Tag: Vaccines

  • COVID-19 Status Update – Testing, Vaccines, Boosters, New Health Order, Volunteers Needed and More

    COVID-19 Status Update – Testing, Vaccines, Boosters, New Health Order, Volunteers Needed and More

    COVID-19 Status Update – Testing, Vaccines, Boosters, New Health Order, Volunteers Needed and More

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    Sonoma County bans large gatherings, recommends residents stay home as much as possible for the next 30 days as case rates & hospitalizations increase significantly

    The County reported a case rate this week of 211.6 new daily cases per 100,000 (up significantly from 56.3), a test positivity rate of 20.5 percent  (up from 13.7), an equity metric positivity rate of 23 percent (up from 14.1), and COVID-related hospitalizations increased from 28 on January 3rd to 80 on Tuesday. See the county’s updated Metrics and Trends page for the most up-to-date data.

    Due to surging COVID cases and hospitalizations, Sonoma County Health Officer Dr. Sundari Mase on Monday appealed to residents in a recorded statement to stay home as much as possible for the next 30 days and limit interactions with those outside of their immediate household. Dr. Mase recommends that people limit travel outside the home to just going to work or to school and making only necessary trips such as going to the grocery store or the doctor. She also issued a Health Order canceling large gatherings to prevent the further spread of coronavirus in the county. Large gatherings of more than 50 people indoors, or more than 100 people outdoors (where social distancing is not feasible), are prohibited for the duration of the order. The order took effect today and is scheduled to remain in effect until February 11, 2022.

    For more information, tune into the County of Sonoma’s weekly COVID-19 community briefing for more information. The briefings in English will be streamed live on Facebook Wednesdays at 4 p.m and repeated in Spanish at 4 p.m. every Thursday. Find recordings of past briefings on the county’s YouTube channel.

    Volunteers Urgently Needed

    The surge in cases has caused staff shortages for a number of our community organizations that provide critical services to our community. The Sonoma Valley Unified School District and Sonoma Valley Hospital have immediate and acute needs for new support. Learn more about the current needs and find additional volunteer opportunities at SonomaValleyVolunteers.org.

    The Sonoma Valley Volunteers website is managed by the Sonoma Ecology Center and the Sonoma Valley Collaborative to help match organizations and volunteers to meet the Sonoma Valley community’s evolving needs during the COVID-19 Crisis.  Sonoma Valley Volunteers will allow volunteers to sign up to help with the organizations of their choice and is regularly updated with new volunteer opportunities.


    Residents encouraged to upgrade facial coverings

    Residents are encouraged to upgrade the quality of face coverings from a cloth mask to a surgical mask or a KN95, KF94, or N95 mask as cloth masks are less effective in stopping the spread of the omicron variant. See the latest state guidance on masks.


    Testing opportunities

    Demand for testing is making it difficult to get tested at a site or to obtain at-home tests. The county is working to increase the availability of testing, both PCR and antigen and the state and federal governments hope to supply more free at-home tests soon. Find additional pop-up testing locations and make an appointment on the County’s testing page or call the hotline at 707-565-4667. The hotline is available to help residents sort through their many testing options in Spanish and English.

    Pop-Up Testing in Sonoma Valley:

    • Monday – Friday, 7 am – 2 pm at the Fiesta Plaza 18615 Sonoma Hwy., Sonoma. To make an appointment: Visit the Curative website or call (888) 702-9042.
    • Monday – Friday, 9 am – 12 pm at Sonoma Valley Community Health Center, 19270 Sonoma Hwy, Sonoma CA 95476. Must Call (707) 939-6070.
    • Sundays, 8 am – 2 pm at the Boyes Hot Springs Park and Ride at Hwy.12 & Thompson Ave., Boyes Hot Springs. To make an appointment: Visit the Curative website or call (888) 702-9042.

    Vaccine Updates and Clinics

    Public health agencies across the Bay Area urge everyone eligible to get vaccinated and, if eligible, get a booster shot right away to protect against the rapidly spreading Omicron variant. Vaccine appointments are now available for anyone 5 years or older who wants one at one of the many clinics, pharmacies or health centers in the County. Go to MyTurn.ca.gov to find an appointment that works for you and find a list of local clinics on the Sonoma Valley Health Partner Website.

