Tag Archives: youngest

Michael Jackson’s Youngest Son Bigi “Blanket” Jackson Looks So Grown Up on 22nd Birthday – E! NEWS

  1. Michael Jackson’s Youngest Son Bigi “Blanket” Jackson Looks So Grown Up on 22nd Birthday E! NEWS
  2. Michael Jackson’s Son Prince Jackson Wishes Brother Bigi a Happy Birthday: ‘Bro Is Killing It’ PEOPLE
  3. Prince Jackson Shares Sweet Tribute To Little Brother Bigi ‘Blanket’ Jackson On His 22nd Birthday Access Hollywood
  4. Michael Jackson’s son Prince shares rare details of brother Bigi’s personal life in sweet birthday tribute HELLO!
  5. Michael Jackson’s Sons Prince & Bigi Jackson Seen in Rare Photo Together Amid Bigi’s Birthday: ‘Killing It’ HollywoodLife

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Soccer player Da’vian Kimbrough, 13, becomes youngest professional athlete in US team sports history – CNN

  1. Soccer player Da’vian Kimbrough, 13, becomes youngest professional athlete in US team sports history CNN
  2. 13-Year-Old Da’vian Kimbrough Becomes Youngest Pro Athlete in U.S. History: ‘A Remarkable Talent’ PEOPLE
  3. Da’vian Kimbrough, 13, becomes youngest pro soccer player in U.S. after signing with the Sacramento Republic CBS News
  4. Sacramento Republic FC makes history by signing 13-year-old Woodland native Woodland Daily Democrat
  5. 13-year-old signs contract with Sacramento Republic; believed to be youngest pro athlete in American sports Fox News
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

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Arizona State hires Kenny Dillingham: Oregon offensive coordinator becomes youngest coach in Power Five

Arizona State has hired Oregon offensive coordinator Kenny Dillingham as its next football coach, the school announced on Sunday. Dillingham, an Arizona State alum, has overseen a Ducks offense that has fielded one of the most productive units in the country this season, averaging 511.2 yards per game (No. 3 in the FBS), 7.07 yards per play (No. 5 in the FBS) and 40.2 points per game (No. 4 in the FBS). 

Dillingham takes over the program after Arizona State fired Herm Edwards earlier this season amid a 1-2 start and ongoing NCAA investigation into illegal recruiting practices during the COVID-19 dead period. 

“It is an honor and a privilege to be named the head coach at Arizona State University,” Dillingham said. “This is a special place to myself and my wife who is also a graduate. I truly believe the team we will build here is one that the state of Arizona and all Sun Devils can rally behind and be proud of as it will take everyone in the valley to help this program achieve the level of success it is due. I am excited to get to work and promise no one will work harder than the staff we will put together.”

Though just 32 years old, Dillingham is a Scottsdale native and has risen through the coaching ranks quickly thanks to getting started in the Arizona high school ranks at a young age. He graduated from Arizona State in 2012, and was hired by then-offensive coordinator Mike Norvell to be an offensive staffer for the Sun Devils in 2014. The Norvell relationship continued with assistant stints at Memphis (2016-18) and Florida State (2020-21) with a one-year stop at Auburn in between. 

When Oregon coach Dan Lanning arrived as Ducks coach in December 2021, he moved quickly to bring Dillingham on board, knowing his expertise as a former co-worker from their time together at Memphis. The same reasons that Dillingham was such an attractive candidate for the Ducks to pull back out to the Pac-12 as an offensive coordinator also apply to the Sun Devils, who will now turn their program over to a native son in the midst of a much-needed reboot.  

“We are proud to announce Kenny Dillingham as our new head football coach,” athletic director Ray Anderson said. “He brings the energy, knowledge and appreciation of our state and university that is valued by all of us,” Anderson said.  “His knowledge of the current college football landscape, learned by coaching across the nation, is needed and wanted at ASU. He will care at the highest level about our state, our alumni, our former players and every single group that is important to help us win. We look forward to working with him and all Sun Devils in making his staff successful and helping our program reach our goals.”

Youth movement in Tempe 

Dillingham becomes the youngest active Power Five coach. Interestingly enough, he’s taking that title from Lanning, who was the youngest power conference coach in 2022 at the age of 36. But beyond the notability of his youth, Dillingham’s age also represents a departure in the recent hires by Arizona State for its football program. 

He is the fifth head coaching hire since 2001 for the Sun Devils, and in both age and experience, he’s an outlier compared to the previous four. Dennis Erickson (2007-11) and Edwards (2018-22) brought extensive coaching track records and also years of experience. Though both Dirk Koetter (2001-06) and Todd Graham (2012-17) were only in their 40s when they arrived, the resume had a few more references. 

But where Dillingham makes up ground for that apparent lack of experience is in the support he carries within the ASU community. Coaching high school football in Scottsdale for more than a half decade has given Dillingham connections that have helped secure this opportunity, and Sun Devils fans are hoping that it will provide a spark to help power the program forward. 

