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An overview of the COVID-19 pediatric vaccine program - The U.S. experience vaccinating children ages 6 months through 17 years. | LitMetric

AI Article Synopsis

  • COVID-19 vaccination significantly reduces the risk of severe outcomes from COVID-19 in children, including MIS-C and death, leading to recommendations for various age groups from 6 months to 16 years and older between late 2020 and mid-2022.
  • The U.S. government worked with multiple partners to ensure widespread vaccine distribution, but vaccination rates among children have lagged behind those of adults, with only 61.8% of children aged 12-17, 32.9% aged 5-11, and 5.5% aged 6 months-4 years vaccinated as of May 2023.
  • The manuscript details the planning and execution of the COVID-19 pediatric vaccination program, highlighting

Article Abstract

COVID-19 vaccination decreases risk for COVID-19 illness and severe disease in children, including multisystem inflammatory syndrome (MIS-C) and death. On December 13, 2020, CDC recommended COVID-19 vaccination for persons ages ≥16 years, with expansion on May 12, 2021, to adolescents ages 12-15 years; to children ages 5-11 years on November 2, 2021; and to children ages 6 months-4 years on June 18, 2022. Following each age-specific recommendation, the U.S. government collaborated with state and local governments, vaccine manufacturers, and numerous other public and private entities, to ensure rapid, broad, and equitable COVID-19 vaccine distribution to strategic locations across the country to maximize access. However, vaccination coverage among children has been lower than among adults and lower among younger children than adolescents. As of May 10, 2023, COVID-19 primary series vaccination coverage was 61.8% among U.S. children ages 12-17 years, 32.9% among those ages 5-11 years, and 5.5% among those ages 6 months-4 years. This manuscript describes the planning and implementation of the U.S. COVID-19 pediatric vaccine program, including successes (e.g., the availability of pharmacy vaccination to extend access beyond more traditional pediatric vaccine providers) and challenges (e.g., multi-dose vaccine vials instead of single-dose vials, leading to concerns about wastage) to provide a historical record of the program and to help inform planning and implementation of future routine or pandemic-related pediatric vaccination campaigns.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.vaccine.2024.02.019DOI Listing

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