    Boosters strongly recommended to protect against Omicron variant

    Widely available via appointment or drop-in sites, boosters maintain the power of vaccines to strongly protect against severe illness and death from COVID-19. Everyone should get one when eligible, particularly those over 50 or those with significant underlying health conditions.

    Get one if you are at least 12 years old and:

    • 5 months have passed since your second dose of Moderna (18+)
    • 5 months have passed since your second dose of Pfizer (12+)

    Vaccine Clinics for children ages 5-11  (pediatric 1st dose, 2nd dose, boosters for those eligible)

    More than 39{fe463f59fb70c5c01486843be1d66c13e664ed3ae921464fa884afebcc0ffe6c} of the County’s 5-11-year-olds have received at least one dose of Pfizer’s pediatric vaccine as of this week. Parents who have health care coverage are encouraged to reach out to their pediatrician, local pharmacy, or the State’s MyTurn website to find a vaccination appointment or attend one of the Sonoma County Office of Education school site clinics intended for students and their families, more clinics will be added soon, visit the Sonoma County Office of Education website for a complete list.

    Vaccine Clinics for 12+ in Sonoma Valley  (1st dose, 2nd dose, additional dose & boosters):

    • Wednesdays & Thursdays, 5:00 – 7:00 pm at Sonoma Valley Community Health Center, 19270 Sonoma Hwy, Sonoma CA 95476. Walk-ins welcome. For questions call (707) 939-6070
    • Saturdays, 12:00 – 3:00 pm at Sonoma Valley Community Health Center, 19270 Sonoma Hwy, Sonoma CA 95476. Walk-ins welcome. For questions call (707) 939-6070

     

  • AMA: Physicians should grant medical exemptions to vaccines

    AMA: Physicians should grant medical exemptions to vaccines

    CHICAGO — At its Distinctive Conference currently, the American Healthcare Affiliation (AMA) Property of Delegates authorized a resolution stating that only licensed medical professionals need to figure out no matter whether a human being should really obtain a clinical exemption from vaccines.

    The policy comes in the wake of tens of countless numbers of people trying to get exemptions to point out and municipal COVID mandates, contending they have health care good reasons for remaining unvaccinated. The new coverage states that only licensed medical professionals should really have the professional medical authority and the electric power to grant these exemptions.

    “Vaccine hesitancy has performed an regrettable part in extending the COVID-19 community unexpected emergency. Failing to get vaccinated has resulted in tragic and needless fatalities. To secure all people, we should be certain that a trained, licensed medical professional is producing the judgment on regardless of whether a person essentially warrants an exemption,” said Willie Underwood III, M.D., M.Sc., M.P.H., a member of the AMA Board of Trustees.

    The definition of “medical authority” may differ from state to condition, with some states making it possible for alternative practitioners, these kinds of as naturopathic companies, to approve vaccine exemptions. Surveys have revealed that naturopathic companies and other alternative medication companies (such as homeopaths and chiropractors) are significantly less most likely to advocate vaccines—or even recommend versus vaccines—despite scientific proof of basic safety and efficacy.

    “State policymakers will need to restrict the definition to medical professionals who have the teaching required to recognize a healthcare ailment that prevents a individual from receiving a vaccine,” Dr. Underwood said. “We shouldn’t jeopardize community wellbeing by listening to unlicensed and untrained companies.”

    The AMA now has coverage opposing nonmedical (religious, philosophic, or own belief) exemptions from immunizations, considering the fact that such exemptions endanger the well being of the unvaccinated specific and the health of the local community at big. The AMA supports the immunization recommendations of the Advisory Committee on Immunization Procedures for all people devoid of healthcare contraindications. It also supports legislation eradicating nonmedical immunization exemptions and encourages state medical associations to search for elimination of nonmedical exemptions in states necessitating obligatory immunizations.

    “One of the regrettable facet results of the COVID-19 pandemic and misinformation about it is the questioning of vaccine efficacy even although vaccines have just about wiped out conditions that when plagued us. Medical professionals will have to make the argument obviously and loudly primarily based on the science: Vaccines help save lives,” Underwood explained.

