What we know about COVID-19 vaccines for children under 5 in Nova Scotia - Action News
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Nova Scotia

What we know about COVID-19 vaccines for children under 5 in Nova Scotia

On Thursday, the province announced that bookings for COVID vaccinations are available for for children between six months old and five years old.

Parents can start booking appointments on July 28

Health Canada has approved the Moderna vaccine for children six months to five years. (Lisi Niesner/Reuters)

Nova Scotia children between six months old and five can now get their first round of the ModernaCOVID-19 vaccine.

The province made the official announcement on July 28.

"We're not having any prioritization system and we're just opening it up to all children all ...of that age," Dr. Shelley Deeks, Nova Scotia's deputy chief medical officer of health, told reporters during a phone conference about two weeks ago.

"Part of that is because we don't know what the demand is going to be. And we know that we're going to get more and more doses as supply comes into [the] country."

Children will need two shots or three if severelyimmunocompromized of the Moderna vaccine, the only one approved for children in that age group in Canada. The doses will need to be at least eight weeks apart. Children will be considered fully vaccinated 14 days after their last dose.

If a child has COVID-19, the appointment should be made eight weeks after the infection, Deeks said.

A small glass bottle of vaccine with the words
Nova Scotia expects Moderna doses for young children to arrive in early August. (Frederic J. Brown/AFP/Getty Images)

Infectious disease expert Dr. Lisa Barrett said even if a child had COVID-19, it's still important for them to get vaccinated.

"We do know the most reliable and consistent boosting of your immune response probably happens with vaccine," Barrettt said. "We don't have that data directly in those younger age groups at the moment [because] we're just about to start vaccinating them yet, but that makes reasonable sense."

Parents are advised to make sure theirchildren havetheir other routine vaccinations before the COVID-19 one is available, Deeks said.

"Now is the time to get them up to date to protect them against those vaccine-preventable diseases. And then they'll be ready to get their dose of Moderna once we have it in the province," she said.

If children are gettingother routine pediatric vaccines, the province says those vaccines can only be administered at least 14 days before or after the COVID-19 vaccine.

The province estimatesthere are around 34,000 children aged six months to four years old in Nova Scotia.