Health & Fitness
Virtua Doctor Encourages Vaccinations As Holidays Approach
Dr. Jeff Seiden has treated children - including toddlers and babies - who have contracted COVID-19.

With the arrival of the holiday season, a Virtua Health doctor who has treated children – including toddlers and babies – who have contracted COVID-19 is encouraging residents to get their children vaccinated.
“Families are eager to celebrate the holidays together, especially since many people remained apart last year,” Dr. Jeff Seiden said. “That’s why we should take advantage of every available opportunity to minimize risk of acquiring or transmitting COVID-19. It’s wonderful that children as young as 5 can now receive protection.”
Seiden said that although nearly every COVID-positive pediatric patient he’s cared for has made a complete recovery, that does not lessen the emotional duress and other challenging circumstances experienced by these families.
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“The child’s health is the most important thing, but we must also consider the fallout of days spent taking care of a sick child, possible emergency department visits or hospitalizations, medical bills, missed work and school – these things have consequences,” Seiden said. “That’s why we should do everything we can to stop children from getting COVID in the first place.”
Looking ahead to winter, a season associated with a variety of communicable diseases and additional time spent indoors, Seiden expressed concerns about compounded illness and hospital capacity limits.
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He said children (and adults) are likely to experience worse symptoms and require more extensive medical intervention should they acquire two illnesses at once, such as both COVID-19 and the flu.
Seiden also said that throughout the fall, many area health systems have reported uncommonly high patient volume. Should COVID-19, influenza, and seasonal ailments spike simultaneously, this would present a significant strain on health care resources, including staffing. Seiden said that hospital administrators might even be forced to ration beds.
He also dispelled what he said were common misconceptions:
- Misconception: The pandemic is ending, or will soon end on its own. Seiden said that the longer we live with this virus, the greater the opportunity for variants to develop, and that the variants could become increasingly severe or transmissible, much like the delta variant.
- Misconception: The vaccines are too risky for kids. Seiden said it is important to recognize that there is a risk with every vaccine or health care intervention. As the father of two fully vaccinated teenagers, he said that risk shouldn’t shut down the conversation, and instead it should serve as the starting point for a dialogue between provider and patient. He also feels strongly that the risks that come with acquiring COVID-19 are far greater – and more worrisome – than the rare, limited risks associated with the vaccines.
- Misconception: The vaccines were rushed. In speaking with infectious disease experts at CHOP and Virtua, Seiden said he has a profound appreciation for the rigorous process required to introduce vaccines to market.
“It is a process that does not tolerate risk,” Seiden said. “It is inherently conservative and cautious. Nothing gets approved on a whim, and everything is rooted in data and science.
“Those who can be vaccinated have an opportunity to protect those who are most vulnerable, such as babies and seniors. I’ve found that kids are excited to be part of the solution. Kids love superheroes and princesses, and those characters provide examples of why we must defend and care for one another.”
To schedule a vaccine appointment, find a walk-up vaccine site, or for more information about vaccines and COVID-19, please visit https://www.virtua.org/services/covid19-updates.
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