Covid-19: JCVI opts not to recommend universal vaccination of 12-15 year olds
BMJ 2021; 374 doi: https://doi.org/10.1136/bmj.n2180 (Published 03 September 2021) Cite this as: BMJ 2021;374:n2180Read our latest coverage of the coronavirus pandemic

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Dear Editor
Since the JCVI, who exist to advise the Secretaries of State on matters relating to vaccination, have decided that the benefit of Covid 19 vaccination for 12-15year olds is only “marginally greater than the potential known harms” should that not be the end of the matter?
What practicality could possibly supplant the fact that the JCVI have determined with regard to all aspects of risks and benefits to children in that age range not to recommend that the vaccine be implemented?
Since the sixties we have been advised over and over that the JCVI advice on vaccination / vaccine safety is what is followed in the UK so why on this occasion would anyone for any reason seek to circumvent their decision?
With the determination of the JCVI in mind, the individual child would be taking the risk in having a vaccination where the benefits in doing so are “marginally greater than the potential known harms”.
In as much as the The Health Protection (Vaccination) Regulations 2009 section 3 states that……
(3) “ The Secretary of State must make arrangements to ensure, so far as is reasonably practicable, that the recommendation of the JCVI is implemented”.(1)
is it not also the case that on the occasions where the JCVI does not make a recommendation in respect of a specific vaccine that the Secretaries of State are required to respect and abide by their decision?
Children and young people paid a very hefty price during the Swine Flu pandemic when a significant number suffered narcolepsy and cataplexy following administration of Pandemrix vaccine and parents will understandably be nervous and cautious this time around.
What solace and clarity can they draw from the current confusion with the JCVI not recommending the vaccine for 12-15yr olds (for the reasons given) but advising that other practicalities be considered in the risk benefit analysis to possibly justify introducing it whatever?
(1) https://www.legislation.gov.uk/uksi/2009/38/regulation/2/made
Competing interests: No competing interests
Dear Editor
The decision of the United Joint Committee on Vaccination and Immunisation (JCVI) not to recommend immunisation for younger age groups should not surprise anyone. Amidst the apparent controversy, it is helpful to pause and examine the case for COVID-19 vaccination carefully, from first principles.
Vaccination policy normally works on two levels:
1. Individual protection. You get vaccinated to reduce your chances of getting sick, disabled, or dying from Disease X. This is a simple risk-benefit equation; If I take the vaccine, will the reduction in harm to me from the disease probably be greater than the harm that the vaccine may cause me?
If the answer is ‘yes’, most would opt for vaccination.
2. Societal protection. This is more complex and introduces ethical dilemmas. You vaccinate someone (or are vaccinated yourself) to reduce transmission and protect others from potential infection, sickness or death; Should someone else (even a child) be put at risk of harm (side-effects) to protect another? Or to protect people of the future through disease eradication?
The answer depends on societal values, but also requires a particularly safe vaccine.
Nearly all existing vaccines are target children – they either address major childhood diseases, or diseases of all ages for which early vaccination provides life-long immunity. While personal protection is the main driver, herd immunity is cited for some, such as measles vaccination.
COVID-19 is another nasty infectious disease, and vaccination decisions require these same considerations. However, the benefit-risk calculations for children differ in important ways.
1. Does the vaccine benefit the vaccinated?
Initial trials showed vaccinated people suffered less severe COVID-19 symptoms than unvaccinated.[1] Despite waning effectiveness over time, vaccines provide some protection against symptomatic disease.[2] But severity and mortality is highly associated with older age and specific co-morbidities.[3] Children are extremely unlikely to die – well children at less than 1 per million,[4,5] the risk to the elderly is over 1000 times higher.[6] So vaccinating a million well children will probably prevent, at most, one death. It may reduce post-viral syndromes (long COVID) but these are also uncommon – less than 2% after 2 months.[7]
COVID-19 vaccine side-effects are well recognized,[8] but incidence is poorly monitored and understood. The US voluntary reporting system (VAERS) has higher rates of vaccination-associated death than all other vaccines combined over the past 20 years.[9] The initial targeting of frail elderly people will have influenced this, but similar mortality is not reported for flu vaccines, and side effects such as myocarditis are targeting the young.[10] Blood clotting disorders (e.g. heart attacks, cerebral venous sinus thromboses) are associated with vaccination, as with COVID-19 itself.[11-13] As the mRNA vaccines are a new technology, longer-term side-effects remain speculative.
