The UK’s vaccine advisory body has refused to give the green light to vaccinating healthy children aged 12-15 years on health grounds alone.
The JCVI said children were at such a low risk from the virus that jabs would offer only a marginal benefit.The UK’s four chief medical officers have now been asked to have the final say, and to consider the wider impact on schools and society.Health Secretary Sajid Javid said a decision would be made shortly.The Joint Committee on Vaccination and Immunisation did advise widening the existing vaccine programme to include an extra 200,000 teenagers with specific underlying conditions.Doctors identified that children with chronic heart, lung and liver conditions were at much higher risk of Covid than healthy children.‘Insufficient evidence’The decision not to recommend the vaccine to all healthy children was based on concern over an extremely rare side effect of the Pfizer and Moderna vaccines which causes heart inflammation and can lead to palpitations and chest pain.Data from the US, where millions of young teenagers have been vaccinated, suggests there are 60 cases of the heart condition for every million, second doses given to 12 to 17-year-old boys (compared to eight in one million girls).France, Italy, Israel and Ireland are also offering the vaccine to all children in this age group.But as children are at such low risk from the virus, the JCVI decided that vaccination would offer only “marginal gain” and, therefore, there was “insufficient” evidence to offer mass vaccination to this age group.The JCVI said it was difficult to factor in long Covid in its advice because of the uncertainty over how common it is in children, although it appears to be less prevalent than in adults. (Courtesy : BBC)