U.S. COVID vaccines start to roll out
for young children
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[June 22, 2022]
By Leroy Leo
(Reuters) - The United States has begun
distributing COVID vaccines for children as young as six months around
the country, and availability of the shots will improve in the coming
days, according to White House COVID-19 response coordinator Dr. Ashish
Jha.
U.S. regulators authorized Moderna Inc's two-dose vaccine for children
aged six months to five years and the Pfizer-BioNTech three-shot regimen
for children aged six months to four years late last week.
It is unclear how many parents will vaccinate their youngest children.
Just one-in-five parents with children under age five said they intended
to vaccinate them "right away" after they become eligible, a survey by
the Kaiser Family Foundation published in May showed. Only about 29% of
children aged five to 11 have been fully vaccinated with the Pfizer-BioNTech
vaccine since it was authorized in October, according to U.S. data.
Chinmay Hegde, father of a 14-month old daughter, told Reuters outside
Children's National Hospital in Washington that the U.S. authorization
was a huge relief. His daughter was the first to be vaccinated at the
hospital on Tuesday.
"I feel like we can just now go travel and do our trips without feeling
as much stress," he said, mentioning a planned family reunion in Canada
in July.
Children who begin their vaccinations with the Pfizer shot this week
could receive their third dose the week of Sept. 12 or later. Those who
receive a first Moderna shot this week could complete their inoculation
as soon as July 19.
Dr. Celine Gounder, an infectious disease specialist and editor-at-large
for Public Health at Kaiser Health News, said parents will need to
consider a trade-off between the number of shots and risk of
side-effects.
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U.S. President Joe Biden holds a young girl during a visit to a
coronavirus disease (COVID-19) vaccination clinic hosted by the
District of Columbia's Department of Health (DC Health) and offering
vaccinations to children under age five, at the Church of the Holy
Communion in Washington, U.S., June 21, 2022. REUTERS/Kevin Lamarque
Moderna's vaccine uses a larger dose
and has a higher likelihood of inducing fever than Pfizer's.
"These are not dangerous side effects and they are manageable with
medications like acetaminophen," said Gounder, a former member of
President Joe Biden's COVID transition team.
But some parents may feel like "'well, even if it's a three-dose
vaccine, it will minimize the risk of fever,'" she said.
Jha said on Twitter on Monday that the rollout for
younger children differed from those for other age groups in that
there were no mass vaccination sites, but there would be more
inoculations done in doctors' offices.
"Parents are clear they want to vaccinate their littlest ones in
familiar settings - doctors offices, pharmacies, health clinics, and
children's hospitals," he tweeted.
The vaccines began shipping on Friday and Saturday,
Jha said, adding that more doctors' offices and hospitals would
begin receiving them on Tuesday and Wednesday of this week.
Not all pharmacies will offer the shots to everyone in this age
group. CVS Health Corp will offer shots for children aged 18 months
and up, while Walmart Inc and Rite Aid Corp will offer them to those
aged 3 and older.
(Reporting by Ankur Banerjee and Leroy Leo in Bengaluru, Katherine
Jackson in Washington DC; Additional reporting by Julio-Cesar
Chavez, editing by Caroline Humer and Bill Berkrot)
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