  • COVID-19 live updates: AHS responds to over 3,000 health measure complaints; U.S. will open to travellers immunized with approved vaccines; health-care sector bracing for staff shortages

    COVID-19 live updates: AHS responds to over 3,000 health measure complaints; U.S. will open to travellers immunized with approved vaccines; health-care sector bracing for staff shortages

    Watch this page throughout the day for updates on COVID-19 in Edmonton

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    COVID-19 news happens rapidly, we have created this file to keep you up-to-date on all the latest stories and information on the outbreak in and around Edmonton.

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    What’s happening now



    Share your COVID-19 stories

    As Alberta grapples with a fourth wave of COVID-19 at the start of another school year, we’re looking to hear your stories on this evolving situation.

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    • Have you or a loved one had a surgery rescheduled or cancelled in recent weeks?
    • Are you someone who has decided to get vaccinated after previously being skeptical of the vaccines?
    • Have you changed your mind about sending your children back to school in person?
    • Have you enrolled your children in a private school due to COVID-19?
    • Are you a frontline health-care worker seeing new strains on the health system?
      Send us your stories via email at [email protected]

    1:33 p.m.

    Alberta Health Services responds to more than 3,000 COVID-19 health measure complaints

    Anna Junker

    The Alberta Health Services building in Calgary, Feb. 24, 2021.
    The Alberta Health Services building in Calgary, Feb. 24, 2021. Photo by Brendan Miller/Postmedia

    Alberta Health Services has received more than 3,000 COVID-19 related complaints or requests in recent weeks.

    The calls have come in between Sept. 16 and Oct. 5, said spokesman Kerry Williamson. They include requests from the public asking for AHS Environmental Public Health (EPH) to check if businesses, facilities, operators or events are complying with current COVID-19 public health measures, including masking, capacity and gathering limits, and compliance with the Restrictions Exemption Program.

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    “If AHS is made aware of a complaint, Public Health Inspectors carry out an education or advisory role as an initial step when responding. AHS does not issue tickets or fines,” Williamson said.

    “The goal of AHS’ Safe Healthy Environments team is to protect the health and safety of the Albertans. AHS Public Health Inspectors always seek to work collaboratively with businesses and organizations to ensure compliance with CMOH orders and current public health measures.”

    Read more


    11:52 a.m.

    U.S will open to travellers immunized with vaccines approved by WHO, FDA and CDC

    The Canadian Press

    A U.S. and a Canadian flag flutter at the Canada-United States border crossing at the Thousand Islands Bridge, in Lansdowne, Ont., Sept. 28, 2020.
    A U.S. and a Canadian flag flutter at the Canada-United States border crossing at the Thousand Islands Bridge, in Lansdowne, Ont., Sept. 28, 2020. Photo by Lars Hagberg /Reuters

    The United States will accept international travellers immunized with COVID-19 vaccines approved by the World Health Organization and the Food and Drug Administration.

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    The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention confirmed the decision today in an email and said more guidance will be provided as requirements are finalized.

    White House officials said last month the U.S. would begin welcoming fully vaccinated international travellers in November, but they did not say which vaccines would be accepted.

    The news means Canadians immunized with the Oxford-AstraZeneca vaccine will be able to travel to the U.S. when new travel rules come into play next month.

    The AstraZeneca vaccine is approved by the World Health Organization, but not by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration.

    The CDC says it began informing airlines of its decision last week.


    Sunday

    Canada’s overworked health-care sector brace for staff shortages as vaccine mandates loom

    National Post

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    An ICU team helping to intubate a patient suffering from COVID-19 at Humber River Hospital in Toronto.
    An ICU team helping to intubate a patient suffering from COVID-19 at Humber River Hospital in Toronto. Photo by Cole Burston / AFP

    Canada’s health and long-term care industries are bracing for staff shortages and layoffs, as deadlines for vaccine mandates loom across the country with unions pushing federal and provincial governments to soften hard-line stances.

    For hospitals and nursing homes, a shortage of workers would strain the already overburdened workforce dealing with nearly two years of the pandemic.

    The uncertainty sparked by vaccine mandates underscores the challenges on the road to recovery. Devon Greyson, assistant professor of public health at the University of British Columbia, said officials are steering into uncharted waters with mass vaccine mandates and it’s not clear how workers will respond.

