/Covid news – live: Decision on vaccines for all 12- to 15-year-olds expected within days despite JCVI advice

Covid news – live: Decision on vaccines for all 12- to 15-year-olds expected within days despite JCVI advice

<p>Jam Budden, 16, receives a jab at a walk-in Covid-19 clinic at Reading Festival</p>

Jam Budden, 16, receives a jab at a walk-in Covid-19 clinic at Reading Festival

(Getty)

A final decision on whether to vaccinate all 12- to 15-year-olds is expected within days, despite the government’s immunisation experts refusing to recommend jabs for healthy teenagers.

The UK’s chief medical officers, including England’s Prof Chris Whitty, are to consider further evidence after Sajid Javid and his counterparts in Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland ordered a review that could defy the Joint Committee on Vaccination and Immunisation (JCVI) for the first time.

The health secretary said the advice from the CMOs would be considered “before making a decision shortly”.

The JCVI announced it was widening the Covid vaccination programme to more children aged between 12 and 15 with underlying health conditions, which means about 200,000 more children will be invited for vaccines.

But it is not recommending jabs for all healthy teenagers.

Professor Wei Shen Lim, the chair of Covid-19 immunisation for the JCVI, said: “The JCVI’s view is that overall, the health benefits from Covid-19 vaccination to healthy children aged 12 to 15 years are marginally greater than the potential harms.”

The decision came a week after the Department of Health and Social Care confirmed preparations were afoot to ensure the NHS was ready to offer coronavirus jabs to all 12- to 15-year-olds in England from early September.

The department said it wanted to be “ready to hit the ground running”.

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Brazil starts boosters while many still await second jab

Some Brazilian cities are offering Covid booster jabs even though most people have yet to receive their second vaccine, in a sign of the concern in the country over the highly contagious delta variant.

Rio de Janeiro, Brazil’s epicentre for the variant and home to one of its largest elderly populations, began administering the boosters Wednesday. Northeastern cities Salvador and Sao Luis started on Monday, and the most populous city of Sao Paulo will begin after the weekend. The rest of the nation will follow the next week.

France, Israel, China and Chile are among the countries giving boosters to older citizens, but more people in those countries are fully vaccinated than the 30 per cent who have had two jabs in Brazil.

About nine out of 10 Brazilians have been vaccinated already or plan to be, according to pollster Datafolha. Most have had a first jab but not the second.

Emily Goddard4 September 2021 08:17