To receive full benefit, a vaccine recipient must be non-immune. While cross-immunity from other coronaviruses is unpredictable,[14] a significant proportion of the population who previously had COVID-19 have as good or better immunity than the vaccine provides.[15,16] Vaccination may add temporarily to this protection, but they are so well protected that clinical benefit will be minimal.[17]
So in balance, in the elderly where COVID-19 mortality is up to 7% of infections,18 and others with major risk factors, vaccination against COVID-19 seems appropriate. The benefits likely outweigh risks. In children and young adults, the equation appears weighted towards risk.[5,19] For anyone who has already had COVID-19, no clinical benefit is demonstrated.
2. Does the vaccine protect others?
For the vaccination to be altruistic – protect others – it must greatly reduce transmission. Leaving the ethics aside, we can question this impact:
A. If the vaccine blocks transmission, does that help anyone?
Only if the vulnerable others are not vaccinated, or their vaccination is poorly protective. Evidence suggests it is protective for at least for a few months once immunity is established.[20] So only those voluntarily unvaccinated, or ineligible for/unresponsive to vaccination, will significantly benefit, including children and those with rare contra-indications.[21]
B. Does it block transmission?
Despite early hopes, it does not. Vaccinated people who become infected have similar viral loads (similar infectiousness) as unvaccinated people.[20,22] But having less symptoms,[20] they may be less likely to self-isolate, potentially increasing risk to the vulnerable.
C. What if almost everyone is vaccinated?
Despite high hopes of gaining transmission-blocking ‘herd immunity’ through mass vaccination, this seems unachievable. In some circumstances, vaccination could promote infection.[23] Vaccinated people transmit the virus. Israel, Iceland, and the UK, with the vast majority of adults vaccinated, record relatively high continuing transmission.[24] Allowing non-vulnerable people to gain broader, longer-lasting post-infection immunity may protect the vulnerable more effectively and safely. This logic underpins the UK's policy of not introducing varicella (chickenpox) immunization, preventing waning vaccine induced immunity from leading to more severe adult infection.
D. What about variants?
As vaccinated people become infected with similar viral loads, narrow vaccine-induced immunity against spike protein may favour variant selection. Post-infection immunity is more broadly active against current variants.[25] The argument that unvaccinated drive development of variants has a poor evidence-base.
To summarize what we do know:
From a public health standpoint, it makes poor sense to impose vaccine side- effects on people at minimal risk of severe COVID-19. The argument that it protects others is weak or contrary to evidence. This conclusion suggests a policy of targeting vaccination to those at highest risk, allowing broader post-infection immunity to provide community protection.
UK politicians might do well to reflect on the country's comparative success, since the Whooping Cough vaccination scare of the 1970s, in maintaining high levels of immunisation against significant childhood diseases. Much credit lies in maintaining a clear evidence-based policy in which the JCVI has played a key role, thoroughly laid out in "The Green Book" (Immunisation against infectious disease).[26] It would be regrettable if events linked to the COVID-19 immunisation programme ended up undermining the UK's whole vaccine effort.
1. https://www.fda.gov/media/144416/download
2. https://www.medrxiv.org/content/10.1101/2021.08.25.21262584v1
3. https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/all.14657
4. https://www.wsj.com/articles/cdc-covid-19-coronavirus-vaccine-side-effec...
5. https://adc.bmj.com/content/105/12/1180
6. https://covid.cdc.gov/covid-data-tracker/#demographics
7. https://www.medrxiv.org/content/10.1101/2021.05.05.21256649v2.full.pdf
8. https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8326508/
9. https://www.openvaers.com/covid-data/mortality
10. https://jamanetwork.com/journals/jama/fullarticle/2782900?guestAccessKey...
