2/ Here’s the story about how safe can ones are for ages 5-11. https://t.co/5b9Rs4PTDW
— Clara Jeffery (@ClaraJeffery) December 30, 2021
"The other, which looked at hundreds of pediatric hospitalizations in six cities last summer, found that nearly all of the children who became seriously ill had not been fully vaccinated."
— Kyle Becker (@kylenabecker) December 30, 2021
You think we don't notice the "fully vaccinated" line? @nytimeshttps://t.co/07jwaymJoz
Serious problems among children 5 to 11 who had received the Pfizer-BioNTech vaccine were extremely rare. Nearly all of the children who became seriously ill had not been fully vaccinated. https://t.co/fhZXUkoaks
— Linda Hill (@bulldoghill) December 30, 2021
Two new @CDCgov studies find: serious problems extremely rare among children 5 - 11 who received Pfizer-BioNTech vaccine; among hundreds of children under 18 hospitalized last summer, nearly all who became seriously ill were not fully vaccinated.https://t.co/LjmRMj8DAM
— Canadian Paediatric Society (@CanPaedSociety) December 30, 2021
Not mentioned: Covid rarely leads to problems in younger children https://t.co/YVTIB5FP4E
— Shill LeBeau (@Lebeaucarnew) December 30, 2021
It seems like the best way to prevent serious illness from Covid, even among those already predisposed to avoid it, is by vaccination. Too bad 24 million Americans who are 0-5 can't be vaccinated. https://t.co/PD6GG4cvro
— marc tracy (@marcatracy) December 30, 2021
#FDA to authorize Pfizer boosters for 12-15 yr olds next week They intended to do it this week but had scheduling issues...Imo: oh really? While infections are taking off in astronomical numbers all over the country? #BoosterShotshttps://t.co/5llhcpzyyl
— Kristen's Kulture (@paz4u) December 30, 2021
FDA expected to authorize Pfizer-BioNTech booster shots for 12-to-15-year-olds by early next week https://t.co/Ka6gqUIrrs
— The Coronavirus in Kids (COVKID) Project (@COVKIDProject) December 30, 2021
FDA is set to authorize Pfizer booster shots for 12-to-15 year olds by early next week, per two people with knowledge.
— Dan Diamond (@ddiamond) December 30, 2021
Parents have grown worried that these children have been disproportionately vulnerable as omicron spreads.
Confirming NYT scoop here. https://t.co/9FMODdyiBD
Let's goooooooohttps://t.co/6f13r8FWEz
— Jen Chaney (@chaneyj) December 30, 2021
FDA expected to authorize Pfizer-BioNTech booster shots for 12-to-15-year-olds by early next weekhttps://t.co/uIefm6wZpq
— Greg -- ? #VotingRightsNow ?? (@gkanders) December 30, 2021
Federal officials are defending the CDC's decision to cut the amount of recommended time people should isolate after testing positive for the coronavirus. https://t.co/fYN3LCmGDv
— USA TODAY (@USATODAY) December 30, 2021
… Covid-19 could experience severe disease and reinforces the importance of vaccination of all eligible children to provide individual protection and to protect those who are not yet eligible to be vaccinated,” the authors of the study wrote. https://t.co/zNWWlKbtiw
— DrCliochronicles AZ x2, Pfizer x1 (@polioandme) December 30, 2021
So glad we got this one right. COVID vaccine in 5-11 years old is pretty benign. Has great potential to end hospitalizations. PS> only 2/3 of hosp had comorbidities with the major one being obese (>20% of kids are overweight or obese in this age group).https://t.co/OayqW6TmYu
— Dr. Ali Khan (@DrAliSKhan) December 31, 2021
I really enjoyed this article - https://t.co/IPQt6YYYY0
— Dr Kate Miller (@DrKate_Miller) December 31, 2021
Early next week for approval on boosters for 12+? ?♂️ ?
— dj patil (@dpatil) December 30, 2021
Come on @US_FDA @CDCgov. You know I love y’all, but get moving faster. Omicron sure is. This should have been done this week. Or meet on the weekend. https://t.co/Vl4t9DzA7l