    “A shortage of workers can mean people’s health and well being. It’s scary,” Greyson said.

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    However, he added, “we’re in an ethical situation where it’s also scary not to ensure that all health workers are vaccinated. So it’s a bit of a catch-22.”

    To tackle staff scarcity, at least one province is offering signing bonuses to nurses. Provinces including Quebec and British Columbia have made it mandatory for healthcare workers and nursing staff to be vaccinated to continue working in their respective fields.

    Prime Minister Justin Trudeau also unveiled one of the strictest vaccine mandates in the world last week, saying unvaccinated federal employees will be sent on unpaid leave and making COVID-19 shots mandatory for air, train, and ship passengers.

    Layoffs have already started to hit, with one hospital in southern Ontario last week dumping 57 employees, representing 2.5 per cent of staff, after its vaccine mandate came into effect. A long-term care home in Toronto put 36 per cent of its staff on unpaid leave after they refused to get vaccinated, the Canadian Broadcasting Corp reported.

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    Letter of the day

    Covid-19 forces Captain Jason Kenney to walk the plank. (Cartoon by Malcolm Mayes)
    Covid-19 forces Captain Jason Kenney to walk the plank. (Cartoon by Malcolm Mayes) Malcolm Mayes

    It’s not surprising that Premier Kenney wants to take Alberta children back to the 19th century by making rote learning central to the curriculum. He is a rote thinker, apparently capable of only two ideas — low taxes and incentives for business — which are basically just one idea. He constantly parrots his one idea that everything else is secondary to business, and that more business is the solution to every problem. This blinkered thinking partially explains the current mess our province is in.

    With three grandchildren between the ages of four and nine, I am extremely concerned that children between five and nine are now increasingly contracting COVID, due to the government’s shortsighted decision to end contact tracing in schools and elsewhere. I am continually amazed at how my grandchildren have rolled with all the shocks and changes of the past year and a half, although who knows what the long-term effects on the mental and physical health of any of us will be. Children don’t need to memorize facts. They need to learn how to access facts in order to acquire knowledge and ideas, so they can become developed human beings and critical thinkers. I suggest that Premier Kenney take a break from politics, go back to school, and finish off that philosophy degree. He could come up with some new and useful ideas relevant to the 21st century.

    K.D. Grove, Edmonton

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    Saturday

    Pregnant patients can bring COVID-19-positive person for support while giving birth at Alberta hospitals

    Lauren Boothby

    The Alberta government is urging pregnant women and those who are trying to become pregnant to get the COVID-19 vaccine as soon as possible.
    The Alberta government is urging pregnant women and those who are trying to become pregnant to get the COVID-19 vaccine as soon as possible. Postmedia Wire

    Maternity patients giving birth in Alberta hospitals can bring a person infected with COVID-19 with them for support, Alberta Health Services (AHS) said in a series of tweets Saturday afternoon.

    AHS confirmed an exemption to quarantine rules allows a COVID-19 positive person to join a pregnant patient in exceptional circumstances and if the hospital is made aware ahead of time. A chief medical officer of health order in effect since July 29 says this designated support person must stay two metres away from everyone except the patient and infant.

    “These exemptions, which have been in effect since July 2021, are granted under exceptional circumstances and only at the request of the patient giving birth. We know the importance of having support at this time. This is a critical part of our approach to patient centred care,” reads an AHS tweet.

    Despite this, the provincial health authority says there are protocols in place to make sure people are safe.

    “The patient & essential support person will remain under contact & droplet isolation. This includes the facility providing access to bathroom facilities & food,” AHS says.

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    Saturday

    Alcohol-related illnesses in Alberta surging during COVID-19 pandemic

    Blair McBride

    Alberta is seeing a surge in alcohol-related illnesses that can be attributed to the COVID-19 pandemic
    Alberta is seeing a surge in alcohol-related illnesses that can be attributed to the COVID-19 pandemic Photo by Nicole Bengiveno /NYT

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    Alberta is seeing a surge in alcohol-related illnesses that can be attributed to the COVID-19 pandemic, experts say.

    Mental and behavioural disorders resulting from alcohol use as well as alcohol-related depression and withdrawal are among the few non-COVID causes of hospital admission that have increased in the province since March 2020, says Calgary physician Dr. Eddy Lang.

