Today's Headlines: More Than 30 Dead in Gaza and Israel as Fighting Quickly Escalates

To Vaccinate Younger Teens, States and Cities Look to Schools, Camps, Even Beaches
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Wednesday, May 12, 2021

Top News

More Than 30 Dead in Gaza and Israel as Fighting Quickly Escalates

By Patrick Kingsley and Isabel Kershner

Hamas fires rockets at Israeli cities. Israel hits Gaza with airstrikes. Civilians suffer the most casualties, but leaders on each side may reap political benefits.

To Vaccinate Younger Teens, States and Cities Look to Schools, Camps, Even Beaches

To Vaccinate Younger Teens, States and Cities Look to Schools, Camps, Even Beaches

The F.D.A.'s authorization of Pfizer's Covid shot for 12- to 15-year-olds is a milestone in battling the coronavirus, but actually getting them vaccinated involves new challenges.

For Clean Energy, Buy American or Buy It Quick and Cheap?

For Clean Energy, Buy American or Buy It Quick and Cheap?

By Noam Scheiber

President Biden says slowing climate change will create jobs. Tension between unions and environmentalists shows it's not so simple.

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Editors' Picks

The Price They Pay for Your Perfect Vacation Photo

Science

The Price They Pay for Your Perfect Vacation Photo

By Priyanka Runwal

Scientists are concerned about unregulated feeding of ocean wildlife by tour operators.

Banning My Book Won't Protect Your Child

Opinion | Guest Essay

Banning My Book Won't Protect Your Child

By Carmen Maria Machado

My memoir could teach teenagers how to exit an abusive relationship. So why don't some parents want their children to read it?

Today's Videos

Israel Airstrikes Leave Widespread Damage in Gaza

Video Video: Israel Airstrikes Leave Widespread Damage in Gaza

By The Associated Press

As tensions escalated in Jerusalem, cross-border fighting between Israel and militant groups in Gaza intensified, with Israel carrying out deadly airstrikes in the Palestinian territory.

Republican Senators Tear Into C.D.C. During Hearing

Video Video: Republican Senators Tear Into C.D.C. During Hearing

By Reuters

Republican senators criticized the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention policies and funding at a hearing on Tuesday. Dr. Anthony S. Fauci had a particularly fiery exchange with Senator Rand Paul.

Queen Elizabeth Opens Her 67th Parliament

Video Video: Queen Elizabeth Opens Her 67th Parliament

By The Associated Press

Queen Elizabeth opened her 67th Parliament with a speech focused on international diplomacy and affairs in the United Kingdom. The speech was seen as a reassuring sign of continuity for Britain's monarchy.

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Coronavirus Briefing: The push to vaccinate teens

Look for doses at pediatricians' offices, day camps, parks and even beaches.

An informed guide to the pandemic, with the latest developments and expert advice about prevention and treatment.

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Vaccinating young adolescents

The F.D.A.'s authorization yesterday of the Pfizer vaccine for 12- to 15-year-olds is a huge milestone in the battle against the virus, crucial for reducing its spread, reopening schools and returning to some sense of normalcy.

But what will the plan for young adolescents look like?

States and school districts across the country are now scrambling to figure out the best way to proceed. With the school year ending soon, it will be a race against the clock to schedule both recommended doses before summer break. Officials are also making plans to offer vaccines at pediatricians' offices, day camps, parks and even beaches.

Parents, whose consent is required by law, are perhaps the biggest complicating factor in vaccinating children. A recent survey by the Kaiser Family Foundation's Vaccine Monitor found that many parents — even those who eagerly lined up for shots themselves — were reluctant to vaccinate pubescent children.

Teenagers themselves may also be hesitant. Some may just hate getting shots, while others reason that because young people often get milder cases of the disease, a vaccine is not worth the risk.

That logic may not be sound: Patsy Stinchfield, a nurse practitioner who oversees vaccination for the Children's Minnesota hospital system, told The Times that more children had been admitted to her hospital recently, and the intensive care unit was currently treating patients who are 13, 15, 16 and 17 years old.

"If you can prevent your child ending up in the I.C.U. with a safe vaccine, why wouldn't you?" she said.

All 50 states require certain vaccines for children who attend school. But those mandates apply only to vaccines that have been fully approved by the F.D.A., and so far, no Covid vaccines have achieved that status.

Within months, eligibility for the vaccines is expected to expand to even younger children. Pfizer expects to seek emergency authorization in September to administer its vaccine to children as young as 2. Moderna's clinical trial results for its vaccine in 12- to 17-year-olds are expected in the next few weeks, and results from a trial of its vaccine in children 6 months to 12 years old are expected in the second half of this year.

Victims line the Ganges

Some cremation workers in India are charging five or 10 times the usual price for last rites. The price of wood has increased, too. Unable to afford a pyre, some families have started disposing of bodies in rivers, medical workers say.

Villagers discovered dozens of bloated corpses on the banks of the Ganges along the boundary of Bihar and Uttar Pradesh, two states where the virus is raging. Some officials said that roughly 30 bodies had been discovered along the holiest river in Hinduism. Witnesses put the figure at more than 100.

"I've never seen so many bodies," said Arun Kumar Srivastava, a local government doctor, who said that it was likely that some were Covid-19 victims.

After racing through New Delhi, India's outbreak has spread to rural areas with fewer resources. The country's infections are now surging in places where sickness and death are much harder to track.

Some states in the south have threatened to stop sharing medical oxygen with one another. At one facility, furious relatives smashed equipment in an intensive care unit after the oxygen suddenly ran out and their loved ones died while gasping for air.

The outbreak has officially killed a quarter of a million people in India, although experts believe that the true toll is much higher. On Tuesday, the health ministry reported more than 386,000 new cases and nearly 3,900 deaths.

Vaccine rollout

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