America
US FDA authorizes Covid vaccines for kids as young as 6 months
Washington, June 18
The US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) has authorized emergency use of the Moderna and Pfizer-BioNTech Covid-19 vaccines for children as young as 6 months, the first for kids in this age group.
For the Moderna vaccine, the FDA on Friday amended the emergency use authorization (EUA) to include use of the jab in individuals 6 months through 17 years of age, reports Xinhua news agency.
The vaccine was previously authorised for people above the age of 18.
For the Pfizer-BioNTech vaccine, the FDA amended the EUA to include use of the jab in individuals 6 months through 4 years of age.
The vaccine had been previously authorized for use in individuals 5 years and older.
The FDA said its evaluation and analysis of the safety, effectiveness and manufacturing data of these vaccines was rigorous and comprehensive, supporting the EUAs.
The agency determined that the known and potential benefits of the Moderna and Pfizer-BioNTech Covid-19 vaccines outweigh the known and potential risks in the pediatric populations authorized for use for each vaccine.
The Moderna vaccine is administered as a primary series of two doses, one month apart.
The Pfizer-BioNTech vaccine is administered as a primary series of three doses in which the initial two doses are administered three weeks apart followed by a third dose administered at least eight weeks after the second dose.
The FDA's decision came after a meeting of its advisors earlier this week, which voted to recommend the two vaccines.
The advisory committee meeting was part of a transparent process to help the public have a clear understanding of the safety and effectiveness data supporting the authorization of these two vaccines for paediatric populations, Peter Marks, director of the FDA's Center for Biologics Evaluation and Research, said on Friday.
"Those trusted with the care of children can have confidence in the safety and effectiveness of these Covid-19 vaccines and can be assured that the agency was thorough in its evaluation of the data," said FDA Commissioner Robert Califf in a statement.
The US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) is scheduled to convene an advisors' meeting on Saturday to vote on guidelines for pharmacies and doctor's offices to give the shots.
CDC Director Rochelle Walensky then has to sign off on those guidelines before kids can start receiving the shots.
The White House expects vaccinations to begin as soon as June 21.
Appointments might be limited initially but every parent who wants to get their child vaccinated should be able to do so within weeks, according to Ashish Jha, who oversees the Biden administration's Covid-19 response.
10 minutes ago
Gov. Greg Abbott Announces Fourth-Term Bid at Houston Event
3 hours ago
"People that are against tariffs are fools": Trump says at least $2,000 dividend a person coming for Americans
3 hours ago
Explosive claims rock Dhaka; Ex-Minister points finger at US Aid giant, Clintons in Hasina's downfall
3 hours ago
"What a terrible thing for Democracy!": Trump decries BBC executives over reports of doctoring speech
3 hours ago
Mukesh Khanna says 'Glad to see that the essence is alive' as Shaktimaan Returns in a new avatar
3 hours ago
Censor Board clears Arjun, Aishwarya Rajesh-starrer 'Theeyavar Kulai Nadunga' for release with U/A certificate
3 hours ago
Keerthy Suresh's 'Revolver Rita' to now hit screens on November 28
3 hours ago
Karan Johar says 'this means everything to us' after Martin Scorsese hosts Homebound NYC screening
3 hours ago
Jorma Tommila can create emotions with almost no dialogue, says 'Sisu' director Jalmari Helander
3 hours ago
Sonu Nigam says 'singing Shiva bhajans with Shaan was truly special'
3 hours ago
Mona Singh: Love to rediscover slow mornings, long conversations without technology
3 hours ago
Shilpa Shetty has a new workout challenge for all the fitness freaks out there
3 hours ago
'Thulluvadho Illamai' fame actor Abhinay passes away
