Paediatric doctors could soon find themselves on the front lines of a US government plan to get some 28 million school-aged children in line for their coronavirus jabs.
Advisory boards to the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) on Tuesday decided that the benefits of jabbing children between five and 11 years old with the Pfizer vaccine outweigh any other health risks.
The decision now awaits further approval from the full FDA and CDC. Both agencies are expected to follow the vaccine panels recommendation.
Data from the companys clinical trials found that a paediatric dose of the vaccine - one third of that given to adults and adolescents - was safe and 90% effective.
If health officials approve the jab, 15 million doses will go out to paediatric offices, childrens hospitals and pharmacies around the country.
When could jabs for kids get final approval?
Following the FDA independent advisory committees green light on Tuesday, the CDC is expected to follow suit on 2 November, meaning jabs for five-year-olds could begin as soon as a day later.
The Pfizer vaccine is already approved for American adults and adolescents, but it has not yet been fully approved for most school-aged children.
Among those between five and 11 years old, there have been about 1.8 million Covid cases confirmed in the US, according to the CDC. Fewer than two hundred have died, and most of those had underlying medical conditions.
Some medical experts say that, given the persistence of the Delta variant and the return to in-person schooling, vaccinating children is a crucial next step in fighting the pandemic.
Parents need to understand the urgency of vaccination because the pandemic is not over, said Dr James Versalovic, pathologist in chief at Texas Childrens Hospital (TCH).
Dr Versalovic estimates at least 1,500 children have been diagnosed since the beginning of the pandemic with the virus at TCH, the largest childrens hospital in the US. No age group has been spared, he said.
What kind of opposition does it face?
Vaccine hesitancy remains a challenge for US medical authorities. Uptake in the adult population has stalled below 60% over the past several months.
Only a third of parents in a poll last month by the Kaiser Family Foundation said they would get their children vaccinated right away. Another third said they would like to wait and see.
Some parents have expressed concern about hundreds of cases of myocarditis, an inflammation of the heart muscle, that have been reported predominantly in young adults who took the vaccine, mostly after the second jab.
Heart inflammation link to Pfizer and Moderna jabs
Dr Liz Mumper, chief executive of the Rimland Center for Integrative Medicine, thinks children should not be given treatments they do not need, pointing to their low risk of contracting Covid and to the lack of long-term data on Covid vaccines.
I am opposed to rolling these vaccines out to all children in a one size fits all model, she said. The vast majority of children already have mild cases.
In an interview with the BBC World News America programme, an FDA advisory board member acknowledged it would be a tough decision to make.
Itll be somewhat hard. Well be looking at data on several thousand children and then making decisions for millions of children, said Dr Paul Offit.
A legal immunity protection offered to drug companies during the Trump administration has also made it nearly impossible to sue drug manufacturers for any side affects suffered from vaccination until 2024.
What would a rollout look like?
The federal government has indicated that, once the vaccine is approved, it will ship paediatric doses to states almost immediately.
Last week, it announced plans to distribute the jabs via more than 25,000 paediatric offices and 100 childrens hospitals, as well as through pharmacies, school-based clinics and community health centres.
The plan is designed to take into account that, for this age group, everything from dosing to counselling support from clinicians to the post-jab waiting period looks different than for other age groups, and parents will need a trusted voice in the room.
Its one thing to have Dr Fauci on the national news say you should get your kid vaccinated, but its another thing for a trusted physician in the community to have that direct conversation with families, says Amy Wimpey Knight, president of the Childrens Hospital Association.
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Mass vaccination sites are not good settings for jabbing young children, Ms Knight tells the BBC, so state and local health officials will need to quickly link up with schools, community centres and doctors offices instead.
All plans are local. Thats what we learned the first time, she says.
President Biden speaks to students in a New Jersey classroom
Image caption,President Biden speaks to students in a New Jersey classroom
Do doctors support the plan?
Patients at Texas Childrens Hospital participated in Pfizers clinical trials for children. Any side effects were easily treatable and monitored, said Dr Versalovic.
We are fully confident in the paediatric Covid vaccines. Its been tailored to children, he said, referring to the reduced dosage.
For a large provider like TCH, ensuring adequate supply at multiple care locations will be of primary concern, he said.
At smaller paediatric practices, physicians are a bit more circumspect.
Dr Robert Dracker, medical director of Summerwood Pediatrics in upstate New York, warned that a vaccine rollout for kids will collide with other realities: the onset of flu season, the mental health crisis of school children, and staffing shortages.
Paediatricians offices have been struggling terribly over the last few years, he said.
Dr Dracker says state health officials have set out guidelines and plan to dispense 300-dose allotments to his office. But he is frustrated by the lack of co-ordination.
Media caption,Watch: The showdown over Covid-19 mandates
We have to try and contact all of our parents to find out how many of them might want their child vaccinated, and then set up separate clinic times, he explained.
Instead of dictating what we have to do, [government officials] really need to listen to the input of practising physicians, he said.
SOURCE : BBC