Category: Covid-19 Vaccine

Page 361«..1020..360361362363..370380..»

The debate over Covid-19 vaccine boosters and what to call them – STAT

September 5, 2021

U.S. health officials want you to get another shot of Covid-19 vaccine. But some experts in the vaccine world dont think we should be using the B word to describe that extra jab.

Dont call it a booster, they insist.

Instead they argue an additional dose of one of the messenger RNA vaccines should be termed a third dose, a part of the primary series of shots that awaken and arm immune systems to deal with the threat of the SARS-CoV-2 virus.

advertisement

Is it semantics? Does it make any material or practical difference what we call it? Does approving use of a booster shot put the country on a slippery slope toward annual Covid vaccinations? STAT asked a number of experts for their views. Lets explore what we learned in the process.

Earlier this week, Stanley Plotkin called in to a meeting of the Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices, which guides the Centers for Disease Control and Preventions vaccine policy.

advertisement

Plotkin needed no introduction to anyone who works in the fields of immunology or vaccinology. He developed the rubella vaccine now bundled in a measles, mumps, and rubella (and sometimes varicella, a.k.a. chickenpox) vaccine that has been used for decades. He is the minence grise of vaccine science, and the senior author of the definitive textbook on these preventatives, Plotkins Vaccines.

All that to say when Stanley Plotkin speaks, people listen.

During the meeting, Plotkin urged the ACIP to stop talking about Covid vaccine boosters. The third shot should be considered the final dose of the original series of vaccines, he argued. We may or may not need later boosters at a later date, Plotkin said. But for now, the third dose is finishing the job of generating a robust and lasting immune response.

Its well known in vaccinology that when using inactivated or non-replicating vaccines vaccines that dont use a live-virus to trigger an immune response multiple doses are needed. A priming dose (or doses) is followed four to six months later with an additional jab that helps the immune response to mature, he said. Many vaccines given in childhood are administered in a three-dose series, with a gap of several months between the second and third shots.

Does that mean the original two doses of the Pfizer and Moderna vaccines given three and four weeks apart, respectively were poorly timed? Plotkin, who consults with multiple vaccine manufacturers, was not ready to go there. The durability of the immune response would likely have been better had the doses been spaced out further, but going months between dose 1 and dose 2 might have led to more Covid deaths, he told STAT.

He suggested the word booster carries a connotation that is not helpful as the country struggles to increase Covid vaccine acceptance: My point, basically, was that calling them boosters implies that the first doses were failures.

Calling the third dose a booster is immunologically incorrect and also gives the wrong impression that somehow the vaccines failed when they could not really have been expected to give a long-lasting immunity from the first doses, Plotkin said.

The Pfizer-BioNTech partnership has strung together a series of firsts with Covid vaccines. It was the first vaccine to be put into use, the first to get full Food and Drug Administration approval, and is the first to apply to give a third dose which the company is calling a booster.

Pfizer is not asking the FDA to revise the license for Comirnaty, its Covid vaccine, to classify it as a three-dose vaccine.

We expect the primary series to remain at two doses for healthy individuals, the company said in an emailed reply to questions from STAT. Our application to the FDA requests approval of a booster dose for those 16 years of age and older.

[Its important to understand that this application relates to a third dose for everyone who got two doses of the Pfizer vaccine. Earlier the CDCs vaccine advisory panel, ACIP, recommended that people who are moderately to severely immunocompromised be given this vaccine in a three-dose series, because they do not respond adequately to two doses.]

Increasing reports of breakthrough infections in fully vaccinated people fueled the decision to use third doses of the mRNA vaccines. The Biden administration points to more infections among people who were vaccinated early in the vaccine rollout to suggest protection is waning. Scientists who are critical of the decision argue that the rise in breakthrough cases coincided with the surge of the more infectious Delta variant and declining support for social distancing measures, making it difficult to tease out what is really going on.