11. https://www.openvaers.com/covid-data
12. https://www.thelancet.com/journals/lancet/article/PIIS0140-67362101608-1...
13. https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/32554424/
14. https://assets.publishing.service.gov.uk/government/uploads/system/uploa...
15. https://www.ons.gov.uk/peoplepopulationandcommunity/healthandsocialcare/...
16. https://www.nature.com/articles/d41586-021-01557-z
17. https://jamanetwork.com/journals/jama/fullarticle/2782139
18. https://bmcpublichealth.biomedcentral.com/articles/10.1186/s12889-021-11...
19. https://www.medrxiv.org/content/10.1101/2021.08.30.21262866v1
20. https://assets.publishing.service.gov.uk/government/uploads/system/uploa...
21. https://www.sps.nhs.uk/?s=&orderby=&order=DESC&cat%5B%5D=3650
22. https://www.ndm.ox.ac.uk/files/coronavirus/covid-19-infection-survey/fin...
23. https://www.biorxiv.org/content/10.1101/2021.08.22.457114v1
24. https://ourworldindata.org/covid-cases
25. https://www.science.org/doi/full/10.1126/science.abh1766
26. https://www.gov.uk/government/collections/immunisation-against-infectiou...
Competing interests: Dr Salmon is a Crematorium Medical Referee for the Cardiff Council Crematorium, Thornhill, Cardiff and is remunerated on a fee for service basis. Dr Bell is employed in the development and clinical evaluation of diagnostic tests for SARS-COV-2 infection. Both authors are members of HART.
Dear Editor
I have read that children of a certain age can have strong immune systems that can over react to the vaccines. I have yet to read that a reduced dose might solve the problem. Has this been tried?
Competing interests: No competing interests
Dear Editor
As I understand it , the Astra Zeneca vaccine trials did not include the 12-15 age group, thus there is no safety data available to justify this policy nor are the long term unintended effects of the vaccine known. The vaccine was never intended for use for this age range. The MHRA licence/temporary authorisation does not allow it.
Children tend not to be badly affected by Covid-19 due to their ACE2 receptors down regulated, a mere 2/million end up in ICU, hence mass vaccination for this age range is neither beneficial from a medical view point or a health economic one.
It would make more sense to vaccinate the elderly and vulnerable. The other consideration is that mass vaccination cannot achieve herd immunity as the vaccinated can still transmit the Delta variant and probably any others. Thus the circuit of Covid-19 infection cannot be broken in the population in any age range by vaccination, we must continue relying on FFP3 masks, improved ventilation of buildings & develop better treatments for those hospitalised.
Regards,
Richard de Clare
Competing interests: No competing interests
Dear Editor
JCVI has again opted (wisely) against mass Covid vaccinations for all children and teenagers; plan to offer jabs to vulnerable 12 to 15-year-olds. Let’s explore the issue (COVID in children), available data, and most importantly the risk-benefit analysis, to conclude whether mass-vaccinations in children are indicated?
As of September3rd, 2021, ~5 million children in the United States have been tested positive for COVID-19 (1). Only ~1% of those resulted in hospitalization (10-20 times less than in adults) and >70% of those children hospitalized had underlying comorbidities such as obesity (2). Case fatality rate in this group is also extremely low (0 - 0.03%; 100 times less than in elderly) (1).
Next we look at the risks associated with mass vaccinations which potentially include ~75 million children in the US alone. In the absence of long-term safety data, there is a potential for harm - both for known side effects as well as the long-term unknown and unintended consequences for children (given longer remaining lifespan) from COVID-19 vaccines. Besides local injection site reactions and systemic symptoms, the CDC has completed investigation of more serious side effects - myocarditis and pericarditis - now reported in over 1000 children and young adults and found a potential link (3); US FDA has issued a warning for the same (4). Europe's drug regulator has also found a possible link between heart inflammation and mRNA COVID-19 vaccines (5). Even if these reactions are rare, the absolute number of (healthy) children affected with this and other unknown side effects could potentially outnumber complications due to COVID-19 requiring hospitalizations.
