Children as young as five will be able to get a COVID-19 jab 'before school returns'

Every five to 11-year-old would be able to get their first COVID-19 vaccine dose before the start of the next school year, a Senate committee has been told.

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The US approved vaccines for five to 11-year-olds earlier this year, with more than five million children now being vaccinated. Source: Getty Images North America

The head of Australia's vaccine rollout expects every child between five to 11 years old will be able to get their first dose by the start of the next school year.

Lieutenant-General John Frewen told a COVID-19 Senate committee all 2.3 million children in the age bracket would be able to receive the vaccine by the time the first term begins.

"We believe we will have adequate supply early in the new year to cover the entire cohort," he told the committee on Tuesday.

"We are working with states and territories about what arrangements are in place, like school-based vaccines, but at the moment we will have the capacity to get all the cohort dosed early in the new year."
COVID-19 Taskforce Commander Lieutenant General John Frewen
COVID-19 Taskforce Commander Lieutenant General John Frewen. Source: AAP
It comes after Australia's medical regulator approved the Pfizer vaccine for five to 11-year-olds.

While the final timings of the vaccine are yet to be determined, it's expected vaccines could commence for the age group from 10 January.

Final approval will still need to be granted by the country's leading body on vaccinations.

The co-chair of the Australian Technical Advisory Group on Immunisation (ATAGI), Professor Christopher Blyth, said the body would hand the findings to the government imminently.

"ATAGI is finalising its advice this week," he said.

"We have looked at the safety data very carefully, because the risk benefits are different in this group compared to older people."

The recommendations are expected to include timings on how long five to 11-year-olds would need to wait before they get their second dose.

While the length of time between doses for the Pfizer vaccine is three weeks, ATAGI is looking at whether a longer time frame, such as eight weeks, would be needed.

Chief Medical Officer Paul Kelly also told the committee he was reassured by data coming out of the United States on child vaccinations.

The US approved vaccines for five to 11-year-olds earlier this year, with more than five million children now being vaccinated.

Following a call with American infectious disease experts, he said reported side effects of the vaccines in children were "very minor and not unexpected".


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Published 7 December 2021 7:11pm
Source: AAP, SBS



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