 The study aimed to assess intentions of parents' guardians to vaccinate their children aged 0-17 against COVID-19, and how these intentions vary based on various socio-demographic characteristics, healthcare coverage, vaccination status, political affiliation, prior COVID-19 infection, exposure to COVID-19 deaths of family or friends, perceived norms of vaccination, and COVID-19 vaccine hesitancy. The study found that more than one-third of parents whose child was not yet eligible for vaccination planned to get them vaccinated right away when a vaccine became available, while approximately a third of parents whose child was already eligible had already been vaccinated or planned to do so right away. Intentions to vaccinate children were significantly associated with various factors, including age, gender, race, ethnicity, education, COVID-19 vaccination, political affiliation, social norms, and vaccine hesitancy. The study discusses implications for public health officials and future research. This article was authored by Donnie Willis, Mario Scootman, Summit Keisha, and others. We are article.tv, links in the description below.