NCAA investigation lingering 

The NCAA is still investigating the Arizona State football program for alleged violations that occurred during the 2020 offseason. Even before Edwards’ dismissal, the program saw multiple assistants either fired or resign as a result of the program’s illegal recruiting practices during the COVID-19 dead period. The ongoing investigation has been a cloud over the program’s future, and Dillingham and his staff may have to weather some of the fallout. 

By investing in someone like Dillingham, who is taking their first job but also has extensive experience in the area, Arizona State would be playing the long game and hoping a native son can lead the program out of the storm to a brighter future. 

Opportunity to move up in the Pac-12 

With USC and UCLA departing for the Big Ten, the Pac-12 is about to see a shakeup in the supposed pecking order within the conference. These kind of realignment moves can provide an opportunity for programs to jump up and obtain a new status within the conference hierarchy, and though divisions will be gone, it’s very possible that Arizona State can become the strongest presence in the south. 

The demographics of Arizona and the Sun Devils’ recruiting base has seen the state’s high school football improve, and Dillingham’s experience from that circuit should allow the program to win some of those battles even against their new Big Ten-based competition. While Oregon and Washington are fighting for supremacy in the Northwest, the door is open for Arizona State, a program with only three Pac-12 championships to its name, to become one of the regular contenders in the conference. 

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Virginia Walmart shooting: Authorities identify the youngest of 6 victims in deadly mass shooting in Chesapeake



CNN
 — 

The youngest victim in this week’s mass shooting inside a Walmart in Chesapeake, Virginia, is a 16-year-old employee who reportedly used his first paycheck to buy his mother a gift before he was killed two days ahead of Thanksgiving.

Fernando Chavez-Barron, along with five other coworkers, was shot and killed Tuesday night when a manager opened fire in an employee break room during a meeting before killing himself, according to a social media post from the city of Chesapeake that publicly identified the teen on Friday.

As authorities work to learn more about the gunman, including publicly releasing a note found on his phone after the shooting, friends of the 16-year-old killed are in mourning.

Those who knew Fernando told CNN affiliate WTKR that he had just started working at Walmart and used his first paycheck to purchase a gift for his mother.

A friend of Fernando’s, Joshua Trejo-Alvarado, said he’s still in disbelief that he’s gone.

“I’m out of words, and speechless that it was him,” Trejo-Alvarado told WTKR. “I was hoping everything was a dream until today. I wish he was still standing here with me. I prayed yesterday night with my whole family for him. We got flowers and candles at home for him, too.”

Trejo-Alvarado texted and called Fernando but didn’t receive a response, he said. Later, he called his friend’s brother, who told him Fernando didn’t survive, WTKR reported.

“He would always be outgoing with anybody he met. He was nice,” Trejo-Alvarado said.

Five others at the Walmart were killed, including Randy Blevins, 70, Lorenzo Gamble, 43, Tyneka Johnson, 22, Brian Pendleton, 38, and Kellie Pyle, 52.

On Thanksgiving Day, the community gathered at a growing makeshift memorial outside the store to pay respects for the lives lost in yet another mass shooting that turned a staple of daily life into a gruesome crime scene. Two people were still hospitalized, with one in critical condition, the city said Thursday.

In honor of the victims, Chesapeake city officials are planning a vigil Monday at 6 p.m. in City Park.

Also on Monday, city council leaders will hold a special meeting confirming an emergency declaration that “will free up funding to support recovery” after the shooting, according to the city’s Twitter account Friday. The post did not specify how the funding would be used.

Since the shooting, authorities have been trying to determine a motive for the sudden eruption of gunfire in a workplace two days before Thanksgiving. Officials on Friday released details of writings from the shooter’s phone obtained after the tragedy.

The writings – titled “Death note” – found on the shooter’s phone contained grievances against people in his life, including some coworkers, according to the city’s Twitter account Friday.

The note mentions God, the holy spirit and how the author felt he was mocked by his “associates” – a job title Walmart uses for some of its employees.

“The associates gave me evil twisted grins, mocked me and celebrated my down fall the last day. That’s why they suffer the same fate as me,” the note says.

“I wish I could have saved everyone from myself,” the note continues. “My God forgive me for what I’m going to do.”

The city released the note in a series of tweets, redacting the names of those mentioned. None of the victims in the shooting were among the redacted names, police said.

Asked whether the gunman had complained about his colleagues, a statement from Walmart said, “There is nothing that can justify taking innocent lives. Our focus continues to be on the families who are grieving and supporting our associates through this difficult time.”

The gun used to carry out the killings is a 9 mm weapon, which the gunman legally purchased the day of the shooting, the city said.

A search of the gunman’s home turned up a box of ammunition and “various items in reference to the 9 mm handgun (box, receipt, other paperwork),” the city said in a tweet.

The shooter, who has been identified as 31-year-old Andre Bing, has been described by coworkers as someone who previously displayed odd and threatening behavior.

Shaundrayia Reese, who worked with Bing from 2015 to 2018, described him as a loner.

