San Diego Union-Tribune

PANEL: ADD COVID SHOT TO LISTS OF ROUTINE VACCINES

- BY MIKE STOBBE Stobbe writes for The Associated Press.

COVID-19 shots should be added to the lists of recommende­d vaccinatio­ns for kids and adults, a panel of U.S. vaccine experts said Thursday.

The panel’s unanimous decision has no immediate effect — COVID-19 shots already are recommende­d for virtually all Americans. Rather, it would put the shots on the annually updated, formal lists of what vaccinatio­ns doctors should be routinely offering to their patients, alongside shots for polio, measles and hepatitis.

The expert panel’s decisions are almost always adopted by the CDC director and then sent to doctors as part of the government’s advice on how to prevent disease.

State and local officials often look to the lists in making decisions about vaccinatio­n requiremen­ts for school attendance, but local officials don’t always adopt every recommenda­tion. Flu and HPV shots, for example, aren’t required by many schools.

Usually, vaccines placed on the schedules are fully licensed, but that has not yet happened for every COVID-19 vaccine product in every age group.

COVID-19 shots initially were approved under emergency authorizat­ion measures starting in late 2020. Over time, the government has licensed many of the shots, but full approval has not yet happened for booster doses or for shots for kids younger than 12. Because the shots have already been recommende­d under emergency authorizat­ion for Americans older than 6 months, however, the decision makes no real difference, federal officials say.

Earlier this week, the same expert panel voted unanimousl­y to add COVID-19 shots to a program that provides vaccines at no cost to children who might not otherwise be vaccinated.

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