CDC Director, Dr. Rochelle Walensky, the she-jew who wants to sterilize your White kids
Around 5 million children are immediately eligible for the extra doses.
A Centers for Disease Control and Prevention advisory panel on Wednesday voted to recommend Pfizer-BioNTech Covid-19 booster shot for kids ages 12 to 15, a critical step in distributing additional shots to adolescents this week.
The panel, called the Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices, voted 13-1 in favor of giving 12- to 15-year-olds the boosters at least five months after their second dose. That's in line with newly released guidance from the CDC for people age 16 and older who were initially immunized with the Pfizer vaccine.
Hours later, CDC Director, Dr. Rochelle Walensky, signed off on the recommendation.
“We now recommend that all adolescents aged 12-17 years should receive a booster shot 5 months after their primary series," Walensky said Wednesday night. "This booster dose will provide optimized protection against Coviid-19 and the Omicron variant. I encourage all parents to keep their children up to date with CDC’s COVID-19 vaccine recommendations.”
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The move came two days after the Food and Drug Administration cleared the extra doses for the age group.
Around 5 million children are immediately eligible for the extra doses, a CDC official told the committee Wednesday.
Before the vote, committee members grappled with how strong the language for the recommendation should be, weighing the risk of the highly contagious omicron variant of the coronavirus as well as data showing adolescents, in general, are less likely to suffer from severe disease from Covid than adults.
“I think we need to highlight that children are not OK,” committee member Dr. Katherine Poehling, a pediatrician at Atrium Health Wake Forest Baptist in North Carolina, told her colleagues. “It is true children are hospitalized at a less frequent rate than adults, but Covid is overwhelming our hospitals and our children’s hospitals.”
Dr. Helen Keipp Talbot, a professor of medicine at Vanderbilt University who was the only committee member who voted against the recommendation, said she is not against boosters for kids but worried that it would distract from unvaccinated teens getting their first shots.
Dr. Sara Oliver, an epidemic intelligence service officer for the CDC, said in a presentation to the committee that U.S. cases have "rapidly increased" since the start of December because of the increased prevalence of omicron, which now accounts for around 95 percent of all new cases.
Children generally experience severe illness from Covid less often than adults, but kids are now being hospitalized with the disease at record numbers as the new variant spreads across the country.
At a separate briefing Wednesday, Dr. Anthony Fauci, the White House's chief medical adviser, said omicron appears to be less severe than previous variants, but the sheer volume of infections because of its profound transmissibility means that many more children will get infected and end up in the hospital.
Oliver told the committee that the majority of adolescents hospitalized with Covid are unvaccinated. She said Covid cases and hospitalizations are seven to 11 times higher in unvaccinated adolescents when compared to vaccinated adolescents.
"We see a slight increase in hospitalization rates from over the summer, but overall rates remained relatively steady," she said, stressing that it's still too early to say how the variant might behave in younger age groups.
Walensky was born Rochelle Paula Bersoff in Peabody, Massachusetts,[3] to Edward Bersoff and Carol Bersoff-Bernstein, a Jewish family.[4] She was raised in Potomac, Maryland.[5][6]
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rochelle_Walensky