Millions of doses specifically formulated for children of that age
group will start arriving at distribution centers over the next few
days, White House coronavirus response coordinator Jeff Zients said,
and the federal government has purchased enough supply for all
eligible 28 million children.
"We are ready to execute, pending CDC's decision. And starting the
week of November 8th, our vaccination program for kids ages 5
through 11 will be running at full strength," Zients told reporters
at a briefing.
The U.S. Food and Drug Administration on Friday authorized the
Pfizer Inc and BioNTech SE coronavirus vaccine for children aged 5
to 11 years, making it the first COVID-19 shot for young children in
the United States.
The U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention still needs to
advise on how the shot should be administered, which will be decided
after a group of outside advisers discuss the plan on Tuesday.
Following the CDC's decision, parents will be able to visit
vaccines.gov and filter locations offering the vaccine for the
children, Zients said.
"The whole plan is based on Pfizer vaccines," he said.
Moderna Inc said on Sunday it would delay filing its request for an
emergency use authorization for a half-strength 50-microgram dose of
the vaccine for children ages 6 to 11.
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Shares in Moderna fell 2.3%, or
$8.04, to $337.17 on Monday while Pfizer shares
were off 10 cents at $43.64. At
the end of last week, the seven-day average number of coronavirus
cases dropped 3% to around 69,000 daily cases, the average
hospitalization rate fell 10% to around 5,100 cases, and the daily
deaths average fell 10% to around 1,100, CDC Director Dr. Rochelle
Walensky said at the same briefing.
U.S. Chief Medical Advisor Dr. Anthony Fauci said it was "very
likely" everyone would be able to get a vaccine booster shot "within
a reasonable amount of time."
Currently the CDC recommendations for boosters cover specific
categories of people.
(Reporting by Ahmed Aboulenein and Alexandra Alper; Additional
reporting by Susan Heavey in Washington and Michael Erman in New
Jersey; Editing by Alison Williams, Mark Porter and Marguerita Choy)
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