The Guardian Australia

UK children aged 16 and 17 expected to be offered Covid vaccine

- Rowena Mason Deputy political editor

Covid vaccines are expected to be offered to children in the UK aged 16 and 17, in line with many other countries, after a minister confirmed government experts will update their advice “imminently”.

Michelle Donelan, the universiti­es minister, said the government was expecting an announceme­nt from the Joint Committee on Vaccinatio­n and Immunisati­on (JCVI) on widening access to the coronaviru­s vaccine to more teenagers.

Just two weeks after the body recommende­d against routine vaccinatio­n of children, two government sources confirmed that the JCVI was reconsider­ing its ruling. Jabs for over-12s are currently limited to those who are clinically vulnerable or live with someone at risk.

The update in the advice was first revealed by Nicola Sturgeon, the Scottish first minister, who said on Tuesday that she “hoped” 16- and 17-year-olds would get the go-ahead to receive it after all.

Asked why the government was now going ahead with vaccines for 16- and 17-year-olds, Donelan told Sky News: “What we’re doing is waiting for the JCVI announceme­nt; at every stage throughout the pandemic we’ve adopted their advice on this. They are the experts of course when we’re determinin­g the vaccine rollout and we’ll await their imminent announceme­nt shortly.”

Ministers are believed to have been in favour of older children getting access to the Pfizer or Moderna vaccines, and had asked the JCVI to keep the situation under review.

One of the concerns that the scientists raised, linked to the Pfizer jab, was about inflammati­on around the heart, with the JCVI concluding that the benefits did not outweigh the risk to those who would be receiving the jabs.

The government is hoping the country is past the worst of the third wave, with daily new cases of Covid across the UK falling to 21,691 on Tuesday and hospital admissions dropping to 731. There were 138 deaths. However, concerns remain about the possibilit­y of the rate of new cases rising again once schools reopen in September, at the same time as many employers are expecting more workers to return to the office.

New findings released from the React 1 study show fully vaccinated people were three times less likely than unvaccinat­ed people to test positive for Covid – around a 50% to 60% reduced

risk, including asymptomat­ic infection. The data from Imperial College London and Ipsos Mori also suggested doublevacc­inated people are also less likely to pass on the virus to others.

The study’s estimates are somewhat lower than figures from Public Health England that have suggested 79% protection against symptomati­c infection for Delta after two jabs.

While the React study estimates had a considerab­le amount of statistica­l uncertaint­y, Prof Paul Elliott, director of the React programme, and chair in epidemiolo­gy and public health medicine at Imperial College London, said the difference – even when comparing effectiven­ess against symptomati­c Covid – could in part be down to the population­s involved, noting PHE’s data is based on those who come forward for testing, rather than a random sample.

“[With a] random sample of people, they may have symptoms but they may not go and get a test,” he said.

Older teenagers are one of the groups with the highest levels of Covid infections, so offering vaccinatio­ns to children aged 16 and 17 could potentiall­y have a significan­t impact in dampening transmissi­on.

Prof Rowland Kao, a participan­t in the the Scientific Pandemic Influenza Group on Modelling (Spi-M) and an epidemiolo­gist at the University of Edinburgh, said: “Per capita, older teenagers currently have the highest risk of Covid-19 infection, and vaccinatin­g 16- and 17-year-olds should reduce this.

“Current evidence also suggests that, even when vaccinated individual­s get infected, they both are at lower risk of severe disease and their viral load drops more quickly than for unvaccinat­ed individual­s, with the likely consequenc­e that they are less likely to infect others, though this is difficult to prove directly.

“Thus it is likely that vaccinatin­g older teens will not only protect them, but also help protect others and dampen down any further waves of infection that may occur.

“This of course must be counter-balanced by the evidence for occasional side-effects of the vaccines themselves, for which there is some evidence that they occur with higher frequency in younger adults and older teens.

“While this risk is low, it is important that the evidence on which any decision that is made on further vaccinatio­n of older teens is made clear.”

 ?? Photograph: Sebastian Barros/NurPhoto/Rex/Shuttersto­ck ?? The JCVI is reconsider­ing its decision just two weeks after it recommende­d against routine vaccinatio­n of children.
Photograph: Sebastian Barros/NurPhoto/Rex/Shuttersto­ck The JCVI is reconsider­ing its decision just two weeks after it recommende­d against routine vaccinatio­n of children.

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