Healthcare workers prepare to test people for the coronavirus disease in Sadr city, Baghdad, Iraq. Reuters
Healthcare workers prepare to test people for the coronavirus disease in Sadr city, Baghdad, Iraq. Reuters
Healthcare workers prepare to test people for the coronavirus disease in Sadr city, Baghdad, Iraq. Reuters
Healthcare workers prepare to test people for the coronavirus disease in Sadr city, Baghdad, Iraq. Reuters

Iraq could vaccinate children against Covid-19 as cases increase


Mina Aldroubi
  • English
  • Arabic

Iraq is considering rolling out Covid-19 vaccines for children following a rise in cases, the health ministry has said.

While children are far less likely than adults to get severely ill or die from Covid-19, international data suggests they can be just as likely to catch and spread the disease.

“Providing the vaccine to children is a subject under study by a specialised technical committee at the Ministry of Health, and it is a purely scientific decision that will be decided in the coming days and announced officially,” the ministry’s spokesman Said Al Badr said on Wednesday.

The development comes as the Pfizer/BioNTech's Covid-19 vaccine could soon be authorised for children as young as five in the US.

The US Food and Drug Administration has requested to vaccinate children and said the benefits would outweigh the risks. For children under 11, the vaccine would require two shots given on the same schedule as the vaccine for adolescents and adults, but the doses will be a third of the size.

Iraq is yet to approve the move or decide on the dosage.

The health ministry said it has developed an electric card for people who cannot receive the vaccine due to health reasons, justified by medical reports.

Medical staff 'more likely to be infected'

"In very rare cases those that will be exempt from taking the vaccine will depend on the opinion of a physician,” Mr Al Bader said.

He said medical staff working in various health institutions are “more likely to be infected with the coronavirus so they will be given priority and follow up to receiving the vaccine”.

Medical officials have recently spoken of a fourth wave of the virus hitting the war-torn country that has a depleted health sector.

For the past two weeks, Iraq has recorded a spike in infected cases, with more than 1,300 daily cases.

Public hesitancy towards taking the vaccine has slowed down the country’s push to ensure its 40 million population is inoculated. Only 5.5 million Iraqis have taken at least one shot of the vaccine since the country launched the programme in March.

  • A staff member in protective gear at Basra University Hospital, where Covid-19 patients in the southern Iraqi city are treated.
    A staff member in protective gear at Basra University Hospital, where Covid-19 patients in the southern Iraqi city are treated.
  • Surgical masks for visitors and protective clothing for staff are commons sights at Basra University Hospital.
    Surgical masks for visitors and protective clothing for staff are commons sights at Basra University Hospital.
  • The first documented case of Covid-19 in Iraq was a patient admitted to this hospital in the shrine city of Najaf.
    The first documented case of Covid-19 in Iraq was a patient admitted to this hospital in the shrine city of Najaf.
  • Iraqi health workers collect swab samples for Covid-19 testing at the Shorja market in Baghdad.
    Iraqi health workers collect swab samples for Covid-19 testing at the Shorja market in Baghdad.
  • A medical worker unpacks a box of Pfizer-BioNTech coronavirus vaccine at a vaccination centre in Iraq's capital, Baghdad.
    A medical worker unpacks a box of Pfizer-BioNTech coronavirus vaccine at a vaccination centre in Iraq's capital, Baghdad.
  • Refrigerated Pfizer-BioNTech coronavirus vaccines being unpacked at an inoculation centre in Baghdad.
    Refrigerated Pfizer-BioNTech coronavirus vaccines being unpacked at an inoculation centre in Baghdad.
  • A coronavirus patient at a hospital in Najaf, Iraq. Infections in Iraq have surged to record highs during a third wave spurred by the more aggressive delta variant. Hospitals neglected by decades of war are overwhelmed with severely ill patients.
    A coronavirus patient at a hospital in Najaf, Iraq. Infections in Iraq have surged to record highs during a third wave spurred by the more aggressive delta variant. Hospitals neglected by decades of war are overwhelmed with severely ill patients.
Updated: October 28, 2021, 6:03 AM