    An article co-written by Lang that was published in the medical journal PLOS ONE in June revealed alcohol consumption rose from the fifth-highest cause of hospitalization in the province to the third during the first six months of the pandemic.

    Alcohol-related illnesses accounted for 3.46 per cent of hospital admissions between March and September 2020, up from 2.65 per cent in that timeframe the previous year.

    “Considering the number of hospitalizations we have in Alberta, that’s a significant increase,” Lang said, attributing the rising drinking rates to heightened feelings of pandemic anxiety.

    “There’s been lots of lost employment and family separation. We know that people are managing that with alcohol and cannabis. That’s going to manifest with people going overboard,” he said. “Alcohol is like gasoline on the fire of mental illness. If you’re already depressed you might think alcohol will make you feel better but in long run it makes things worse because it contributes to suicidal thoughts.”

    Increased rates of drinking in Alberta are also showing up in liver health.

    Hospitalizations for alcoholic hepatitis rose by 90.5 per cent in the first wave of the pandemic, according to a study soon to be published in the journal Clinical Gastroenterology and Hepatology.

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    Saturday

    Albertans leave messages at UCP MLA offices to say no thanks to the government

    Gil McGowan (front, President, Alberta Federation of Labour), Jeffrey Strom, Beth Strom and Karen Kuprys (right, Secretary Treasurer, Alberta Federation of Labour) invited concerned citizens to Alberta UCP MLA Kaycee Madu’s office in Edmonton on Saturday, October 9, 2021, to leave messages voicing their disapproval to the Alberta government’s handling of the COVID-19 pandemic. Participants also shared their messages on social media with the hashtag #NoThanksGivenUCP. (PHOTO BY LARRY WONG/POSTMEDIA)
    Gil McGowan (front, President, Alberta Federation of Labour), Jeffrey Strom, Beth Strom and Karen Kuprys (right, Secretary Treasurer, Alberta Federation of Labour) invited concerned citizens to Alberta UCP MLA Kaycee Madu’s office in Edmonton on Saturday, October 9, 2021, to leave messages voicing their disapproval to the Alberta government’s handling of the COVID-19 pandemic. Participants also shared their messages on social media with the hashtag #NoThanksGivenUCP. (PHOTO BY LARRY WONG/POSTMEDIA) Photo by Larry Wong /Postmedia

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    Albertan have been leaving messages at UCP MLA offices to say no thank you to the government that has needlessly endangered peoples lives.

    In a Thursday news release, the Alberta Federation of Labour asked Albertans to leave messages at UCP MLAs offices saying no thank you for the government’s handling of COVID-19 outbreaks on Saturday. They could also leave comments on social media using #NoThanksGivenUCP

    The group says that Albertans are angry that hospitals are over capacity, health-care workers are being pushed to their breaking point, surgeries are being cancelled and many schools are facing outbreaks in the news release.

    “The UCP refuse to take needed actions to keep Albertans safe,” says the release.

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    Saturday

    ‘I see you ICU:’ Albertans express gratitude for health-care workers at Thanksgiving

    The Canadian Press

    Teams in a crowded Calgary intensive care unit tend to a COVID-19 patient on a ventilator.
    Teams in a crowded Calgary intensive care unit tend to a COVID-19 patient on a ventilator. Photo by Supplied by Alberta Health Services

    Hundreds of Albertans are sending coffee, gift cards and Thanksgiving meals to those working in intensive care units overwhelmed with COVID-19 patients.

    J’Val Shuster says she and her staff at Devour Catering will be delivering turkey dinners to 200 nurses, doctors and health-care staff at four Calgary hospitals on Sunday and more meals are to be delivered in the days to come. People have been paying $15 a meal through the company’s “I See You ICU” drive.

    “We’ve had over 1,700 people purchase a total of 6,000meals for doctors, nurses and staff,” Shuster said.

    “Nurses (have said) even if they don’t get the meals, they’re very uplifted just by the fact that people are showing their support and wanting to do something.”

    Shuster said she began the idea last month as she struggled to keep her business afloat. Support has been so overwhelming, she said, she has had to temporarily stop taking meal orders.

    “We’re going to co-ordinate with all the departments at what frequency they want the remaining ordered meals. We can’t prepare 6,000 meals at once.”