“He was always saying the government was watching him. He didn’t like social media and he kept black tape on his phone camera. Everyone always thought something was wrong with him,” Reese said.

Another former coworker, Joshua Johnson, worked at Walmart until 2019 and said Bing had made threats.

“He said if he ever got fired from his job he would retaliate and people would remember who he was,” Johnson said.

Reese and Johnson said they didn’t report any concerns about Bing’s behavior to management.

Employees at the Walmart had just clocked in for their overnight shift Tuesday when they saw a manager standing in the doorway, pointing a gun at them in the break room. But the disturbing image hadn’t set in for some employees, including Briana Tyler, who had just been hired at the store.

“It still hadn’t really kicked in that it was real. Because I was thinking it was like a simulation type of thing, like this is what we do if we have an active shooter,” Tyler told CNN. “And the reason why I think it was that was because I recognized his face.”

But then reality set in when she saw her colleagues getting shot.

“He just had a blank stare on his face and he just literally just looked around the room and just shot and there were people just dropping to the floor,” Tyler said. “Everybody was screaming, gasping. He just walked away after that and just continued throughout the store and just kept shooting.”

Hear what the Walmart shooter told this survivor

As the shooter walked away from the break room, employee Jessie Wilczewski hid under a table, she told CNN. She described seeing some of her coworkers on the floor or lying on chairs – some likely dead.

When the shooter returned to the break room, he told her to get out from under the table, Wilczewski said.

“He said, ‘Jessie, go home,’” said Wilczewski, who’s a mother to a 15-month-old child.

As she got up and started to leave, she tried not to look at her coworkers – but the sound of blood hitting the floor haunts her, she said.

“The sound of the droplets, da-da-da-da, it replays and replays and replays,” she told CNN earlier this week. “Of how much blood was coming off the different chairs – it was making a rhythm. And it was one of the most disturbing things – I will, I think, will never let go of that.”

Wilczewski said the trauma she witnessed stuck with her after fleeing.

“Never, ever in my life would I ever wish this upon anybody,” Wilczewski said. “And it’s horrible because it doesn’t stop. It doesn’t stop replaying when you leave the scene. It doesn’t stop hurting as much. It doesn’t stop, and it sucks because you really want it to. You just want that little bit of – that you had before all this.”



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Raul Rosas Jr., 17, becomes the youngest fighter to sign with UFC and ‘nobody is gonna stop me’

The UFC is bringing in a fighter who is just shy of his 18th birthday.

Raul Rosas Jr. became the youngest fighter to sign with the UFC on Tuesday night, following a unanimous decision win over Mando Gutierrez on Dana White’s Contender Series. White, impressed by Rosas’ performance, offered the teen a contract before the end of the show, which he accepted. Rosas is the youngest fighter to compete on the series.

“I’ve never seen anything like it,” White said of Rosas’ age and outing against Gutierrez. “Not only that, the amount of fighters blowing me up saying you’re crazy not to (sign him). … He’s absolutely, positively talented. He’s special, he’s different.”

Rosas, a bantamweight fighter, dominated the 25-year-old Gutierrez for most of the fight with his grappling prowess. He nearly finished Gutierrez in the first round with a rarely used Suloev stretch submission from back control. Gutierrez had moments, taking Rosas down and landing some ground-and-pound. But almost always, Rosas would end up in the better position, using his dexterity, skill and creativity on the ground to scramble his way to the top.

“I knew I was gonna get that contract,” said Rosas, who turns 18 on Oct. 8. “I’ve been saying it since the beginning. Since I was born, I knew this was gonna happen.”

Rosas (6-0) had finished all of his previous opponents before Tuesday night. The Mexican-born fighter, who trains out of Las Vegas, previously fought in the UWC promotion in Tijuana.

Dan Lauzon holds the record as the youngest fighter to compete in the UFC (18 years, 198 days), per ESPN Stats & Information research. As long as Rosas steps into the Octagon within the next 216 days — a likely scenario — he will beat that mark.

And Rosas is already talking about winning championships. The youngest UFC champion was Jon Jones at age 23 in 2011.

“Everybody shouldn’t be surprised,” Rosas said. “I’m the new king in here, so I’m coming for that belt now. … I’m gonna be champion when I’m 20. Respect to everybody, but I’m gonna be champion when I’m 20, or even earlier. Nobody is gonna stop me.”

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Rihanna is now America’s youngest self-made billionaire

She’s shining bright like a diamond.

Rihanna is now the youngest self-made billionaire woman in the US — knocking Kim Kardashian to second place.

The 34-year-old singer recently made Forbes’ annual list of America’s richest self-made women for the third year in a row, ranking 21st overall. She’s the only billionaire under 40 on the list.

The next-youngest billionaire on the Forbes list is Kardashian, 41, who has a net worth of $1.8 billion.

Rihanna’s net worth is now $1.4 billion, which is only partly from her successful music career. Most of it comes from her entrepreneurial endeavors, including Fenty Beauty, Fenty Skin and Savage X Fenty.

