Babies with underlying conditions will be offered a Covid vaccine, UK health chiefs confirmed today. 
Around 60,000 infants aged six months to four years will be eligible for two Pfizer jabs. 
They include children with poorly controlled asthma and issues affecting their heart, kidneys, liver or digestive system. 
While
 Covid poses a small threat to the overwhelming majority of children, 
some are at risk of a more serious illness. Jabs are the ‘best way to 
increase their protection’, according to the Government’s vaccine 
taskforce. 
NHS sites will begin offering jabs in mid-June. Parents should wait to be contacted before coming forward, officials said. 
Latest
 data from the UK Health Security Agency (UKHSA) suggests that 51 
under-fours have died of Covid since the pandemic began. 
Yet 
this toll includes anyone who has tested positive for the virus within 
four weeks of dying, so could be a slight overestimate. 
In a 
report published today, the Joint Committee on Vaccination and 
Immunisation, which advises the Government on the jab rollout, said 
eligible youngsters should be offered two 3-microgram doses of Pfizer’s 
Covid vaccine, at least eight weeks apart. 
If a child has recently been infected with the virus, they should not be jabbed until at least four weeks later, it said. 
Further
 advise on third doses of the low-dose formulation for those in the 
cohort who are immunosuppressed will be issue ‘in due course’, the JCVI 
said. 
Healthy children in the age group are not currently eligible, it added. 
Professor
 Wei Shen Lim, chair of the JCVI’s COVID-19 Committee, said: ‘For the 
vast majority of infants and children, Covid causes only mild symptoms, 
or sometimes no symptoms. 
‘However, for a small group of 
children with pre-existing health conditions it can lead to more serious
 illness, and for them, vaccination is the best way to increase their 
protection.’ 
The JCVI’s advice follows a review of Covid vaccine
 trials among children in the US, including safety data and monitoring 
the virus amongst youngsters in the UK. 
Data suggests that 
at-risk children aged six months to four years are seven times more 
likely to be admitted to intensive care with severe Covid, it said....<<<Read More>>>...
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