Kathleen Neuzil, director of the Center for Vaccine Developmentat the University of Maryland Medical School, thinks getting more adults vaccinated, both domestically and internationally, and getting children younger than 12 vaccinated would do more to control Covid than giving healthy Americans a third dose at this stage.

I am clearly in the get-vaccine-to-the-world camp, Neuzil said. It is absolutely the right thing to do, its also the smart thing to do. We are going to be chasing variants forever if we cant get the majority of the population vaccinated and convert this from a severe disease to hopefully just a nuisance disease.

Ali Ellebedy, who studies the immune systems response to infection and vaccination, isnt sure healthy adults currently need a third jab of the Pfizer or Moderna vaccines, based on what he is seeing.

His laboratory at Washington University in St. Louis, studies the lymph node and bone marrow of vaccinated people to see how their immune systems are engaging to generate protection against SARS-2. Most of the people his group has studied are still generating a response to their second dose of vaccine even six months after that dose was received, he said.

I dont think that will be hurt by additional immunization. I just think that well, we really didnt even reach the full potential of the second dose [yet], said Ellebedy, who is an associate professor of pathology and immunology.

Usually, you give an additional immunization to re-engage the system. But at least in most of the individuals we looked at, the system is already engaged, he said.

Ellebedy thinks a third dose will help the people who get it, though hes not sure whether a third-shot program will have a clinically important impact. By that he means it may not change the risk of severe disease that twice-vaccinated people face because they already have good protection. The immune memory we are seeing is really robust, he said.

We probably wouldnt be talking about third shots or boosters whatever you want to call them but for the emergence of the Delta variant, he said. Delta really changed the game.

For the record, Ellebedy will get a third shot when hes eligible. I do think there will be a benefit from having a third shot.

Pfizer CEO Albert Bourla has publicly raised the prospect that annual Covid shots may be required. The companys official line is that annual jabs may be needed, but there arent enough data yet to say one way or the other.

Plotkin agrees. The idea of an annual booster will depend on what happens to the antibody level after this third dose, he said. I would hope that the antibodies would persist pretty well. But if Im wrong and also if the virus changes considerably that like with influenza, you need to adjust the vaccine to the mutations of the virus then I guess I could imagine annual vaccination. But we just dont have the data yet.

Ellebedy said, having seen the immune responses reaction to vaccination, he doubts well need fourth shots in the near future. But he added the caveat that until the Delta variant emerged, he didnt think wed need a third dose so soon either.

Maybe not, said Jeffrey Duchin, health officer for the Seattle and King County public health department.

I dont think its that meaningful for the general public, said Duchin, who is also a professor of infectious diseases professor at the University of Washington.

What the general public wants to know and it needs to know is how many doses do I need? And when do I need to get them? And the scientists need to figure out whether those doses are going to be in the form of a primary series that would be relatively closely spaced together over a period of months or primary series and then a booster, which typically comes at a more delayed timeframe, down the road maybe years, he said.

Its also important for people to understand that the scientific and public health communities are still learning about the best way to use these vaccines, Duchin said. That means as new knowledge is acquired, recommendations on use of the vaccines including, potentially, boosters are going to evolve.

I do think that this is going to be an evolution in our understanding and fine tuning of how we use these vaccines based on what we learn. So, the next set of recommendations may not be the last, he said. Theyll be the best set of recommendations that we can make based on the information thats currently available. And I think as we learn more, we may find that we can make improvements. Maybe, maybe not. But I think time will tell whats the best way to use these vaccines.

Read the rest here:

The debate over Covid-19 vaccine boosters and what to call them - STAT

Businesses find protests and support in the wake of COVID-19 vaccine and testing policies – Salt Lake Tribune

September 5, 2021

(The Bayou Facebook Page) The Bayou, a Salt Lake City bar and restaurant, faced protests on Saturday, August 28, 2021 due to their vaccination policy for dine-in service.

| Sep. 4, 2021, 12:00 p.m.