In March, Bloomberg reported Savage X Fenty lingerie company was working with advisors on an initial public offering that could value the company at $3 billion or more. Rihanna owns 30 percent of that company. 

The nine-time Grammy Award winner also owns 50 percent of Fenty Beauty, which launched in 2017 and brought in $550 million in revenue in 2020. French luxury fashion conglomerate LVMH owns the other half of the company.

Rihanna celebrates her beauty brands Fenty Beauty and Fenty Skin at Goya Studios on February 11, 2022, in Los Angeles, California.
Mike Coppola/Getty Images

In 2012, the “Love On The Brain” singer started a philanthropy fund called the Clara Lionel Foundation (CLF), aiming to “support and fund groundbreaking education and climate resilience initiatives,” according to the website.

A year after the foundation was launched, the Fenty Beauty CEO held two lipstick campaigns with MAC Cosmetics, raising $60 million to benefit women and children affected by HIV/AIDS. In February 2020, CLF was named one of the world’s most innovative not-for-profit companies by Fast Company. 

But Rihanna’s main focus isn’t the money — she’s all about the “work, work, work, work, work, work.”

In 2019, she told The New York Times, “I never thought I’d make this much money, so a number is not going to stop me from working.”

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Kentucky 2-year-old Isla McNabb becomes one of Mensa’s youngest members

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Soon after their daughter Isla turned 2, Amanda and Jason McNabb started spotting strange configurations of plastic, multicolored toy letters around their house in a Louisville suburb.

Next to a chair: C-H-A-I-R

And near the Amazon Fire Stick remote: T-V

Not even Booger escaped identification. Next to the family’s tabby, the McNabbs found another series of the now-familiar block letters, this time spelling out C-A-T.

The culprit: their toddler. Isla’s colorful subtitles led her parents to have her IQ tested in May when she was approaching 2½, the McNabbs told The Washington Post. By the end of the month, they got the results: Isla had scored in the top 1 percent of the population. Her performance qualified her for membership in Mensa, an organization of people who score in the top 2 percent on IQ tests.

That makes her one of the youngest Mensa members in the country. In 2019, American Mensa spokesperson Charles Brown, while speaking about a Texas 2-year-old who became a member of the organization, said the boy was one of three members younger than 4 and one of 56 younger than 6.

“That’s out of 50,000 members,” Brown told WFAA.

Isla McNabb, a 2-year-old Mensa member, sounded out words such as “excited” and “rainbow” from flashcards on June 30. (Video: Amanda McNabb)

As for Isla, her father, Jason McNabb, 43, said there were a few times during the first years of his daughter’s life that the hair on the back of his neck stood up — what he called “creepy moments” that made him think something exceptional was happening.

But they became more than fleeting moments and gut feelings around the time she turned 2 in November. Isla had an affinity for the alphabet and had been sounding out letters on her own. So her mom and dad — an auditor and a dentist, respectively — got her a tablet as a birthday gift. After writing down some letters, Jason demonstrated for Isla how to sound them out. Wondering whether she could piece those letters together, he wrote the word “red.”

“She sounded it out and said, ‘Red,’ ” Jason said.

The McNabbs tried “blue,” followed by “yellow” and then “purple.” Isla got them all. Then her mom thought of one she was sure would stump her daughter: “orange.”

“There’s no way,” Amanda, 38, told The Post, recalling what she was thinking at the time.

“Everything we threw at her, it just seemed like she picked it up right away,” Jason said. “It was incredible.”

After that, the McNabbs kept teaching her new words. Almost always, she could phonetically sound out the letters until she was able to read the word. Her parents began keeping a list. When they started, Isla’s vocabulary was around 100 words. It quickly grew to 200. They stopped counting at 500.

“Now she can just read,” Amanda said.

At a doctor’s appointment in the past couple of months, the McNabbs told the pediatrician that Isla could read. The doctor assumed they meant that she’d memorized stories her parents had told her repeatedly. Jason and Amanda then directed Isla to a poster in the doctor’s office about the danger of leaving babies alone on an exam table. Isla read every word.

“Oh! She can read,” the pediatrician said.

Isla’s learning wasn’t limited to reading, which most children begin to do around 6 or 7. She started counting and then abruptly began doing it backward. She can do simple math, including subtraction. One day, Amanda kept Isla occupied by giving her some crayons and an empty Amazon box. She noticed Isla had written M-O-M — or a solid approximation, given her lack of motor skills. Reading had evolved into writing.

Amanda researched psychologists who administered IQ tests and found one in Lexington, a little more than an hour’s drive from their home. He told her that he normally didn’t test children younger than 4. But, intrigued by her claims, he made an exception. Isla’s results on the Stanford-Binet Intelligence Scales, which were reviewed by The Post, rate her as “superior” or “very superior” in all categories.

She ranked in the 99th percentile.

Although she’s intelligent, Isla is also a normal toddler. She likes “Bluey,” an Australian cartoon about a blue heeler cattle dog, and “Blippi,” a children’s show on YouTube, which her father described as a “modern-day Pee-wee Herman.” Last month, she started going to preschool and has become obsessed with making friends and with her teacher, Miss Abigail. She also enjoys doing jigsaw puzzles and playing outside.

