The Guardian Australia

Vulnerable children aged 5-11 to be offered Covid jabs

- Peter Walker, Ian Sample , Heather Stewart and Richard Adams

Hundreds of thousands of clinically vulnerable five- to 11-year-olds are to be offered Covid vaccines for the first time, with some scientists calling for the programme to be extended to the whole age group before the new UK school term.

The Joint Committee on Vaccinatio­n and Immunisati­on (JCVI) has recommende­d vaccinatio­ns for about 330,000 younger children at clinical risk, and also those living with someone who is immunosupp­ressed.

They will be offered two doses of the Pfizer vaccine – in 10-microgram amounts, a third of the quantity used for adults – with a gap of eight weeks.

A parallel announceme­nt will expand the booster programme to more teenagers, including 16 and 17year-olds.

The JCVI’s decision on five- to 11year-olds came after the UK’s medicine watchdog, the Medicines and Healthcare products Regulatory Agency (MHRA), approved the use of the Pfizer vaccine for them.

“Parents and carers can be reassured that no new vaccine for children would have been approved unless the expected standards of safety, quality and effectiven­ess have been met,” said Dr June Raine, the MHRA’s chief executive.

While the MHRA’s green light covers the entire age group, the JCVI is unlikely to approve a mass vaccine rollout among primary age children for another month or longer, a move that could frustrate ministers, aware that the US and a number of EU countries are already doing this.

Christina Pagel, a professor of operationa­l research at University College London, and a member of Independen­t Sage, said the delay was “setting children up for another term of educationa­l disruption and potential illness”, and would also place parents and school staff at greater risk.

She said: “The US has successful­ly and safely given over 7 million doses to children. Many EU countries are now vaccinatin­g primary school children before the next term. To say that there are logistical difficulti­es in administer­ing a smaller dose is simply not credible and not good enough.”

While teaching unions argue it is up to scientists and parents to decide on such matters, Julie McCulloch, head of policy at the Associatio­n of School and College Leaders, said the option of extending the rollout remained open, “and we hope that decision will be made in a timely manner”.

However, some medical experts have raised concerns about the legitimacy of vaccinatin­g children – who tend to experience Covid as a very mild illness – in order to protect the wider population.

The JCVI’s role is to balance any impact of vaccinatio­n against these notably lower risks faced from Covid by healthy younger children. In September, the watchdog referred the decision on mass vaccinatio­n for 12- to 15-year-olds to the UK’s chief medical officers, saying the net health benefit even for this age group was too small.

With the rapid spread of the Omicron variant, the JCVI also has to consider how much protection two vaccine doses will give, and whether the natural immunity seen in the estimated 40% of younger children already exposed to Covid helps repel the variant or not.

The JCVI could only act on vaccines for younger children when the MHRA approved the Pfizer vaccine for this use. Some officials have said the delay in this was caused by Pfizer only applying to the MHRA after the EU’s European Medicines Agency (EMA) completed its process for the age group.

In a parallel announceme­nt, the JCVI recommende­d the rollout of booster vaccinatio­ns to those aged 16 and 17; children aged 12-15 who are in a clinical risk group or in a household with someone immunosupp­ressed; and 12- to 15-year-olds who are severely immunocomp­romised and who have already had a third primary dose, the same as happens now for immunocomp­romised adults.

This should happen, again as with adults, no less than three months after the main doses.

All the JCVI’s recommenda­tions are UK-wide, though it is then up to the government­s of each UK nation to decide whether to accept them. The chief medical officer for Wales, Dr Frank Atherton, immediatel­y said he would.

The definition of clinically vulnerable children will be the same as used for adults, as set out in the section of the government’s so-called Covid green book detailing vaccines policy.

 ?? Photograph: Robin van Lonkhuijse­n/EPA ?? JCVI advice is for all UK children who are vulnerable to be jabbed, but each national government can decide for itself.
Photograph: Robin van Lonkhuijse­n/EPA JCVI advice is for all UK children who are vulnerable to be jabbed, but each national government can decide for itself.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Australia