People calling The Bayou, a bar and restaurant in Salt Lake City, used to hear information on dining hours and takeout orders when called in but that has changed since they started a policy of only serving vaccinated customers.

If you would like to argue with us about how this is either unconstitutional, or illegal, or violates your misguided idea of what HIPAA stands for, please visit our website first, where we will have most certainly addressed your issue, The Bayous voicemail states, after explaining its policy. Our website should also dissuade you of any crazy idea that we are either discriminating or are somehow secret communists.

The Bayou was closed for dine-in service from late Feb. 2020 until May 2021, when their staff and ownership were able to be vaccinated against COVID-19. They decided to reopen their dining room with a requirement that customers show proof of vaccination.

But some people did not take the policy well, and last Saturday they marched in front of the restaurant, chanting, holding signs and yelling at the owners, who shouted back from the roof.

When the policy was first announced the group Utah Business Revival drummed up a bunch of protest and drama about the restaurants policy, according to Mark Alston, the co-owner of The Bayou. The attention came with death threats but The Bayou didnt back down.

Alston says the group which protested last week, Utah Patriots, was a spinoff of Utah Business Revival.

Last weeks protest fell flat in a crucial way, according to Alston. The Bayou was closed when the marchers arrived.

They werent disruptive to our business because they had clearly done about the same high quality of research on our business theyve done on the vaccine in the sense that they showed up when we were closed, Alston said.

Not only did they show up when we were closed, but they showed up with a significant number of small children, and were a bar. So Im not sure what the point of having small children protesting that they cant come into a bar is, but that was kind of how well they were researching.

Despite the protest and the threats, Alston said most of The Bayous customers supported their policy.

Across the street, the live music venue The State Room implemented a similar policy to The Bayous, requiring all patrons, staff, and artists to show proof of vaccination with corresponding ID or proof of negative test dated within 24 hours of attending an event.

Chris Mautz, a co-owner at The State Room, said he hasnt seen many customers, if any, requesting refunds.

We were working internally amongst our staff leading into [the new policy], so it certainly was no surprise on that front, Mautz said. Patrons, you know, overwhelmingly, the response has been very positive. You know, it does feel like if you are paying attention to whats happening out there in the touring world and the venue world, that the real momentum and movement is to be heading in this direction.

The State Room has done some research in possibly holding a vaccination event and Mautz feels they are encouraging vaccinations for their patrons.

For Alston at The Bayou, the point is that they dont want to contribute to the spread of the COVID.

Doing the right thing isnt supposed to be easy its not easy, Alston said. " Were basically losing money every day were open right now. But the alternative is for us to stay closed, at least for us. I mean, bars and restaurants are a huge spread point for the Coronavirus, and were not going to be a part of making everything worse, especially with as bad as it is in Utah right now.

Although The Bayou moved back to dine-in service with the vaccine, increasing case rates have put a damper on their expected return to normal. In the meantime, Alston says the situations created by the pandemic have been bad but thats just sometimes life sucks. And you have to deal with it.

What I will say about these protesters is that, especially in Utah, where theres no government mandate requiring this, but there are a handful, a very small handful of businesses trying to do the right thing, that [the protesters] claiming some sort of American freedom by protesting us operating our businesses the way we see fit, and the way we feel safe, is incredibly anti-American.

See the original post:

Businesses find protests and support in the wake of COVID-19 vaccine and testing policies - Salt Lake Tribune

OPINION: Belmont must join other US universities in mandating the COVID-19 vaccine – Belmont Vision

September 5, 2021

Belmont needs to do better.

The release of the universitys COVID-19 vaccination rates Tuesday showed only 63% of students received vaccinations against the virus. The university strongly encourages the vaccine on a voluntary basis, but as case numbers start to rise once again at Belmont and beyond this time with deadlier, more contagious variants in the mix its clear that strong encouragement isnt enough.

