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action or later. Please see Debugging in WordPress for more information. (This message was added in version 6.7.0.) in /home4/scienrds/scienceandnerds/wp-includes/functions.php on line 6114Source: https:\/\/www.theverge.com\/2022\/6\/17\/23167317\/under-five-covid-vaccine-pfizer-moderna<\/a> The Food and Drug Administration has authorized<\/a> COVID-19 vaccines for children under five \u2014 the last age group in the United States to get clearance to receive the shots. The agency authorized both Pfizer \/ BioNTech and Moderna vaccines for this age group. <\/p>\n It\u2019s been a long, long wait for young children to get these vaccines, full of delays and frustrating setbacks<\/a>. The Biden administration has plans in place<\/a> for the first vaccinations for this age group, which includes kids between six months and five years old, to start the week of June 20th. <\/p>\n The FDA also authorized the Moderna vaccine for adolescents and teenagers six through 17 years old. It had previously only been available to people over 18. <\/p>\n Pfizer \/ BioNTech\u2019s under-five vaccination series includes three shots at one-tenth the dose of the adult shots. The companies had originally<\/a> tested a two-shot series at that dose, but it didn\u2019t produce a strong enough immune response. Moderna uses two shots at one-fourth the adult dosage for kids under five. <\/p>\n Children who contract COVID-19 generally aren\u2019t at as high a risk of getting seriously ill as adults are, but the illness can still be dangerous for them. The omicron surge put record numbers<\/a> of kids under five in the hospital. And any protection for this group against catching COVID-19 means that the people who care for kids under five \u2014 parents, grandparents, other caregivers \u2014 have an additional layer of protection as well. Still, despite the still-present risks of the virus, only one in five parents of kids under five say they\u2019re planning to vaccinate their kids right away, according to a Kaiser Family Foundation poll<\/a>. Most say they want to \u201cwait and see.\u201d <\/p>\n Finally opening up vaccinations for the final segment of the American population might seem anticlimactic given the persistent spread of the virus throughout the country. It\u2019s been over a year since people celebrated<\/a> the initial, glorious hope of the first FDA sign-off on shots for adults. In the months since, the delta and omicron variants have evaded some of the vaccines\u2019 protection against infection. The shots aren\u2019t the all-powerful shields they once seemed to be, even though they still protect against the most serious effects of the virus. But it\u2019s still a key milestone in the life of the pandemic: almost everyone now has access to one of the most powerful tools available to combat the virus. <\/p>\n
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