Another important point to consider is possibility of unintended consequences related to differences in vaccine induced and infection induced immunity? There is a possibility that antibody-responses due to mRNA vaccines against SARS-CoV-2 might be similar to that of natural infection, but CD8 T cell responses generated could be less-broadly protective against future variants (6).
Proponents of covid-19 vaccine in children argue that children transmit viruses to vulnerable older adults. Data to back this argument does not exist. More so, the Covid vaccination rates for elderly in the United States (and in western countries) is relatively very high (~85% has received one shot and 75% has received 2 shots) which should provide adequate protection from Covid infection and complications (7).
We must vaccinate our (and global) vulnerable population (older individuals with risk factors and children with co-morbidities). However, utmost caution should be applied before embarking on any public policy suggesting/mandating mass-COVID-immunization of healthy children. Informed consent should also be “truly informed” for those parents who wish to vaccinate their children (8), and we must use our wisdom; the marginal benefits of mass vaccination should be considered in the larger overall context of available resources and potential harm (9).
References:
1. American Academy of Pediatrics. Children and COVID-19: state-level data report. Updated 7/1/2021
https://services.aap.org/en/pages/2019-novel-coronavirus-covid-19-infect...
2. Hospitalization of Adolescents Aged 12–17 Years with Laboratory-Confirmed COVID-19 — COVID-NET, 14 States, March 1, 2020–April 24, 2021 | MMWR (cdc.gov)
3. Myocarditis and Pericarditis Following mRNA COVID-19 Vaccination. https://www.cdc.gov/coronavirus/2019-ncov/vaccines/safety/myocarditis.html
4. https://www.fda.gov/news-events/press-announcements/coronavirus-covid-19...
5.. https://www.reuters.com/business/healthcare-pharmaceuticals/eu-regulator...
6. Ivanova EN et al. Discrete immune response signature to SARS-CoV-2 mRNA vaccination versus infection.
7. https://covid.cdc.gov/covid-data-tracker/#vaccinations
8. Emanuel EJ, Boyle CW. Assessment of Length and Readability of Informed Consent Documents for COVID-19 Vaccine Trials. JAMA Netw Open 2021
9. Think Twice Before Giving the COVID Vax to Healthy Kids | MedPage Today
Competing interests: No competing interests
Dear Editor
I realise it may be a gap in my reading but currently for well children under 17y and 9 months the UK recommends a single covid shot. The green book does not give evidence of how effective a single jab is against delta variant only that it is lower than against the alpha variant. (September 3 2021 update) The product licence also is for 2 jabs. At the time of this e response the jcvi has advised against jabbing those under 16 if generally well and not in contact with those who are vulnerable and passed the buck to others. Please can an ethicist and or a lawyer please spell out exactly what will be needed for fully informed consent in young people with the current policy and compare the benefits say with mask wearing and social distancing when in crowded places which is not UK (England ) policy
Competing interests: I am in favour of vaccines with fully informed consent and involved with the covid vaccine programme
Re: Covid-19: JCVI opts not to recommend universal vaccination of 12-15 year olds
Dear Editor
Given that the JCVI, having considered the risks and benefits in offering Covid 19 vaccine to children between 12-15yrs of age did not make the recommendation, is there not a risk in ferreting around for other practicalities to include in the assessment, presumably so as to enhance the percentage in favour of vaccination, that Article 36 of the UN Convention On The Rights Of The Child might come into play.
Article 36 - Other forms of exploitation
“Children should be protected from any activity that takes advantage of them or could harm their welfare and development”.
The JCVI had due regard for the welfare of children in identifying the risk/benefit analysis but in altering the balance in favour of vaccination by other means, potential risks will be visited on the child which when considered alongside the benefits, the JCVI couldn’t justify. Might this have implications for Artice 36?.
(1) https://www.nswchildrensweek.org.au/un-convention-on-the-rights-of-the-c...
Competing interests: No competing interests