The Pfizer-BioNTech COVID-19 vaccine is available to all children ages 6 months and up. The vaccine has full Food and Drug Administration (FDA) approval for use in those 12 and up and emergency use authorization (EUA) for ages 6 months to 11 years. As school-age children have become eligible for vaccination, parents wonder if public school systems could make it mandatory for students to get vaccinated.
Key Takeaways
- The Pfizer-BioNTech vaccine is approved for kids ages 6 months and up.Schools may eventually require COVID-19 vaccination alongside other childhood vaccines, but not soon.Factors like full FDA approval and the global and local prevalence of COVID-19 will play a role in deciding if and when schools will mandate the vaccine.
“Different schools will have different thresholds for creating mandates. There are some that have already talked about instituting mandates; others may wait,” says Kawsar Talaat, MD, associate professor of international health at the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health.
American public schools require children to receive all of the routine vaccinations recommended by the American Academy of Pediatrics (AAP). However, parents who don’t want their kids to adhere to these guidelines can typically seek special permission for an exemption. Some parents wonder whether that will be the case with the COVID-19 vaccine.
Kawsar Talaat, MD
The vaccines are safe, the vaccines are effective, and they are a good way to keep our kids healthy and to keep our kids in school.
“The vaccines are safe, the vaccines are effective, and they are a good way to keep our kids healthy and to keep our kids in school,” says Dr. Talaat. “Having said that, mandates do work, but they have a lot of pushback against them, so encouraging people and trying to get people to be vaccinated voluntarily might be a better way to do that.”
Schools might consider several factors in determining whether or not children should be required to receive the COVID-19 vaccine to attend school.
Full FDA Approval
The Pfizer-BioNTech vaccine now has full FDA approval for children and teens over the age of 12. But for kids under 12 and under 18, Pfizer and Moderna respectively, are being distributed “under an emergency use authorization [EUA], which is a much shorter process than what is required for a vaccine to be fully approved by the FDA,” says Reagan Anderson, DO, FAOCD, FAAD, FASMS, MPH, and former combat physician.
The Moderna vaccine received FDA approval for people 18 years and up on January 31, 2022. Full FDA approval is a lengthy process that involves evaluating data from the vaccine manufacturer, including:
- Details about the manufacturing processInspection of the vaccine facilitiesPreclinical and clinical dataVaccine testing results
This process usually takes years; however, the full approval of the Pfizer vaccine for 12 and older came less than a year after its EUA. It isn’t clear whether a timeline for full FDA approval of a children’s vaccine will follow a similar pattern.
“It requires so much work on behalf of the people who are applying as well as those who are reviewing,” says Dr. Talaat.
It requires so much work on behalf of the people who are applying as well as those who are reviewing.
The lack of full FDA approval in those age groups doesn’t mean the vaccine is unsafe by any measure, only that schools may have difficulty mandating something that hasn’t yet received official FDA approval like other required vaccinations.
The Risks of Kids Spreading COVID
Scientists now know that kids spread the virus the same as adults. That means they can spread COVID-19 in lots of circumstances, including:
Pfizer’s vaccine for children ages 6 months to 11 years is currently operating under emergency use authorization (EUA), as well as Moderna’s for those under 18. Full FDA approval is a lengthier process, which some school districts may wait on before discussing COVID-19 vaccine mandates.
- When they are asymptomaticWhen they have mild symptomsWhen they have non-specific symptomsWhen they don’t know they are infected
When a community has higher rates of COVID-19 infection, it is more likely that COVID-19 will spread in local schools. Layered prevention strategies as recommended by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC).
These measures, which include wearing masks, getting vaccinated, physical distancing, testing, and screening, all reduce the risk of COVID-19 transmission in schools. However, not all schools adhere to such guidelines.
The Risk of the Virus Compared to the Vaccine
Finally, one of the most prominent factors schools will have to consider when it comes to potential COVID-19 vaccine requirements is the fact that kids are often only mildly affected by the virus.
As of November 17, 2022, almost 15 million American children have been infected with COVID-19. Nearly one million of those cases occurred in the last week of January 2022. Since the pandemic began, children have made up 18.3% of cases.
Children accounted for 1.6% to 4.4% of hospitalizations among states reporting data. In addition, as of July 6, 2022, 829 kids ages 5 to 18 and 431 kids under 5 have died from COVID-19.
Yes, it’s a generally mild disease in kids, but it can be an incredibly serious disease in kids, and it can be a fatal disease in kids, and the best way to prevent that and to keep them healthy is by vaccinating them.
“Yes, it’s a generally mild disease in kids,” says Talaat, “but it can be an incredibly serious disease in kids, and it can be a fatal disease in kids, and the best way to prevent that and to keep them healthy is by vaccinating them.”
The information in this article is current as of the date listed, which means newer information may be available when you read this. For the most recent updates on COVID-19, visit our coronavirus news page.
What This Means For You
Like everything related to the COVID-19 pandemic, this is an evolving situation. Thankfully, kids of all ages (6 months old and up) can now receive the COVID-19 vaccine.