The Columbus Dispatch

Pfizer seeks OK on shots for kids

Reduced-dose vaccine could cut youth cases

- Jennifer Mcdermott and Lauran Neergaard

Parents tired of worrying about classroom outbreaks and sick of telling their elementary school-age children no to sleepovers and family gatherings felt a wave of relief Thursday when Pfizer asked the U.S. government to authorize its COVID-19 vaccine for youngsters ages 5 to 11.

If regulators give the go-ahead, reduced-dose kids’ shots could begin within a matter of weeks.

That could bring many families a step closer to being done with remote learning, virus scares and repeated school shutdowns and quarantine­s.

“My son asked about playing sports. ‘After you’re vaccinated.’ He asked about seeing his cousins again. ‘After you’re vaccinated.’ A lot of our plans are on hold,” said Sarah Staffiere of Waterville, Maine, whose 7-year-old has a rare immune disease that has forced the family to be extra cautious throughout the pandemic.

“When he’s vaccinated, it would give our family our lives back,” she said.

Expanding vaccine availabili­ty to roughly 28 million more U.S. children is seen as another milestone in the fight against the virus and comes amid an alarming rise in serious infections in youngsters because of the extraconta­gious delta variant.

It would also push the U.S. vaccinatio­n drive further ahead of much of the rest of the world at a time when many poor countries are desperatel­y short of vaccine.

The Food and Drug Administra­tion must decide whether the shots are safe and effective in younger children.

Many parents and pediatrici­ans are clamoring for protection for youngsters under 12, the current age cutoff for COVID-19 vaccinatio­ns in the U.S.

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