    Betty Wade of Calgary purchased 50 dinners for health-care staff.

    “I’m absolutely thankful for them, particularly now in this fourth wave,” said the retiree.

    “They’ll have something at the doorstep when they leave their shift that makes them realize that they are appreciated more than they know by so many people. We are very, very thankful for every one of them doing their job saving lives as best they can in this situation.”

    She recalled that at the beginning of the COVID-19 pandemic many cheered and clapped for workers on the streets.

    “But there’s a difference now … it’s the intensity in the ICU and in the hospitals,” she said.

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  • EXPLAINER: What to Know About Kids and COVID-19 Vaccines | Health News

    EXPLAINER: What to Know About Kids and COVID-19 Vaccines | Health News

    Queries about vaccine safety, dosages and necessities in young children are swirling as the U.S. moves nearer to administering the photographs in little ones beneath the age of 12.

    Pfizer this 7 days became the initially vaccine maker to question the Food items and Drug Administration to authorize unexpected emergency use of its coronavirus vaccine in little ones ages 5-11, a improvement that could open up the shot to 48 million far more persons.

    The ask for is created even much more urgent as little ones enter the fall and winter season months of in-person learning, which could see flu outbreaks on major of coronavirus conditions.

    Little ones are at decreased possibility of serious an infection and demise from COVID-19 than older populations, but it does continue to take place.

    In accordance to a the latest report, nearly 5.9 million kids have examined positive for COVID-19 considering that the start off of the pandemic, and the quantity of new conditions in children “remains exceptionally higher,” producing up virtually 27{fe463f59fb70c5c01486843be1d66c13e664ed3ae921464fa884afebcc0ffe6c} of new bacterial infections.

    Cartoons on the Coronavirus

    Info from the Centers for Condition Control and Avoidance shows that extra than 600 kids have died from the coronavirus.

    “In this latest wave of COVID-19, specially down south, there have been hundreds of small children hospitalized,” Peter Marks of the FDA’s Heart for Biologics Evaluation and Investigate stated at a town hall in October. “And, frankly, it is an shame in a developed place to have even 100 kids, like we’ve had, die of infectious ailment which is preventable.”

    When Will the COVID-19 Vaccine Be Authorized for Children?


    Pfizer, which created the to start with COVID-19 vaccine to obtain complete Fda approval, is the furthest along in the approach. The firm past month submitted info to the Food and drug administration on the success of its shot in little ones ages 5-11.

    The organization in October submitted a request for crisis use authorization for the shot in the age group. Fda and CDC officers have pledged to act quickly on the ask for.

    Even in advance of the application, the Fda had scheduled a conference of its vaccine advisory committee scheduled to discuss the subject on Oct. 26 “in anticipation of the ask for.” The agency could authorize the shot in late Oct or, extra probable, in November.

    “We know from our huge practical experience with other pediatric vaccines that youngsters are not compact grownups, and we will perform a extensive evaluation of medical trial info submitted in assist of the basic safety and success of the vaccine utilised in a younger pediatric populace, which may well need to have a distinctive dosage or formulation from that used in an more mature pediatric populace or older people,” performing Fda Commissioner Janet Woodcock reported in a statement about the conference.

    Meanwhile, Moderna is also learning its vaccine in children ages 5-11, and its demo results are predicted afterwards this 12 months.

    Is the COVID-19 Vaccine Secure for Youngsters?

    In September, Pfizer introduced “beneficial topline effects” from its trial in children ages 5-11. It noted that the vaccine was “harmless, effectively tolerated and confirmed sturdy neutralizing antibody responses.”

    Specially, the demo benefits showed that kids in the age group mounted a equivalent antibody response to all those who were being vaccinated in the 16-25 age team. The Pfizer vaccine examined in children aged 5-11 is even now delivered in two shots spaced apart by 21 times, but it is only a third of the dosage given to individuals ages 12 and older.

    The more compact dosage was “meticulously chosen as the desired dose for security, tolerability and immunogenicity in kids 5 to 11 yrs of age,” the company said in a press release.

    Young children require a smaller dose for the reason that, amid other factors, they have “incredibly active immune units,” in accordance to William Schaffner, a professor of infectious illnesses at the Vanderbilt University Clinical Center.

