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Thursday, May 22, 2025

Canada approves Pfizer-BioNTech jab for kids starting at age five

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1279 days ago
20211120
A child reacts while receiving a dose of the Pfizer-BioNTech coronavirus vaccine in Louisville, Kentucky, US on November 8. Canada approved the vaccine for children aged five to 11 on Friday [File: Jon Cherry/Reuters]

A child reacts while receiving a dose of the Pfizer-BioNTech coronavirus vaccine in Louisville, Kentucky, US on November 8. Canada approved the vaccine for children aged five to 11 on Friday [File: Jon Cherry/Reuters]

The vac­cine is 90.7 per­cent ef­fec­tive at pre­vent­ing COVID-19 in kids with no se­ri­ous side ef­fects, Health Cana­da said.

SOURCE: AL­JAZEERA

 

Cana­da has ap­proved the Pfiz­er-BioN­Tech coro­n­avirus vac­cine for chil­dren be­tween the ages of five and 11.

It’s the first jab to be ap­proved for kids in that age group, Health Cana­da said on Fri­day, call­ing the move “a ma­jor mile­stone” in the fight against COVID-19.

The vac­cine was 90.7 per­cent ef­fec­tive at pre­vent­ing COVID-19 in chil­dren five to 11 years of age, Health Cana­da said, and no se­ri­ous side ef­fects were iden­ti­fied.

“Af­ter a thor­ough and in­de­pen­dent sci­en­tif­ic re­view of the ev­i­dence, the De­part­ment has de­ter­mined that the ben­e­fits of this vac­cine for chil­dren be­tween 5 and 11 years of age out­weigh the risks,” Health Cana­da said in a state­ment.

Kids in Cana­da will re­ceive two dos­es of the vac­cine, at 10 mi­cro­grams each, to be tak­en three weeks apart. That is a low­er dose than the 30 mi­cro­grams two-dose reg­i­men au­tho­rised for peo­ple 12 years of age and old­er.

“To date, no se­ri­ous safe­ty con­cerns have been iden­ti­fied in the clin­i­cal tri­als,” Chief Pub­lic Health Of­fi­cer of Cana­da There­sa Tam told a brief­ing on Fri­day. “Na­tion­al­ly, dai­ly case counts are de­clin­ing slow­ly.”

Chil­dren should wait 14 days be­fore or af­ter re­ceiv­ing an­oth­er vac­cine be­fore tak­ing the coro­n­avirus jab, Tam said, so reg­u­la­tors can bet­ter track po­ten­tial side ef­fects.

The Pfiz­er-BioN­Tech vac­cine was first au­tho­rised for peo­ple 16 years of age and old­er in Cana­da on De­cem­ber 9, 2020. It was ap­proved for chil­dren 12 to 15 years of age on May 5, 2021.

Cana­da’s vac­ci­na­tion cam­paign for chil­dren is ex­pect­ed to be­gin this month, Isaac Bo­goch, an in­fec­tious dis­eases spe­cial­ist at the Uni­ver­si­ty of Toron­to who has ad­vised Cana­da’s gov­ern­ment on coro­n­avirus pol­i­cy, said on Twit­ter.

The US ap­proved the Pfiz­er-BioN­Tech vac­cine for kids aged five to eleven late last month. More than 2.5 mil­lion US chil­dren have re­ceived their first dose.

 

While all chil­dren are ca­pa­ble of get­ting the virus that caus­es COVID-19, they of­ten don’t be­come as sick as adults, ac­cord­ing to the Mayo Clin­ic, a US med­ical cen­tre.

 

Some chil­dren do, how­ev­er, be­come se­ri­ous­ly ill from COVID-19, the clin­ic re­port­ed, and they can eas­i­ly spread it to their friends and fam­i­ly mem­bers.

On av­er­age, Cana­da is see­ing about 2,400 new dai­ly coro­n­avirus cas­es, Howard Njoo, the coun­try’s deputy chief pub­lic health of­fi­cer, told re­porters on Fri­day.

About 1,680 Cana­di­ans have been hos­pi­talised dai­ly with COVID-19 in re­cent weeks, he added, with sig­nif­i­cant vari­a­tion be­tween re­gions.

More than 75 per­cent of Cana­di­ans have been ful­ly vac­ci­nat­ed against COVID-19, ac­cord­ing to Our World in Da­ta, a track­ing group based at Ox­ford Uni­ver­si­ty.

 

 


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