“Normal kid stuff,” her mother said, adding that Isla is, of course, a fan of reading and the library.

A couple of Isla’s favorite books: the Pete the Cat series and “Chicka Chicka Boom Boom,” which teaches children the alphabet. It does so by telling a story about a coconut tree that collapses after all 26 letters climb it.

Isla re-creates the book’s climax by stuffing her block letters into Booger’s cat tree and then knocking it over to make the letters scatter, her parents said. “We do that multiple times a day,” Amanda added with the exasperated tone and gaze unique to the parents of toddlers.

Isla McNabb, a 2-year-old from Crestwood, Ky., read aloud “Pete the Cat” to her parents on June 30. (Video: Amanda McNabb)

Her parents are, well, tired. Initially worried that Isla wasn’t sleeping enough, the psychologist who tested her informed the McNabbs that it’s normal for highly intelligent children to sleep less. They were relieved their daughter was healthy but not excited about the prospect of her continuing to rouse them at 4 a.m.

“That’s kind of disheartening for us,” her mother said.

Amanda said she’s sure of one thing. While she was eager to get her daughter tested and excited about the results, she will not be following suit. “I tell people that I’m not going to get tested,” she said.

“I can’t have her knowing that she’s smarter than me.”

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F.D.A. Panel Recommends Pfizer and Moderna Vaccines for Youngest Children

WASHINGTON — The only Americans still not eligible for coronavirus vaccines — babies, toddlers and preschoolers — appear on the verge of finally getting cleared to receive them after an advisory panel to the Food and Drug Administration voted unanimously on Wednesday to recommend the Pfizer and Moderna vaccines for the group.

The F.D.A. appears poised to authorize Moderna’s vaccine for children younger than 6 and Pfizer’s for those younger than 5 as soon as Friday. States have already ordered millions of doses, and White House officials have said shots could roll out as early as next week.

The committee’s 21-0 votes came after a daylong review of clinical trial data and signaled the end of a process that involved months of false starts and dashed hopes for a vaccine to cover the youngest Americans. Except for the roughly 20 million children under 5, everyone has had access to coronavirus shots for many months and is eligible now for booster shots.

The F.D.A. and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention jointly made a strong push for a positive recommendation, showering the committee with 230 pages of data that they said showed the vaccines were safe and provoked a strong immune response in children. Regulators also emphasized that even though young children are generally at low risk for serious illness from the virus, vaccinating the group would save lives.

“We have to be careful that we don’t become numb to the number of pediatric deaths because of the overwhelming number of older deaths here,” Dr. Peter Marks, the F.D.A.’s top vaccine regulator, said. “The intervention we’re talking about here is one that is something that we have accepted in the past to try to prevent deaths from influenza,” he added.

Officials from the C.D.C. said that more than half of young children hospitalized with Covid had no underlying medical conditions. During the Omicron wave in the winter, young children were hospitalized at a higher rate than older children and adolescents, and their illness tended to be at least as severe. More than 200 children ages 6 months through 4 years old have died of Covid, according to death certificate data, one of the most conservative estimates.

The panel members, some of whom have treated hospitalized children for Covid and have comforted terrified parents, seemed eager to act.

“There are so many parents who are absolutely desperate to get this vaccine,” said Dr. Jay Portnoy, a professor of pediatrics at the University of Missouri-Kansas City medical school. “I think we owe it to them to give them the choice.”

Dr. Arthur Reingold, an epidemiologist at the University of California, Berkeley, School of Public Health, said the nation already vaccinates children against diseases “where the risk of a child dying or being hospitalized of those diseases was pretty close to zero.”

The C.D.C.’s own panel of vaccine experts is set to take up the matter over two days this weekend. If that committee also gives a favorable recommendation, Dr. Rochelle P. Walensky, the agency’s director, would issue her decision, the final step in the process.

Neither vaccine has been tested against new subvariants that are circulating in the United States. The clinical trials were largely conducted when the Omicron variant prevailed. Two subvariants, BA.4 and BA.5, could become dominant within a month.

The virus is evolving so fast that some panelists expressed fear that the clinical trial results on which their decisions were based were already outdated. “We’re really trying to predict the future,” Dr. Paul Offit, a vaccine expert with the Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia and an F.D.A. panelist, said in an interview. “This is a problem.”

But the panel’s biggest worry seemed to be whether Pfizer’s three-dose vaccine, which it developed with its German partner, BioNTech, was effective enough. Pfizer has reported that two doses of its vaccine were only about 28 percent effective in preventing symptomatic disease; Dr. Susan Wollersheim, an F.D.A. reviewer, said the company’s data did not clearly show that two doses drove down the incidence of Covid.

Pfizer argued that three doses were 80 percent effective, but the finding was based on only 10 cases out of a subset of 1,678 trial participants. And Dr. Doran Fink, acting deputy director of the F.D.A.’s office of vaccines, cast doubt on the company’s estimate, describing it as “preliminary” and “imprecise.”

