LIFE

Should we Delay COVID-19 Vaccination in Children?

The net benefit of vaccinating children is unclear, and vulnerable people worldwide should be prioritised instead, say experts in The BMJ today.

Girl getting vaccined

They say the argument that children are less likely to be severely harmed by COVID-19 infection, and they therefore benefit less from a vaccination protecting them from it, is mistaken. Photo: Freepik

EurekaAlert | BMJ

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Leer en español: ¿Deberíamos retrasar la vacunación contra COVID-19 en niños?

The net benefit of vaccinating children is unclear, and vulnerable people worldwide should be prioritised instead, say experts in The BMJ today.

But others argue that COVID-19 vaccines have been approved for some children and that children should not be disadvantaged because of policy choices that impede global vaccination.

Dominic Wilkinson, Ilora Finlay, and Andrew Pollard say for a health system to offer any vaccine to a child, two key ethical questions must be asked. First, do the benefits outweigh the risks? Second, if the vaccine is in short supply, does someone else need it more?

"Careful attention to both questions suggests that we should not yet roll out COVID-19 vaccination to otherwise healthy children."

They acknowledge that in older adults, the benefits of coronavirus vaccines clearly outweigh the rare side effects. And in children with certain chronic or acute serious illnesses they probably do, and these children should therefore have access to a vaccine. "But in otherwise healthy children, no one can currently be sure."

But they say one thing we can be sure of is that in the UK, some people are currently at much higher risk from COVID-19 than healthy children. And most lower income countries have fully vaccinated less than 5% of their community.

Also read: Mefloquine: A Promising Drug 'Soldier' In The Battle Against COVID-19

Some might ask, why do we have to choose? Can't we vaccinate children as well as those overseas? But, to put it simply, there are right now a limited number of vaccine doses.

"As adults, we have had to wait our turn for the vaccine. We have understood that, given its scarcity, the vaccine has to be prioritised for people at the highest risk of dying." This clear and inescapable ethic now applies to our children, they conclude. Their turn will come–but not yet.

But Lisa Forsberg and Anthony Skelton say that vaccinating children against COVID-19 protects them – and others – from the risk of harm and death from infection, and it is the best way to promote children's wellbeing by minimising need for restrictions or disruptions to their lives resulting from failure to properly manage infection spread.

They say the argument that children are less likely to be severely harmed by COVID-19 infection, and they therefore benefit less from a vaccination protecting them from it, is mistaken.

"It exposes children to unknown risks of severe disease and of long term health complications. Moreover, we now know that exposing children to those risks disproportionately harms already disadvantaged children."

Another argument for delaying the vaccination of children is that priority should be given to older adults in developing countries where vaccine supply has been limited.

Yet they point out that currently global vaccine supply shortages result from policy choices.

"The ethically defensible choice is to exert whatever pressure we can to minimise vaccine hoarding and distribute vaccines to developing countries, while releasing patents and allowing the manufacture and supply of vaccines at a larger scale, to enable vaccination of adults and children everywhere," they write.

They believe that accepting the "austerity" narrative that children must wait until the most vulnerable people in other countries can be vaccinated diverts focus from the real problem: that profits are valued over lives. "Here, as elsewhere, we are failing in our responsibilities to avoid aggravating existing injustice," they conclude.

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