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Though the COVID-19 vaccine for kids is now on its way, some parents oppose its use, and here are the reasons why.
According to the researchers, this COVID-19 vaccine for kids opposition was more common among mothers than fathers and was particularly prevalent among white mothers who identified as Republican or Republican-leaning.
Jessica Calarco shared that women are more likely than men to obey expert medical advice for avoiding health risks because they act as family health managers within the family. She is a study co-author and Indiana University Bloomington sociology professor.
Survey: 1 in 4 parents won t vaccinate their kids against COVID-19
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One in four parents participating in a recent survey said they would not get their children vaccinated against COVID-19. File Photo by Ian Halperin/UPI | License Photo
More than one-quarter of U.S. parents don t plan to vaccinate their kids for COVID-19, and roughly as many oppose school-required coronavirus shots, a new study finds.
This opposition was more common among moms than dads, and was especially common among white mothers who identified as Republican/Republican-leaning, the researchers said.
Advertisement Women tend to serve as family health managers within the family so they are generally more likely than men to follow expert medical recommendations for avoiding health risks, said study co-author Jessica Calarco.
After the Washington Nationals won the World Series in 2019, Abby Prywitch and her fellow student journalists at Parkway Central High School brainstormed an idea about an alum they would like to interview: Max Scherzer, a star pitcher on the Nationals.
âRight away, I knew that I really wanted to do that story, so I volunteered for it,â said Pyrwitch, who is Jewish and serves as editor-in-chief of
Corral, the schoolâs newspaper.
But it would not be an easy assignment.Â
Her persistence in reporting on Scherzer and a number of other well-written stories recently earned Prywitch the 2021 Student Journalist of the Year award from the Missouri Interscholastic Press Association.Â
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The cat may not have intended to prank the professor, but that was how it came across in the moment. As we began our late night Zoom call, the cunning kitty pulled off an unexpected photobomb by jumping into the frame and absolutely refusing to leave. I relished the coincidence. We were talking about April Fools Day, after all, and photobombing is one type of prank. even if that wasn t what her cat intended. It s not in any way affection or love, Dr. Giselinde Kuipers, who teaches sociology at the Belgian university KU Leuven, told Salon as her feline friend swished his tail in her face. He thinks he owns this chair and comes to inform me and to push me out.