Still, he said the F.D.A. was “very confident” from the immune response data that Pfizer’s vaccine, like Moderna’s, met the criteria for emergency use authorization, which requires that benefits outweigh risks. But some panel members were clearly worried that parents might be misled.

Dr. Amanda Cohn, a top C.D.C. official and panel member, said she did not have “any idea” what the efficacy rate after three doses of Pfizer will end up being, and that officials should not embrace the 80 percent estimate.

Jeannette Y. Lee, a biostatistician at the University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences, raised another concern: that some parents might skip the crucial third dose for their children. “As we know, it’s a struggle to get people in for two,” she said.

Pfizer officials said the data showed the vaccine’s effectiveness built over time. “It’s not as if there’s no efficacy at all,” Dr. William C. Gruber, a senior vice president at Pfizer, said.

For some parents, the bar is low. Some of the more than 1,600 parents who responded to a New York Times query about life with an unvaccinated young child said they would accept any efficacy above zero to give their children some protection.

“To keep her safe from illness and potential death or lifelong hardship? Why is this a question?” wrote Cayla Miller, a mother in Swanville, Maine. “We’ve been waiting so long to protect our whole family. I’ve nearly lost my job and my mind trying to keep her safe.”

Scientists and federal officials have warned against directly comparing the Moderna and Pfizer vaccines. Not only did the companies conduct their clinical trials at different times, with different populations, but the dosing and regimens differ.

Pfizer has proposed a three-dose regimen at one-tenth the strength of its adult dosage, with the first two doses spaced by three weeks and the third at least two months after the second. Moderna wants to offer two doses of vaccine, four weeks apart, at one-fourth the strength of its adult dose. Moderna’s adult dose is significantly stronger than Pfizer’s.

Dr. Wollersheim of the F.D.A. declined to answer when one panelist asked for a comparison of the vaccines’ effectiveness in young children. But as some parents may do, some panel members tried to do their own matchup.

Dr. Offit noted that Moderna’s efficacy data was somewhat stronger than Pfizer’s: about 51 percent effective in preventing symptomatic infection in children 6 months to 2 years old and 37 percent effective in children 2 through 5.

Even though protection against symptomatic infection was limited, he said, it was possible to predict that Moderna’s vaccine would ward off severe disease.

“I’m not so sure you can predict that with Pfizer’s vaccine,” he said. “I fear that they may have under dosed.”

Both vaccines provoked levels of neutralizing, or virus-blocking, antibodies among children comparable to those in young adults. Pfizer’s vaccine has been authorized for children 5 to 15 since last year, and regulators said it helped prevent hospitalization and deaths.

Still, both appear significantly less effective against symptomatic infection than the adult vaccines when they were introduced 18 months ago. The F.D.A. said that was because Omicron proved far more adept at evading the vaccines’ defenses against infection than previous versions of the virus.

Given evidence of waning potency over time, the FD.A. has said that young children who get Pfizer and Moderna shots will likely require booster shots, just as older recipients have. That would mean Pfizer’s vaccine could wind up as four doses, while Moderna’s could be three.

Neither vaccine provoked serious safety concerns. The vast majority of side effects were mild — irritability and crying, sleepiness, fatigue and loss of appetite. Recipients of Moderna’s vaccine appeared more likely to experience fevers, but in line with those provoked by other pediatric vaccines, the F.D.A. said.

Federal health officials have said they expect many children under 5 to be vaccinated by pediatricians and primary care physicians, a contrast to older age groups. But the uptake is expected to be low; children aged 5 to 11 became eligible to be vaccinated late last year, but only about 37 percent of them have gotten at least one dose.

Doses are packaged by the hundred to reach smaller practices and rural locations. The Biden administration has also advertised a network of other locations that would work to reach families, including pharmacies and children’s hospitals, while groups such as the Association of Children’s Museums and the National Diaper Bank Network will help with education efforts.

One topic of discussion among the F.D.A. panel members was how to address the many parents whose children already have acquired some natural immunity. Federal health officials presented data to the committee this week suggesting that more than two-thirds of children aged 1 to 4 years old have already been infected with the virus.

A Moderna official told the committee that the company’s trial found that young children who had gotten the virus and were vaccinated had greater levels of protection, a conclusion backed by outside research.

Dr. James E.K. Hildreth, a committee member and the president of Meharry Medical College in Nashville, noted that many children had been infected “and have done just fine.”

“But for those parents who choose to do so, especially for those parents of kids with underlying conditions,” he added, “this is a choice they should have.”

Emily Erdos contributed reporting.

Read original article here

F.D.A. Panel Recommends Pfizer and Moderna Vaccines for Youngest Children

WASHINGTON — The only Americans still not eligible for coronavirus vaccines — babies, toddlers and preschoolers — appear on the verge of finally getting cleared to receive them after an advisory panel to the Food and Drug Administration voted unanimously on Wednesday to recommend the Pfizer and Moderna vaccines for the group.

