Three newly published studies have revived concerns about COVID-19 vaccines for young children, many of whom are at little risk of contracting serious cases of the illness.
That may no longer be the case, according to the new studies.
The protection against severe disease also diminished, going below 50 percent in New York and 51 percent in the CDC study for those under 12.
The diminished protection means the benefits of the shot are getting closer to the risks, which include an elevated chance of experiencing heart inflammation, Dr. Cody Meissner, a member of the advisory panel that recommended authorization of the vaccine for kids, told The Epoch Times.
Taken together, the studies suggest “the benefit roughly equals the risk of harm” for many children, Meissner said.
Some other experts disagree, including Dr. Chandy John, an immunologist at Indiana University School of Medicine.
Omicron Evades Protection Better
Health authorities thus advised virtually all Americans 12 or older to get a booster shot after the vaccines began performing worse against the Delta variant of the virus that causes COVID-19—known as SARS-CoV-2 or the CCP (Chinese Communist Party) virus—than earlier variants.Omicron displaced Delta in the United States and many other countries in late 2021, and has proven better able to evade the shielding from the vaccines, especially the protection against infection.
“You’re looking at the diminution of efficacy or effectiveness,” Dr. Anthony Fauci, the chief medical adviser to President Joe Biden, told reporters in a recent briefing as he highlighted data showing the decline.
The data analyzed for authorization of the shot for children 5 to 11, from Pfizer’s ongoing clinical trial, came before Omicron appeared.
The FDA cleared the jab for the age group based on the premise that the known and potential benefits outweighed the known and potential risks.
Concerns About Small Dataset
The FDA authorized the jab for those 5 to 11 after its FDA’s vaccine advisory panel voted 14–0 to recommend the authorization, but the vote came after an hourslong meeting during which multiple members, including Meissner, voiced concerns, including about the small dataset.The efficacy data was for a pool of 2,250 children, about two-thirds of whom received the jab. The efficacy was inferred based on a technique called immunobridging, or comparing the immune responses among the children to those seen in a portion of older recipients. Efficacy of the vaccine against severe disease couldn’t be determined because none of the participants, including the unvaccinated, contracted severe cases of COVID-19.
“There are high risk individuals and I think they do need to be attended to, that we do need to provide a vaccine for them, but for many others, one dose or no dose even if they’ve had prior COVID infection, I think they may not need anything more,” Kurilla said.
“It’s not even clear that this vaccine will reduce rates of transmission,” Meissner added at the time. “This vaccine is probably not going to prevent infection,” he added.
After FDA officials refused to allow the panel to recommend authorization for certain groups only, such as kids with weak immune systems, advisers approved the recommendation, telling the FDA to authorize the jab for every 5- to 11-year-old who doesn’t have an allergy to a component of the vaccine.
“It is pretty clear to me that the benefits do outweigh the risk,” said Dr. Amanda Cohn, a CDC official who sits on the panel. “To me the question is pretty clear: We don’t want children to be dying from COVID, even if it is far fewer children than adults, and we don’t want them in the ICU.”
Children at Little Risk From COVID-19
Children are far less likely than other age groups to need hospital care for or die from COVID-19.Out of 1.9 million COVID-19 cases among children 5 to 11 as of October 2021, just about 8,300 resulted in hospitalization, and approximately 20 percent of those were for non-COVID reasons, according to the CDC.
In the age group, just 94 children had died from COVID-19, according to data reported to the CDC. Over 98 percent of the overall deaths in that group were from other causes.
“Fortunately, these most severe outcomes are generally rare. The chance that a child will have severe COVID, require hospitalization, or develop a long-term complication ... remain low, but still the risk is too high and too devastating for our children, and far higher for many other diseases for which we vaccinate children,” CDC Director Rochelle Walensky said in November 2021.
Walensky said parents should still get their children vaccinated with Pfizer’s vaccine because it “can help protect them against COVID-19, as well as reduce disruptions to in-person learning and activities by helping curb community transmission.”
The CDC didn’t respond to a request for comment on the new studies.
Division Over Path Forward
Children 5 to 11 receive a smaller dosage level that’s one-third the amount given to Americans 12 and older. They’re also not yet able to get a booster.“I think it is likely that children with this vaccination will need a third dose, but this is not different from adults, in whom a third dose was required to provide strong protection against Omicron infection and severe disease,” John, the immunologist, said.
Dr. Jeffrey Klausner, a professor at the University of Southern California, said getting the vaccines out quickly “was important and saved millions of lives” but that the studies reinforce that “the full effectiveness of COVID-19 vaccination is seen with a 3-dose series.”
“We still need to do a better job of making sure every person age 65 years and older is completely vaccinated and up-to-date with a booster. The greatest number of preventable deaths have been in the elderly. Focusing our efforts on children is misplaced,” Klausner, a former CDC employee, told The Epoch Times in an email.
Some said the lack of long-term safety data, coupled with the low risk among children and the declining vaccine efficacy, should give parents pause when considering whether to vaccinate their child.
“We don’t know potential long term harms or even some of the short term that we’re seeing reported in VAERS,” Kim Witczak, co-founder and executive director of the drug safety group Woodymatters, told The Epoch Times, referring to the Vaccine Adverse Event Reporting System.
“It only protects you for a certain amount of time,” added Witzcak, who sits on another FDA advisory panel. “I think that’s something that the public needs before they make that decision, instead of being told it’s completely safe and effective, which is what we’ve heard for now over a year.”
“It really should be up to the parents decide whether they want to immunize their child, and I think they need to be informed, they need to educate themselves that yes, there may be some benefit, it may reduce the risk of death, but the risk of death is so small, it’s almost negligible,” said Meissner, who heads Tufts University School of Medicine’s Division of Pediatric Infectious Disease. “But if a parent feels better if their child is vaccinated, I think they certainly should have access to the vaccine, and that’s why I voted for the age group, and also for children that have risk factors.”
The authors of the New York study and the CDC study declined requests for comment. The corresponding author for the third study didn’t return an inquiry, nor did Pfizer.