From News Nation:
“US gives final clearance to
COVID-19 shots for kids 5 to 11”
U.S. health officials on Tuesday
gave the final signoff to Pfizer’s kid-size COVID-19 shot for children ages 5
to 11. The announcement by CDC director Dr. Rochelle Walensky came only hours
after an advisory panel unanimously decided Pfizer’s shots should be opened to
the 28 million youngsters in that age group. The Food and Drug Administration
cleared kid-size doses — just one-third the amount given to teens and adults —
for emergency use last week.
With the FDA’s action, Pfizer had
already begun shipping millions of vials of the pediatric vaccine — in orange caps
to avoid mix-ups with the purple-capped doses for everyone else — to doctors’
offices, pharmacies and other vaccination sites. Kids will get two shots, three
weeks apart. While children are at lower risk of severe illness or death from
COVID-19 than older people, 5- to 11-year-olds still have been seriously
affected — including over 8,300 hospitalizations, about a third requiring
intensive care, and nearly 100 deaths since the start of the coronavirus
pandemic, according to the FDA. And with the extra-contagious delta variant
circulating, the government has counted more than 2,000 coronavirus-related
school closings just since the start of the school year, affecting more than a
million children.
Nearly 70% of 5- to 11-year-olds
hospitalized for COVID-19 in the U.S. have other serious medical conditions,
including asthma and obesity, according to federal tracking. Additionally, more
than two-thirds of youngsters hospitalized are Black or Hispanic, mirroring
long-standing disparities in the disease’s impact. A Pfizer study of 2,268
schoolchildren found the vaccine was nearly 91% effective at preventing
symptomatic COVID-19 infections, based on 16 cases of COVID-19 among kids given
dummy shots compared to just three who got vaccinated. The kid dosage also
proved safe, with similar or fewer temporary reactions — such as sore arms,
fever or achiness — than teens experience. But the study wasn’t large enough to
detect any extremely rare side effects, such as the heart inflammation that
occasionally occurs after the second full-strength dose, mostly in young men
and teen boys. It’s unclear if younger children getting a smaller dose also
will face that rare risk. The similarly made Moderna vaccine also is being
studied in young children, and both Pfizer and Moderna also are testing shots
for babies and preschoolers.
^ Hopefully, this announcement
will help encourage Parents and their children to get vaccinated. ^
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.