Covid Vaccine For Children Aged 5-11 Approves Brazil

18,759 new Covid cases in last 24 hours in Brazil


Brazilian Health Authorities approved Covid-19 vaccines for children aged 5 to 11 on Wednesday, as the country faces a rapid increase in cases due to social gatherings and the arrival of the new Omicron variant.

 

The final permit by Brazil's Ministry of Health comes three weeks after the nation's independent medicines regulator, Anvisa, declared Pfizer-BioNTech's child-size dose to be safe and effective for them.

 

Health Minister Marcelo Queiroga said, "To all those parents who want to vaccinate their children, the Ministry of Health will guarantee doses of the (Covid-19) vaccine."

 

Until Wednesday's announcement, Controversy abounded in Brazil, with many alleging an improper delay by the government.

 

President Jair Bolsonaro did not get vaccinated yet and said he will not immunize his 11-year-old daughter Laura, asked weeks ago to publish the names of those responsible for Anvisa's decision, unleashing a wave of threats.

 

The final authorization comes after a massive Rise in infections in the country and a struggle to repair the health ministry's hacked Covid website.

 

According to the latest data released, Brazil's Health Ministry recorded 18,759 new cases in 24 hours, the highest level since October 5.

 

The seven-day average also rose to 9,876 new cases, up from 5,033 the previous Tuesday, and 3,386 the week before that.

 

The rapidly increasing rate of new infections follows a trend seen in other nations where Omicron has taken hold.

 

Ethel Maciel, an epidemiologist with the Federal University of Espirito Santo said, "We will have growth of the Omicron variant here as in all the other countries."

 

"The Christmas and New Year holidays, and the Omicron variant contributed a lot," she explained.

 

But she also noted that Brazil "has a backlog of data due to a problem with the tracking system, meaning the site is currently being updated which inflates the number of cases.

 

The issue stems from a cyberattack last month that disabled the government's website for tracking infections and deaths, while allowing hackers to steal personal data and delete citizens' health passes.

 

On Tuesday, Authorities in Rio de Janeiro, wary of Omicron's increasing impact, announced the cancellation of next month's carnival street celebrations.

 

After the US, Brazil has recorded the second highest number of deaths due to Covid with around 620,000 since the global pandemic began.

 

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