Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

COVID-19 vaccine doses OK’d for children under 5 begin arriving in Wisconsin

- Benita Mathew

Children 6 months and older could get a COVID-19 vaccine as early as this week in some parts of Wisconsin.

State health officials preordered 48,500 of its nearly 126,000 allotted doses of Pfizer-BioNTech and Moderna vaccines, which have already begun arriving, Karen Timberlake, secretary of the state Department of Health, said during a press call Tuesday.

The vaccines will be shipped directly to larger health care systems or go through smaller regional hubs, she said.

The U.S. Food and Drug Administra­tion expanded the emergency use authorizat­ions for Moderna’s vaccine to include children 6 months through 5 years of age, and Pfizer-BioNTech’s for children 6 months through 4 years of age.

On Saturday, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention also signed off on vaccinatio­ns for children under 5. The new guidelines qualify nearly 300,000 children in the state for the vaccine, Timberlake said.

“It keeps them in school, summer activities, or child care, as well as safely participat­ing in sports, play dates and other group events,” Timberlake said.

As of Tuesday, about 62% of adolescent­s 12 to 17 and 28% of kids ages 5 to 11 got a dose of a COVID-19 vaccines statewide, according to DHS data.

Green Bay Press-Gazette USA TODAY NETWORK – WISCONSIN

Vaccine shipments on the way

The preordered doses are based on both supply and demand, Timberlake said. State health officials surveyed health care providers to determine how many estimated doses they would administer in the early weeks of the rollout to children 6 months and older.

With an allocation of just under 126,000 doses, Wisconsin health officials will place additional orders as the rollout continues, Timberlake said.

Children’s Wisconsin in Milwaukee expected its Pfizer doses to come in late Tuesday or Wednesday morning. Staff will begin administer­ing vaccines to children 6 months and older Monday, said Smriti Khare, pediatrici­an and chief mental and behavioral health officer at Children’s Wisconsin.

That will give them time to set up appointmen­ts and provide the providers with training about administer­ing the children’s vaccines.

In some Milwaukee health department clinics, vaccinatio­ns could be administer­ed this week, Khare said.

In Green Bay, Bellin Health is waiting on its shipments to arrive and has not announced when parents will be able to make an appointmen­t.

Young babies and toddlers already have well-child, regular checkups, prompting Khare to say it will be easier to get the newly eligible age group vaccinated, as their parents won’t have to bring them in for a separate appointmen­t to get the COVID-19 shot.

Most pharmacies will only administer shots to children 3 and older

While retail pharmacies played a large role in getting older age groups vaccinated, rollout will be focused more on pediatrici­ans’ offices for the state’s youngest children.

That’s because most pharmacies, including Walgreens, will only be able to vaccinate children 3 or older, according to the federal Public Readiness and Emergency Preparedne­ss Act — which prohibits pharmacies from administer­ing a vaccine to a child under 3 without a prescripti­on.

Khare suggested parents should call ahead and confirm with their pharmacy.

The exception is CVS Pharmacy, which plans to administer COVID-19 vaccines to younger children — those ages 18 months and up — at its national network of 1,100 MinuteClin­ic locations.

That’s because MinuteClin­ics are made up of family nurse practition­ers, physician associates, and nurses who have a background of giving vaccinatio­ns to children. The clinics also provide private exam rooms to make families more comfortabl­e with getting a shot, spokespers­on Amy Thibault said in an email to the USA TODAY NETWORK-Wisconsin Tuesday. The PREP Act applies to pharmacist­s.

The best way to get an appointmen­t as soon as possible is to first call your regular pediatrici­an or family doctor, Timberlake said. An updated list of vaccine sites will be found at www. vaccines.gov.

‘COVID is not risk-free for children’

The Pfizer-BioNTech vaccine will be given at a 3-microgram dose, which is one-tenth the size of the adult dose. Three doses will provide the same protection as seen in young adults after two doses, making it a three-dose vaccine for children.

The Moderna vaccine for children 6 months to 5 years is 25 micrograms, one-quarter of the adult dose. It will be followed by a 10-microgram booster.

While children are less likely than other groups to become seriously ill from COVID-19, they are not untouchabl­e, Khare said.

According to the CDC, as of May 28, more than 400 between 0 and 4 years have died due to COVID.

Approval of the vaccines for children is a crucial step to combating long COVID-19 and the possibilit­y of developing multi-system inflammatory syndrome in children, a condition that can cause inflammation of the heart, lungs, kidneys, brain, eyes and other organs, according to the CDC.

During the omicron variant surge, for instance, children were hospitaliz­ed at a rate five times higher than during the delta wave, according to DHS data.

The vaccines will also help kids return back to normal life as they may continue to face isolation or loneliness since the start of the pandemic.

“We had a mental health crisis before the pandemic. It’s worse now and anything we can do to get children better is very important,” Khare said. “...COVID is not risk-free for children.”

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