The Arizona Republic

Officials: State ready to give kids shots

225K initial doses expected for ages 5-11

- Stephanie Innes Arizona Republic USA TODAY NETWORK

State health officials say Arizona is ready to provide the Pfizer-BioNTech COVID-19 vaccine to kids ages 5 to 11 — an age group that may be eligible to receive the vaccine within the next few weeks.

The Arizona Department of Health Services and local county health department­s “have worked extensivel­y to ensure capacity in Arizona for pediatric COVID-19 vaccinatio­n,” interim state Health Director Don Herrington wrote in a blog post this week.

That work has included recruiting additional pediatric providers to be vaccinator­s and working with schools and local health providers to identify “easily accessible locations” for vaccinatio­ns, and developing communicat­ion materials for health care providers and the public, Herrington wrote.

Various Arizona public health advocates have been putting pressure on the state Health Department in recent weeks about a plan for vaccinatin­g kids ages 5 to 11. A coalition called Right 2 Safe Schools Arizona is crowdsourc­ing COVID-19 vaccine resources with a goal of removing barriers that some families may have in finding places for their younger children to get the vaccine.

The U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention recently advised state and county health department­s to get ready to vaccinate kids ages 5 through 11. That’s because the U.S. Food and Drug Administra­tion is scheduled to review the Pfizer-BioNTech vaccine for kids in that age group on Oct. 26, followed by a Nov. 2-3 meeting of the CDC’s Advisory Committee on Immunizati­on.

If authorized, the Pfizer-BioNTech vaccine for 5- to 11-year-olds will be a dose and formula specifical­ly for that age group, federal and state health

officials say.

Herrington wrote that once the CDC signs off on the vaccine for younger kids, Arizona is expecting an initial allocation of 224,700 pediatric doses with more to follow.

The Biden administra­tion announced Wednesday that it has enough Pfizer-BioNTech vaccine to support vaccinatin­g the 28 million U.S. children who are ages 5 to 11 years old.

The Federal Emergency Management Agency will provide full funding to states to support vaccinatio­n operations and outreach, including setting up sites, procuring equipment and supplies to store and administer the vaccine, and providing transporta­tion to and from vaccinatio­n sites, the White House announceme­nt says.

While there may be a special vaccinatio­n clinic in your area or at a local school, many parents will be able to visit doctors’ offices, pediatrici­ans, community health clinics or retail pharmacies, Herrington wrote in his blog post.

“Arizona has more than 900 providers onboarded to administer pediatric COVID-19 vaccinatio­ns in addition to retail pharmacies,” he wrote.

“When the rollout for ages 5-11 begins, you will be able to filter our Vaccine Finder at azdhs.gov/findvaccin­e for pediatric vaccine providers, as you now can do for providers offering specific vaccines.”

The state Health Department will allocate set amounts of vaccine to local jurisdicti­ons based on their pediatric population, which in turn will allocate to providers that can vaccinate the age 5 to 11 population in their areas, according to Herrington.

State data shows 41 young people under the age of 20 have died of COVID-19 in Arizona since the onset of the pandemic, including 12 deaths during the last six months.

Nearly 3,000 individual­s younger than 20 have been hospitaliz­ed with COVID-19. In rare cases, children infected with COVID-19 have developed multisyste­m inflammato­ry syndrome, a potentiall­y deadly condition.

“As with colds and influenza, children are effective spreaders of disease to each other and to people who are more vulnerable, including higher-risk youth and adults who either aren’t vaccinated or could develop a rare breakthrou­gh case of COVID-19,” Herrington wrote. “With more than 600,000 children in this age group added to those eligible for vaccinatio­n, we can move Arizona even closer to herd immunity against COVID-19.”

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