The upward trends in case frequncy tell an all-too-familiar story, and last year, that story ended with campus abandoned and students isolated.

Belmont needs to take the next step when it comes to protecting our community by mandating the COVID-19 vaccine for students, faculty and staff.Taking into account legitimate medical and religious exemptions, every member of our Belmont community needs to get the vaccine; after seeing Tuesdays report and its dismal figures, a mandate seems to be the only thing that will make it happen.

As of Friday, over 700 colleges in the U.S., both public and private, require students to have theCOVID-19 vaccination in order to attend.

Belmont can take action now to join those ranks. In doing so, we can acknowledge what it truly means to love your neighbor and protect those who are most vulnerable.

Almost all serious and fatal COVID-19 cases now occur among the unvaccinated. At the beginning of the pandemic, it was age and underlying conditions that determined your risk of hospitalization or death from COVID-19. Now, its vaccine status.

Fully vaccinated individuals account for only 6.5% of new COVID-19 cases, according to a Houston study referenced by the CDC. Breakthrough infections happen, but, in the vast majority of cases, people who have been vaccinated avoid a trip to the hospital.

In addition, many routine shots are already required by the university. Mandating a vaccine to protect against COVID-19 would not be unprecedented in the slightest. Before they are allowed to attend, students are required to file immunization records showing vaccines against hepatitis B, meningitis, chickenpox, measles, mumps, rubella, tetanus, diphtheria and whooping cough.

Point being, vaccine mandates at Belmont already exist and are observed with no issue.

There is no excuse not to require another fully approved vaccine that can prevent a disease responsible for 4.55 million deaths worldwide in less than two years.

Upper administration strongly encourages all students to get the COVID-19 vaccine, so what is holding up a mandate? The answer is politics, and as excuses go, that one is pretty lousy. COVID-19 is an issue of public health, not public opinion, and the best way to slow the spread of the virus and to prevent infection by delta or other variants is to get vaccinated, according to experts at the CDC.

People use politics to justify a lot of bad decisions. If we allow fear of controversy to dictate our own safety, we are setting a precedent for the university to make decisions not because they are in our communitys best interest, but because they will invite the least amount of backlash. That is dangerous.

In refusing to mandate the vaccine at the university, we are giving oxygen to the thoroughly disproven dialogue coming from the most polarizing vaccine deniers. That is dangerous.

With city-wide restrictions lifted and the booming Nashville social scene open again, the bars are open and bands are back in town. It is inevitable that Bruins will want to live this year up to its full potential, but without the vaccine to protect our community, students risk being carriers in a chain of transmission that could end with someone losing their life.

That is dangerous.

Masks and social distancing served as the tourniquet to stop the bleeding, but vaccinations are what will close and heal the wound.

We have to stop living in the past when it comes to this pandemic.

We have to mandate the vaccine. We have to move forward.

This op-ed was written by Anna Jackson and Sarah Maninger. More information about Belmonts current health and safety policies can be found on the university webpage for COVID-19 data reporting.

-----

Would you be interested in receiving important Belmont news via email?Enter your email address below to have important stories sent right to you!

Thanks, we'll be in touch!

See the original post here:

OPINION: Belmont must join other US universities in mandating the COVID-19 vaccine - Belmont Vision

A&M announces COVID-19 vaccine incentives | News | thebatt.com – Texas A&M The Battalion

September 5, 2021

Texas A&M announced university COVID-19 vaccination incentives for staff and students in a university wide email on Sept. 3.

Fully vaccinated students and staff can submit proof of vaccination to enter to win large prizes by Oct. 14. The drawing for prizes will take place on Oct. 15, overseen by Ingram, Wallis & Co., P.C.

According to the email, five graduate or undergraduate students will receive $14,500 to use toward educational purposes including tuition and fees. Additionally, five faculty members have the chance to receive a variety of prizes.

