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Manchester Evening News
Manchester Evening News
National
Saffron Otter

Older teenagers 'seriously ill' with Covid 'led to jab rollout extension to 16 and 17-year-olds'

An increasing number of 16 and 17-year-olds becoming 'seriously ill' with coronavirus led to the extension of the vaccine rollout to that age group, a member of the committee advising on jabs said.

Professor Adam Finn, who sits on the Joint Committee on Vaccination and Immunisation (JCVI) and is a professor of paediatrics at the University of Bristol, said there had been 'a couple' of 17-year-olds in the area with Covid who needed intensive care in hospital in recent weeks.

He said while most young people will only have the virus in a mild form, the vaccines will be effective at preventing serious cases.

He told BBC Breakfast: “We’re going cautiously down through the ages now into childhood and it was clear that the number of cases and the number of young people in the age group – 16, 17 – that were getting seriously ill merited going forward with giving them just a first dose.”

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Prof Finn said the JCVI would advise “when and what” the second dose for that age group would be after assessing more data.

“Most young people who get this virus get it mildly or even without any symptoms at all," he added.

“But we are seeing cases in hospital even into this age group – we’ve had a couple of 17-year-olds here in Bristol admitted and needing intensive care over the course of the last four to six weeks – and so we are beginning to see a small number of serious cases.

“What we know for sure is that these vaccines are very effective at preventing those kind of serious cases from occurring.”

A person receives a Covid-19 jab at a pop-up vaccination centre (PA)

His comments follow an announcement by NHS England that confirmed nearly 16,000 people in the 16 to 17-year-old age group received their vaccine over the weekend, just days after JVCI guidance was updated.

Meanwhile, extending the jab rollout further down to the 12 to 15-year-old age group has not been ruled out.

Danny Altmann, professor of immunology at Imperial College London, said he thinks doing so would be “a good thing”.

He told Times Radio the more unvaccinated people there are, the more lungs there are “for virus to percolate in, therefore it’s got to be a good thing to be vaccinating more children down through the age range”.

He said children who have the virus but do not have symptoms are “as dangerous to the spread as anybody else”.

He said: “From a medical scientific point of view, I’d say there’s nothing special about the virus in their lungs that can’t transmit through to their families, through to their schoolteachers, through to their colleagues.”

From August 16, children under the age of 18 will no longer be required to self-isolate if they are contacted by NHS Test and Trace as a close contact of a positive Covid-19 case.

Instead they will be informed they have been in close contact with a positive case and advised to take a PCR test.

Guidance issued at the end of term states that schools no longer need to perform contact tracing after being notified of a positive case.

Close contacts will now be identified through the Test and Trace programme.

Previously, children were required to isolate for 10 days if another pupil in their bubble – which could be an entire year group – tested positive for Covid-19.

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