SHARE
COPY LINK

HEALTH

Children under five eligible for Covid-19 vaccinations in France

French health authorities have launched a campaign to vaccinate children under the age of five in certain high-risk groups against the Covid-19 virus.

Children under five eligible for Covid-19 vaccinations in France
A child receives a dose of vaccine during a visit of France's Health Minister Olivier Veran in a vaccination centre against Covid-19 (Photo by Eliot BLONDET / POOL / AFP)

According to reporting by Le Parisien, France’s public health body (the DGS) sent a message out to health professionals on Thursday night informing them that they had launched the campaign for children under the age of five in certain risk categories to be vaccinated against the virus.

The French medical regulator (HAS) had previously recommended that certain groups of children in certain high-risk groups – such as those with serious illnesses or those living with an immunocompromised parent – be vaccinated from the age of six months.

Previously those children could be vaccinated in hospitals and specialised centres, but starting on Monday, January 23rd, children under the age of five who are eligible for vaccination against Covid-19 will be able to be vaccinated by a doctor, midwife or nurse.

READ MORE: Paxlovid and vaccines: The latest Covid advice from the French government

The HAS released a list of conditions that would make children under the age of five eligible for vaccination, including;

  • Liver disease
  • Heart and respiratory diseases (including severe asthma requiring continuous treatment)
  • Neurological diseases
  • Primary or drug-induced immunodeficiency
  • Obesity
  • Diabetes
  • Hematologic malignancies
  • Sickle cell disease
  • Trisomy 2
  • Children who live in the same environment as an immunocompromised person

France’s decision to authorise vaccination for certain young children came after several other countries, such as the United States did so.

According to L’Obs, babies “under one year old accounted for 70 percent of hospitalisations for children aged 0-17 years old and 84 percent of critical care admissions.”

When authorising children under five for vaccinations, the HAS noted that so far “no deaths, cases of myocarditis or pericarditis have been reported in the various studies conducted.”

How to vaccinate your child 

First, you must verify whether your child under the age of five is eligible for the vaccine by checking the list of high-risk groups above.

Next, you should consult your child’s doctor, as a prescription will be necessary for them to be vaccinated. 

Both parents must agree to the child being vaccinated by filling out the authorisation form HERE, according to the DGS. 

The vaccination schedule will differ for children under the age of five. They will be given a lower dose of the vaccine – specifically the Pfizer-BioNTech shot – and it will be delivered in three total injections, rather than two. 

The interval between the first two will be three weeks, and the interval between the second and third jabs will be at least eight weeks.

Even if the child has had Covid, “all three doses should be given, to ensure optimal protection,” the DGS told medical professionals, according to Le Parisien. However, if the child becomes sick with Covid-19 during the vaccination schedule, it can be revised so that there is an interval of at least three months from infection and vaccination.

According to the HAS, citing data from a clinical trial conducted in the first half of 2022, three doses of the vaccine was 80.3 percent effective against symptomatic infections “in all age groups from 6 months to 4 years with no history of infection.”

What about kids over the age 5?

All children aged five to 11 have been eligible for Covid-19 vaccination since December 2021 in France (children aged 11 and over were already eligible). Despite this eligibility, only about five percent of children in this group have been vaccinated, giving France one of the lowest levels of vaccination for young children in Europe. 

While Covid-19 represents a greater risk for older children and adults, according to L’Obs, severe illness and death can also occur in children. 

READ MORE: Can anybody in France now get the latest Covid booster vaccine?

As of January 20th, the French government still required that children aged five to 11 have both parents or guardians (if both have legal parental authority) provide authorisation prior to vaccination against Covid-19.

Prior to being vaccinated, there will be a pre-vaccination medical interview (on-site) where the medical professional will ensure that the child does not have any conditions, answer any questions the child or parents may have, and finally provide a prescription for the vaccination.

Member comments

Log in here to leave a comment.
Become a Member to leave a comment.

LIVING IN FRANCE

‘It can be lonely living in France, especially the countryside, if you haven’t mastered the language’

A new group plans to offer volunteer services for English-speakers in France who feel lonely or isolated.

'It can be lonely living in France, especially the countryside, if you haven't mastered the language'

A multi-national group on the border of the Aude and Ariège départements in south-west France is seeking to set up a non-profit volunteer-run befriending project to help English-speakers in the area who may feel socially isolated – and wants to hear from anyone interested.

Jessica Wanamaker, who lives near Mirepoix, Ariège, is one of the driving forces behind the project.

“Befriending is fairly common in the UK,” she said. “There’s a whole befriending network there, which I think brings together nearly 200 organisations, if not more.”

The idea is to offer outreach by phone, video and/or in-person to English-speaking people aged around 65 or above with limited French, in the area surrounding Mirepoix.

Wanamaker said that the group was aware that a number of English-speakers of a certain generation living in the picturesque part of south-west France may be lonely or socially isolated, for a number of reasons – and may not be aware of the help available from the French social care sector. 

The New Yorker said that isolation may be common among older people who moved to France from a number of different countries.

“What we’re seeing anecdotally is a particular generation in their mid 70s losing their companions or all of a sudden not feeling comfortable about driving,” she said. “

“A lot of British people, in particular, tend to live in the countryside, in villages or just outside and some of them never really mastered the French language.”

The nascent group includes people from Germany, Netherlands, Ireland and Britain – all of them keen to help others who may feel ‘cut off’ from their communities and their support network.

Some English-speakers in rural south-west France may not be aware of the help they may be able to receive. 

“[They’re] often not known to the authorities and even where the authorities do know, while they do their best, they don’t [necessarily] have people able to speak English. And that’s the core of it – there isn’t a common language, apart from sign language.”

She said that the group also hopes to build long-term links with communities, “with outreach to the local mairie, to the commune”.

“When we last contacted them, French services said, ‘well, we don’t get that many calls from the English’. That’s partly because they probably don’t know what’s there, but also because of this barrier of communication.”

Anyone who thinks they might benefit from such a project, or who can volunteer their time – and language skills – is invited to email [email protected]

SHOW COMMENTS