The F.D.A. appears poised to authorize Moderna’s vaccine for children younger than 6 and Pfizer’s for those younger than 5 as soon as Friday. States have already ordered millions of doses, and White House officials have said shots could roll out as early as next week.

The committee’s 21-0 votes came after a daylong review of clinical trial data and signaled the end of a process that involved months of false starts and dashed hopes for a vaccine to cover the youngest Americans. Except for the roughly 20 million children under 5, everyone has had access to coronavirus shots for many months and is eligible now for booster shots.

The F.D.A. and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention jointly made a strong push for a positive recommendation, showering the committee with 230 pages of data that they said showed the vaccines were safe and provoked a strong immune response in children. Regulators also emphasized that even though young children are generally at low risk for serious illness from the virus, vaccinating the group would save lives.

“We have to be careful that we don’t become numb to the number of pediatric deaths because of the overwhelming number of older deaths here,” Dr. Peter Marks, the F.D.A.’s top vaccine regulator, said. “The intervention we’re talking about here is one that is something that we have accepted in the past to try to prevent deaths from influenza,” he added.

Officials from the C.D.C. said that more than half of young children hospitalized with Covid had no underlying medical conditions. During the Omicron wave in the winter, young children were hospitalized at a higher rate than older children and adolescents, and their illness tended to be at least as severe. More than 200 children ages 6 months through 4 years old have died of Covid, according to death certificate data, one of the most conservative estimates.

The panel members, some of whom have treated hospitalized children for Covid and have comforted terrified parents, seemed eager to act.

“There are so many parents who are absolutely desperate to get this vaccine,” said Dr. Jay Portnoy, a professor of pediatrics at the University of Missouri-Kansas City medical school. “I think we owe it to them to give them the choice.”

Dr. Arthur Reingold, an epidemiologist at the University of California, Berkeley, School of Public Health, said the nation already vaccinates children against diseases “where the risk of a child dying or being hospitalized of those diseases was pretty close to zero.”

The C.D.C.’s own panel of vaccine experts is set to take up the matter over two days this weekend. If that committee also gives a favorable recommendation, Dr. Rochelle P. Walensky, the agency’s director, would issue her decision, the final step in the process.

Neither vaccine has been tested against new subvariants that are circulating in the United States. The clinical trials were largely conducted when the Omicron variant prevailed. Two subvariants, BA.4 and BA.5, could become dominant within a month.

The virus is evolving so fast that some panelists expressed fear that the clinical trial results on which their decisions were based were already outdated. “We’re really trying to predict the future,” Dr. Paul Offit, a vaccine expert with the Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia and an F.D.A. panelist, said in an interview. “This is a problem.”

But the panel’s biggest worry seemed to be whether Pfizer’s three-dose vaccine, which it developed with its German partner, BioNTech, was effective enough. Pfizer has reported that two doses of its vaccine were only about 28 percent effective in preventing symptomatic disease; Dr. Susan Wollersheim, an F.D.A. reviewer, said the company’s data did not clearly show that two doses drove down the incidence of Covid.

Pfizer argued that three doses were 80 percent effective, but the finding was based on only 10 cases out of a subset of 1,678 trial participants. And Dr. Doran Fink, acting deputy director of the F.D.A.’s office of vaccines, cast doubt on the company’s estimate, describing it as “preliminary” and “imprecise.”

Still, he said the F.D.A. was “very confident” from the immune response data that Pfizer’s vaccine, like Moderna’s, met the criteria for emergency use authorization, which requires that benefits outweigh risks. But some panel members were clearly worried that parents might be misled.

Dr. Amanda Cohn, a top C.D.C. official and panel member, said she did not have “any idea” what the efficacy rate after three doses of Pfizer will end up being, and that officials should not embrace the 80 percent estimate.

Jeannette Y. Lee, a biostatistician at the University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences, raised another concern: that some parents might skip the crucial third dose for their children. “As we know, it’s a struggle to get people in for two,” she said.

Pfizer officials said the data showed the vaccine’s effectiveness built over time. “It’s not as if there’s no efficacy at all,” Dr. William C. Gruber, a senior vice president at Pfizer, said.

For some parents, the bar is low. Some of the more than 1,600 parents who responded to a New York Times query about life with an unvaccinated young child said they would accept any efficacy above zero to give their children some protection.

“To keep her safe from illness and potential death or lifelong hardship? Why is this a question?” wrote Cayla Miller, a mother in Swanville, Maine. “We’ve been waiting so long to protect our whole family. I’ve nearly lost my job and my mind trying to keep her safe.”

Scientists and federal officials have warned against directly comparing the Moderna and Pfizer vaccines. Not only did the companies conduct their clinical trials at different times, with different populations, but the dosing and regimens differ.

Pfizer has proposed a three-dose regimen at one-tenth the strength of its adult dosage, with the first two doses spaced by three weeks and the third at least two months after the second. Moderna wants to offer two doses of vaccine, four weeks apart, at one-fourth the strength of its adult dose. Moderna’s adult dose is significantly stronger than Pfizer’s.