    “At different levels of lifetime, one’s immune system responds in a different way,” he states. “Infants and kids have a superb immune process. It can reply vigorously to vaccines, for instance.”

    The Pfizer trial enrolled nearly 2,300 participants ages 5-11. It could be carried out with a lesser quantity of participants than the trials involving more mature men and women mainly because the corporation did not have to begin from scratch. Preceding data from older members proved the vaccines had been productive at stopping COVID-19, so the trial with youthful young ones did not need to prove the vaccine worked – just that it prompted a comparable level of antibodies and was risk-free.

    “We can do a demo that lasts only months, demonstrating that the little ones who bought the vaccine designed a enough sum of antibody – really comparable to what the teenagers and youthful grown ups produce,” Schaffner states. “That will be enough facts for us due to the fact we’ve currently recognized these ranges of antibody are linked with safety.”

    U.S. health officials promise to absolutely evaluate the shot’s protection in youngsters.

    “We want to be positive over and above a shadow of a question that the proof indicates a potent protection profile and sturdy immune reaction in young children,” Surgeon Common Vivek Murthy said at a modern press conference. “Which is why it issues that 1000’s of young ones are enrolled in each and every demo, and that they are very carefully monitored for at the very least two comprehensive months right after they receive their second dose.”

    What Are the Vaccine’s Facet Results in Youngsters?

    Pfizer hasn’t posted a lot details on the aspect effects kids can hope soon after obtaining the shot. It did say in a push launch that the side consequences are “normally similar to those people noticed in individuals 16 to 25 many years of age.”

    That signifies that some children can assume sore arms, fatigue and other typically gentle facet consequences, Schaffner suggests.

    “These are little selling prices to pay out in purchase to get defense versus a virus that at its worst, can get rid of an even nutritious, standard little one,” he states.

    Are A lot of Mothers and fathers Envisioned to Get Their Children Vaccinated?

    Parental consent will be needed for kids to obtain the shots.

    About a single in 4 mom and dad say they certainly will never get their 5-11-year-olds vaccinated from COVID-19, according to a new poll from Kaiser Spouse and children Basis executed ahead of Pfizer declared its topline trial facts for the age group.

    About a 3rd of mother and father say they will get their child vaccinated “right away.” An additional 3rd mentioned they will “wait around and see.”

    If the vaccination amount for 12-15-calendar year-olds is any indication, it could be an uphill struggle.

    Despite the Pfizer vaccine getting unexpected emergency use authorization for people today ages 12-15 in May well, the age group proceeds to report the cheapest vaccination protection, in accordance to CDC data. Just about 43{fe463f59fb70c5c01486843be1d66c13e664ed3ae921464fa884afebcc0ffe6c} of this age group is thoroughly vaccinated compared to a national level of 56{fe463f59fb70c5c01486843be1d66c13e664ed3ae921464fa884afebcc0ffe6c}.

    Will Schools Need Young ones to Get the Vaccine?

    Probably unsurprisingly, California just lately grew to become the to start with point out to announce it will have to have college students in public and private universities to get the vaccine.

    The necessity would take result 1 semester following the Food and drug administration granted the vaccine full acceptance for an age group. Now only the Pfizer vaccine satisfies that threshold for people ages 16 and more mature.

    “The point out now requires that college students are vaccinated in opposition to viruses that result in measles, mumps, and rubella – you can find no reason why we wouldn’t do the exact same for COVID-19,” California Gov. Gavin Newsom mentioned in a assertion.

    But it is unclear how lots of jurisdictions will observe the Democratic state’s guide. Vaccine mandates have proven to be a controversial subject, and lots of faculty boards have presently experienced a challenging time grappling with pushback to mask prerequisites.

    Is There a Vaccine for Youngsters More youthful Than 5 Decades Aged?

    Pfizer expects to release effects in children beneath the age of 5 later this yr. Participants in this trial been given an even reduce vaccine dosage – about 1-tenth of what was offered to grown ups.

    “Topline readouts for the other two age cohorts from the trial – small children 2-5 many years of age and kids 6 months to 2 a long time of age – are envisioned as before long as the fourth quarter of this year,” Pfizer documented in September.

    Moderna is also learning its vaccine in kids below the age of five.