, 3 weeks apart) outweigh its risks for use in children 5-11 years of age?”
Yes: 17 votes
No: 0 votes
Abstain: 1 vote
The ball now goes to the FDA. Then, it goes to the ACIP and CDC next week. If all goes well, vaccines in arms for 5-11 year olds will come at the end of next week.
Love, YLE
I joined the President of the American Academy of Pediatrics last week for a Q&A regarding the vaccine for 5-11 year olds. See the recording here.
Other Q&A questions for parents answered in my newsletter here
Here are common vaccine concerns for parents and how to address them. If you’re a paying subscriber and want the PDF, just reply to this email. The latest draft is for adolescents specifically, but I’m happy to update for 5-11 year olds if helpful.
We have COVID vaccine slots available tomorrow so pls call 6615878882 for appointment (11am - 5 pm). We are vaccinating 12 y and up including parents.
Brimhall Pediatrics Our pediatricians Dr. Belinda Santos-Senar and Dr. Lyndon A. Senar are committed to providing high
Heartbreaking!! COVID doesn’t discriminate!! Pls get vaccinated for the sake of your children!!
A California couple died of Covid-19 weeks apart, orphaning 5 young children including a newborn
What you wear can help protect your skin from sunburns! When possible, dress yourself and your children in cool, comfortable clothing that covers the body such as lightweight cotton pants, long-sleeved shirts, and hats. Learn more here: https://www.healthychildren.org/English/safety-prevention/at-play/Pages/Sun-Safety.aspx
We are hiring!!
When you have a neurotypical child, you feel reasonably assured that class participation and decent study habits will result in good grades. These kids have close friends. They get invited to participate in social things like birthdays, play dates and weekend gatherings. They make the teams, auditions and are always busy doing something fun with their friends.
But when you have a child with certain differences, this is often not the case. Learning may take longer, both academically and socially. Despite their tremendous efforts, results are often a fraction of their peers and social acceptance is fleeting, setting them up for painful comparisons and bitter frustration. Instead of a fun and fulfilling experience, school can become a breeding ground for depression and anxiety, and homework a battle ground at home. It is exhausting for parents and child alike.
This is the month of SPED (Special Education), Autism, Dyslexia, and ADHD (Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder) awareness. For all the children who struggle every day to succeed in a world that does not recognize their gifts and talents, and for those who are walking beside them, please let this be a gentle reminder to be kind and accepting of ALL people.
Recognize that the "playing field" is not always a level surface.
Children who learn differently are not weird. They are merely gifted in ways that our society does not value enough. Yet they want what everyone else wants: To be accepted.
Please help me share awareness of this. Copy and paste (by touching and holding the text) onto your profile in honor of all children who are deemed "different". Our world would be far less beautiful without them.
❤️🧡💛💚💙💜
Is it eczema or something else? Learn the facts about Atopic Dermatitis here. And don't forget to call your pediatrician if you have any concerns about your child's health. https://www.healthychildren.org/English/health-issues/conditions/skin/Pages/Eczema.aspx
Employee appreciation taco lunch with the best taquero in town!!! Thanks to our staff for choosing to stay and work with us this pandemic year!! Thanks to all our patients for your understanding since we have to limit our appointment slots. Let’s all stay safe and healthy this year and the coming years. Merry Christmas to all!!🎄🎄🎁
Get to know vaccine preventable diseases for your babies!
Infant and Childhood Vaccines | Parents | Vaccines & Immunization Parents, learn what you need to know about vaccines, including which vaccines your child needs and how to prepare for vaccine visits.
Have you put up your holiday decorations yet?
When you think of children and holiday decorations, you have to be sure that everything is as safe as possible. Children have a way of finding trouble.
What is the best way to childproof your holiday set-up without sacrificing the magic of your decorations? Here are some pediatrician-approved tips.
Full article on my blog: https://thepediatricianmom.com/ten-childproofing-tips-for-the-holidays/
follow me on Instagram: www.Instagram.com/thepediatricianmom
Saw this very adorable patient with a very cute bow. I asked mom where she got it and she said she made it and is selling them. I got her permission to take photos and post it so we can help support her small business in our community!! Pls check her FB and IG page if you wanna order cute bows for your baby girls. & Sassy Bows And More
Fun educational activities to stimulate your kids’ sensory development!!
16 Sensory Activities for Kids at Home Are you looking for fun, educational activities you can do at home with your infant, toddler, or preschooler to encourage sensory development? Get started with these 16 ideas.
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9840 Brimhall Road Unit 100
Bakersfield, CA
93312
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