Meanwhile, five Texas A&M or A&M System employees will be able to choose from two football Flex Packs, a $500 gift card to Barnes & Noble, a campus parking permit, membership to the Student Recreation Center or season tickets for OPAS or the Brazos Valley Symphony, the email reads.

A&M is still offering COVID-19 vaccines free of charge on campus for those wishing to get immunized before they are due for the drawing.

According to the email, the following requirements must be met in order to enter the random drawing:

"Individuals must be fully vaccinated against COVID-19 either one or two shots depending on the type of vaccine and manufacturer.

Individuals must submit their entry form directly to A&M's incentive program.

Individuals must be either enrolled or employed at A&M or one of the A&M System agencies, which are outlined in the programs terms and conditions."

If you have lost your vaccination card, you can contact your vaccine provider and ask for a copy of it from the Texas Immunization Registry, which keeps vaccine records for the Texas Department of State Health Services.

Read more:

A&M announces COVID-19 vaccine incentives | News | thebatt.com - Texas A&M The Battalion

COVID vaccination bus stops at Southlands Shopping Center – FOX 31 Denver

September 5, 2021

AURORA, Colo. (KDVR) People visiting the Southlands Shopping Center on Saturday had the opportunity to get the COVID-19 vaccine.

I thought it was going to be a bit longer, but it wasnt, just in and out, Thomas Fallon of Westminster said.

The states mobile vaccination site parked at the shopping center from 8 a.m. to 4 p.m. Its part of a statewide push to get more people vaccinated as hospitalizations surge.

I feel a lot safer, I also feel like the people around me are a lot more safe, Elijah Goldberry said.

The mobile vaccination site will be back at the Southlands Shopping Center on Saturday, Sep. 25.

Click here for more information on Colorado mobile vaccine clinics.

Continued here:

COVID vaccination bus stops at Southlands Shopping Center - FOX 31 Denver

Cow chips and COVID-19 vaccines: Wisconsin festival partners with vaccine clinic – WKOW

September 5, 2021

PRAIRIE DU SAC (WKOW) -- The Wisconsin State Cow Chip Throw has been a Prairie du Sac staple since 1975. This year, there was a new addition to the festival: coronavirus vaccines.

Sauk Prairie Healthcare teamed up with the festival to offer free COVID-19 shots to people at the event.

"Sauk Prairie Healthcare is interested in getting as many vaccines into people's arms as we can," Ken Carlson said. "We don't want to miss any opportunity to do that, and where people are maybe on the fence, we also want to be available to provide information as much as possible about COVID-19 vaccines."

Those who got their first shot are eligible for Wisconsin's $100 vaccine incentive.

However, Carlson said he wasn't expecting a lot of people to get the shot, even with the incentive.

"Our expectations for the number of people that come in and get vaccinated isn't through the roof because we know it's just one at a time," he said. "We've been pleased that in the first two couple of hours of operation we've gotten about five or six that have come through."

The main draw of the festival is the cow chip throwing contest, where participants try to toss their dried cow manure the furthest.

The throw didn't happen in 2020 because of the pandemic, and organizer Eddie Egan said that made this year's event even more special.

'It's nice to be back again," he said. "We hated to lose last year, but it's really fun to be out with the community again for this year."

More:

Cow chips and COVID-19 vaccines: Wisconsin festival partners with vaccine clinic - WKOW

Homeland Security Agents Intercept Counterfeit COVID-19 Vaccine Cards Headed to Idaho – bigcountrynewsconnection.com

September 5, 2021

Federal officials want to remind people that making fake coronavirus vaccine cards is a crime.

The Department of Homeland Security agents in Seattle recently intercepted a shipment of counterfeit COVID-19 vaccine cards bound for Idaho, according to a tweet from the field office.

Maderna or anyway you spell it, making counterfeit COVID-19 vaccination cards is a federal crime! the field office said in a tweet.

Seattle Homeland Security agents and the U.S. Customs and Border Patrol reportedly intercepted the phony vaccine cards being shipped into the United States.

