Photo: Cleveland clinic
The studies underscore both the effectiveness of the vaccine in children and its safety.
One study of 42,000 children ages 5 to 11 found that “serious adverse effects” from the Pfizer-Biontech vaccine, including myocarditis, a form of heart inflammation, “were rarely reported” among the age group.
A second study conducted in Arizona between July and December 2021 determined the Pfizer vaccine was about 92% effective in preventing COVID-19 illness in children ages 12 to 17.
Anda third studyfound that nearly all children ages 5 to 17 hospitalized with COVID-19 in July and August 2021 — more than 99% — were unvaccinated.
The three studies further justified the need for kids to get vaccinated against COVID-19.
A child getting a COVID-19 vaccine dose.Getty
Much like adults, children typically experienced side effects from the COVID-19 vaccine on the day of vaccination, according to the first study. Among the most commonly reported symptoms were injection site pain, fatigue, headache and fever. The study reported just 11 verified cases of myocarditis among 42,000 kids, seven of which had recovered.
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There were two deaths reported during the study, both in children that researchers said had “multiple chronic medical conditions.” The study authors said that they do not believe their deaths were related to the vaccine.
According to the second study, kids who tested positive for COVID-19 were more likely to report not wearing a mask as much while interacting with the community at large, including at schools.
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Pediatric hospitalization rates climbed this summer when the severe delta variant became the dominant COVID-19 strain in the United States, the third study said. About one-third of all children age 5 and up reportedly had more than one viral infection during that time.
At the six hospitals studied in Arkansas, Florida, Illinois, Louisiana, Texas and Washington, D.C., nearly 15% of unvaccinated pediatric patients required ventilation and about 1.5% died, per the study.
The CDC’s new findings come as the omicron variant wreaks havoc on the U.S., with the country smashingsingle-day recordsfor positive COVID-19 cases multiple times in the last week alone. Several events have been scaled back, such asNew York City’s New Year’s Eve eventin Times Square, or canceled altogether as a result of the strain’s rapid spread. Some experts have even recommendedforgoing New Year gatheringsaltogether to avoid further infection.
So far, the vaccines from Pfizer and Moderna have proven highly effective in preventing serious illness for those who come in contact with the COVID-19 virus. And on Thursday, Johnson & Johnson announced that two doses of its vaccine are85% effectivein preventing hospitalization.
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source: people.com