Dr. Wollersheim of the F.D.A. declined to answer when one panelist asked for a comparison of the vaccines’ effectiveness in young children. But as some parents may do, some panel members tried to do their own matchup.

Dr. Offit noted that Moderna’s efficacy data was somewhat stronger than Pfizer’s: about 51 percent effective in preventing symptomatic infection in children 6 months to 2 years old and 37 percent effective in children 2 through 5.

Even though protection against symptomatic infection was limited, he said, it was possible to predict that Moderna’s vaccine would ward off severe disease.

“I’m not so sure you can predict that with Pfizer’s vaccine,” he said. “I fear that they may have under dosed.”

Both vaccines provoked levels of neutralizing, or virus-blocking, antibodies among children comparable to those in young adults. Pfizer’s vaccine has been authorized for children 5 to 15 since last year, and regulators said it helped prevent hospitalization and deaths.

Still, both appear significantly less effective against symptomatic infection than the adult vaccines when they were introduced 18 months ago. The F.D.A. said that was because Omicron proved far more adept at evading the vaccines’ defenses against infection than previous versions of the virus.

Given evidence of waning potency over time, the FD.A. has said that young children who get Pfizer and Moderna shots will likely require booster shots, just as older recipients have. That would mean Pfizer’s vaccine could wind up as four doses, while Moderna’s could be three.

Neither vaccine provoked serious safety concerns. The vast majority of side effects were mild — irritability and crying, sleepiness, fatigue and loss of appetite. Recipients of Moderna’s vaccine appeared more likely to experience fevers, but in line with those provoked by other pediatric vaccines, the F.D.A. said.

Federal health officials have said they expect many children under 5 to be vaccinated by pediatricians and primary care physicians, a contrast to older age groups. But the uptake is expected to be low; children aged 5 to 11 became eligible to be vaccinated late last year, but only about 37 percent of them have gotten at least one dose.

Doses are packaged by the hundred to reach smaller practices and rural locations. The Biden administration has also advertised a network of other locations that would work to reach families, including pharmacies and children’s hospitals, while groups such the Association of Children’s Museums and the National Diaper Bank Network will help with education efforts.

One topic of discussion among the F.D.A. panel members was how to address the many parents whose children already have acquired some natural immunity. Federal health officials presented data to the committee this week suggesting that more than two-thirds of children aged 1 to 4 years old have already been infected with the virus.

A Moderna official told the committee that the company’s trial found that young children who had gotten the virus and were vaccinated had greater levels of protection, a conclusion backed by outside research.

Dr. James E.K. Hildreth, a committee member and the president of Meharry Medical College in Nashville, noted that many children had been infected “and have done just fine.”

“But for those parents who choose to do so, especially for those parents of kids with underlying conditions,” he added, “this is a choice they should have.”

Emily Erdos contributed reporting.

Read original article here

If Cleared, Covid Shots for Youngest Children Could be Available on June 21, White House Says

A top Biden administration health official, anticipating that federal regulators will soon authorize coronavirus vaccines for children younger than 5, said Thursday that the first doses could become available as early as June 21, and that states, pharmacies and community health centers can begin ordering them from the Biden administration on Friday.

Dr. Ashish Jha, President Biden’s coronavirus response coordinator, shared the timeline during an appearance in the White House briefing room. He cautioned that the preparations are contingent on Food and Drug Administration authorization of the doses for children six months through four years old, and a recommendation from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. No doses will be shipped until the F.D.A. and the C.D.C. sign off.

“I want to be very clear that I am not here to prejudge the outcome of the process,” Dr. Jha said. “But the administration is hard at work planning all sorts of scenarios based on whatever the outcome is.”

The nation’s 18 million children under 5 are the last group of Americans for whom Covid vaccines are not available, and the frustration among many parents is palpable. Now, for the first time, they have a specific date, albeit a tentative one.

Dr. Jha said that while it will take time for the vaccines to become broadly available, the White House expects that “within weeks” of an authorization, “every parent wants their child to get vaccinated will be able to get an appointment.” He also said he expects that some parents will be reluctant.

Earlier this month, the F.D.A. laid out its own timetable for considering applications from Moderna and Pfizer-BioNTech to authorize doses of their Covid-19 vaccines for young children; a decision on authorization is expected days after an outside panel of experts advising the F.D.A. meets on June 14 and 15.

In making the announcement, Dr. Jha tread a delicate path. Last summer Mr. Biden created an uproar when he announced booster shots would be available to many Americans in mid-September pending F.D.A. authorization — only to meet resistance from the agency’s leaders, who said they needed more time to review the data.

But Dr. Jha said it was important for the White House to plan, and to be transparent about that planning. He said the administration has been working closely with local health departments, pediatrician and family doctors, as well as children’s hospitals, and has asked states to distribute the initial tranche of doses to “their highest priority sites, including those serving the highest risk children and hardest to reach areas.”

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