The cards were bound for Idaho, though Homeland Security did not specify where in the Gem State the counterfeit cards were headed.

In a statement to The Idaho Statesman, Special Agent in Charge Robert Hammer who oversees all Homeland Security Investigations operations in the Pacific Northwest said specific charges for this case will be determined by the U.S. Attorneys Office. Hammer added that the matter is still under investigation.

What is important for the public to know is that purchasing these or any counterfeit items is a waste of money, and there will be legal consequences for presenting them in place of real vaccination cards, Hammer said in a statement. There are multiple federal statutes on the books that have already been used in charging individuals at the federal level for partaking in these fake COVID vaccination card schemes.

Earlier this week, an Illinois woman was arrested in Hawaii after she tried to use a fake vaccine card to bypass the states strict quarantine measures to prevent the spread of the coronavirus.

Authorities raised suspicion when they noticed her COVID-19 vaccine card misspelled Moderna as Maderna, according to Hawaii News Now, a local news outlet.

Excerpt from:

Homeland Security Agents Intercept Counterfeit COVID-19 Vaccine Cards Headed to Idaho - bigcountrynewsconnection.com

Local physicians talk COVID-19, vaccines and holiday gatherings – Gaston Gazette

September 5, 2021

COVID-19 and children under 12: How the pandemic affects the unvaccinated

COVID-19 cases have spiked among children especially those under 12 who are unvaccinated. Heres how to protect them.

Just the FAQs, USA TODAY

Just ahead of the Labor Day holiday, three of the biggest health providers in the region hosteda virtual press conferenceto talk about the severity of the COVID-19 surge.

Via a Zoom conference on Thursday, Dr. Todd Davis, chief physician executive for CaroMont Health, Dr. Sid Fletcher, senior vice president and chief clinical officer for Novant Health, and Dr. Katie Passaretti, epidemiologist and medical director of infection prevention for Atrium Health, urged the public to follow the latest CDC guidance this holiday weekend and to get the vaccine to fight against the delta variant.

Virus surge in schools:Gaston County public schools top 100 COVID-19 cases in first week of class

Forty-sevenguests attended the press conference to learn about the doctors' concerns as the variant becomes the most contagious strand of COVID-19.

"We've come together to really try to share with you the impact that we're seeing within the community so that you have an awareness about that and so that we share that with the public at large and kind of let you know that we're in this as a united front," said Fletcher.

As residents of all communities are welcoming the holiday by resting, watching footballor attending a gathering with friends, health professionals are urging those with these plans to take extreme precautions to avoid a further COVID-19 spread.

"There are a lot of concerns right now. We are at a challenging point in the pandemic. Holiday gatherings and travels are certainly a concern as we may see an increase of cases on top of our already high level," said Passaretti.

"Everyone wants to have a great holiday weekend, but please be careful. If you are going to a crowded setting, wear that mask. Do what you can to prevent spreading."

The doctors asked people to limit travel plans while the number of cases is high. A large number of indoor gatherings are also a concern.

According to the data shared by the three health organizations, there's currently an average of 933 patients hospitalized for COVID-19 in the area, with 92% of those patients being unvaccinated.

"That's very concerning for us," said Fletcher.

Of those,22%are in ICU with 97% on a ventilator.

According to Fletcher, the majority of patients admitted for COVID-19 are of young age in comparison to the majority of patients admitted at the beginning of the pandemic being of an older age.

"We're seeing patients who predominantly are not vaccinated, which is particularly heartbreaking for us because this seems to be preventable, and part of the appeal that we're going to give you is that you do things to proactively protect yourself, to protect your families and to protect the people that you love," said Davis.

News:Gastonia to continue free bus fares into November amid COVID-19 pandemic

During the discussion, doctors spoke frankly about the concern for capacity at area hospitals.

