The Food and Drug Administration gave its approval for children aged 5 to 11 to receive a smaller dose of the COVID-19 vaccine developed by Pfizer.
Parents who have been waiting to get their children inoculated against the coronavirus will be able to do so soon.
The White House COVID-19 coordinator Jeff Zients said Monday that the distribution of the child-sized shots should be fully up and running starting next week, Reuters reported.
WH Covid-19 coordinator Jeff Zients says U.S. vaccination program for children ages 5-11 will be "fully up and running” starting the week of November 8.
— Sabrina Siddiqui (@SabrinaSiddiqui) November 1, 2021
Shortly after the FDA’s approval, Zients had told NPR that the shots would not be instantly available after the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention gives its final approval, which is expected to come this week.
“We are hard at work, planning the logistics and making sure that vaccines will be available at tens of thousands of sites that parents and kids know and trust,” Zients told NPR.
Some of those sites include 25,000 pediatricians’ and doctors’ offices, New York Magazine reported.
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Zients told reporters during a virtual briefing Monday that 15 million doses of Pfizer’s children’s COVID-19 vaccines are being shipped, Reuters reported.
He said the government has ordered enough vaccines for every 5- to 11-year-old in the country, NPR reported.
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