"Quite frankly, beds are scarce. We are running short on resources and certainly, that's very concerning to us. Itsurrounds difficulties in the capabilities that we have in the hospitals for both medical research capabilities and in particular in intensive care unit capabilities.," said Fletcher.

In addition to concerns about the surge of cases, the physicians talked about the strain on medical professionals to treat the staggering number of patients.

"The thing that we're most challenged by is really staffing. That'sdifferent than what we saw early in the pandemic. So right now we're functioning, but we are really just managing that, and we are incredibly full," said Fletcher.

The trio agreed that COVID-19 is "largely preventable illness," but vaccines are not being taken advantage of to fight the illness. They imploredthe community to help by taking the vaccineto protect themselves and free up time and attention for patients battling other illnesses.

"Our staff are tired andare trying to do everything they can to do to help you, but we would like our community now to start helping themselves as well," said Davis.

The number of newly vaccinated residents continues to decline even after the FDA announced its approval for the Pzifer vaccine, so the encouragement to get vaccinated was not a missing topic of conversation during the conference.

Passaretti acknowledged that somevaccinated peoplehave gotten COVID-19, but the difference istheir cases were mild in comparison to those not vaccinated.

When asked about the outlook if the vaccination rate doesn'timprove, doctors expressed their concern of what is to come.

"Frankly, we don't know. We have tried to model this, but the delta variant is behaving differently than the previous variant that we had to manage. What we're fearful of is if we do not reach community herd protection rates, that we could be experiencing this pandemic for a very prolonged period of time," said Davis.

Beatriz Guerrero can be reached at 704-869-1828 or on Twitter@BeatrizGue_

Continued here:

Local physicians talk COVID-19, vaccines and holiday gatherings - Gaston Gazette

COVID-19 vaccines: British health officials refuse to approve shots for healthy children ages 12-15 – Fox News

September 5, 2021

British health officials have refused to approve COVID-19 vaccinations for healthy children aged 12-15 years old.

Ministers have asked the officials to review the guidance in light of possible issues that might arise as the school term gets under way. The current guidance would allow for teens with underlying conditions or vulnerable parents to get the shot.

The decision on healthy children was based on concern over an extremely rare side effect of the Pfizer vaccine that causes heart inflammation, the BBC reported.

COVID-19 BOOSTER SHOTS: HEALTH AGENCIES ADVISE THEY NEED MORE DATA BEFORE ISSUING GUIDANCE

"The margin of benefit is considered too small to support universal COVID-19 vaccination for this age group at this time," said Wei Shen Lim, chair of COVID immunization for the Joint Committee on Vaccination and Immunization (JCVI). "The committee will continue to review safety data as they emerge."

The current program, which already includes some children with preexisting conditions, will now extend to include children with chronic heart, lung and liver conditions accounting for some 200,000 children who previously did not qualify, according to The Telegraph.

CORONAVIRUS IN THE US: STATE-BY-STATE BREAKDOWN

"The reason we decided to vaccinate those children with two doses is that we were looking at health benefits to the children themselves," said Anthony Harnden, deputy chair of the JCVI. "This was a really, really strong mental health issue in that if that child gave Covid to their parent or grandparent who lived with them who is immuno-suppressed, and they ended up with harm and even death from COVID, then it was going to haunt these youngsters for the rest of their lives."

"We thought that that mental health burden was so important that they would be put within those groups of children that would be having vaccinations for health reasons," he added.

FAUCHI: MU COVID VARIANT NOT AN IMMEDIATE THREAT TO AMERICANS

The chief medical officers of the four U.K. nations will not further evaluate the benefits and drawbacks of vaccinating the age group.

CLICK HERE TO GET THE FOX NEWS APP

The government had already announced preparations to provide shots to children in the age group starting in early September. The Department of Health and Social Care said that it wanted to be "ready to hit the ground running."

Here is the original post:

COVID-19 vaccines: British health officials refuse to approve shots for healthy children ages 12-15 - Fox News

Page 361«..1020..360361362363..370380..»