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Parents fear being overruled if 12 to 15-year-olds offered jabs in school

Secondary school-age children might be able to decide for themselves if they want a vaccine, according to reports.

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Parents have raised concerns at proposals to offer 12 to 15-year-olds in England a coronavirus jab, despite assurances from the Education Secretary that consent would always be sought.

Public health experts are calling for the vaccine rollout to be extended to secondary schoolchildren as the more transmissible Delta variant tears through schools in Scotland.

Most Scottish students returned to school in the second week of August, and deputy first minister John Swinney warned it has driven a rise in cases in the country.

HEALTH Coronavirus VaccineDoses
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But parental rights organisation UsForThem, which was founded in May 2020 following the decision to close schools, said it had been flooded with calls from parents worried they would have no say.

Molly Kingsley, UsForThem’s co-founder, told the Telegraph: “Yes you have to ask for parental consent, but this begs the question of what is going to happen if consent is withheld?

“This is profoundly murky and it shatters any remaining trust parents have in the Government.

“It strikes me that given the uncertainty about whether a 12-year-old is competent to consent, there are serious liability issues for schools that press ahead with this on school premises.”

UK hospital patients with Covid-19: wave two v wave three
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Education Secretary Gavin Williamson told ITV news on Thursday: “Parental consent will always be sought.

“If JVCI do reach a decision that children should be able to receive a vaccine, parental consent would always be asked before they receive that vaccine.”

He added: “It would be reassuring for parents to have that choice as to whether children would be able to have that vaccine but it always has to be based upon parental consent.”

Covid-19 case rates in UK nations
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Figures published on Thursday by Public Health England estimated that the rollout has directly averted between 102,500 and 109,500 deaths, and more than 82,100 hospital admissions.

So far, vaccines are being offered to healthy people aged 16 and above, and those considered at-risk in the 12-15 age bracket.

The Department of Health has said no decisions have yet been made to extend the vaccine to the younger age group, but said they “continue to plan for a range of scenarios”.

Reading Festival 2021
Sixteen-year-old year old Sofia Parkinson getting a vaccine jab at a walk-in Covid-19 vaccination clinic at the Reading Festival (Kirsty O’Connor/PA)

“Ministers have not yet received further advice from the JCVI on this cohort.

“We continue to plan for a range of scenarios to ensure we are prepared for all eventualities.”

According to a survey of 10 to 17-year-olds in the UK by the The Children’s Society, 62% of children said they want to get a Covid jab, while 11% said they would not want to.

Meanwhile, returning secondary school and college students in England are being urged to get tested – and vaccinated where possible – to stop coronavirus spreading and minimise disruption to lessons over the autumn.

NHS England said more than half a million 16 and 17-year-olds have had their first dose, with pop up vaccine centres set up in some festivals over the summer.

The Welsh Government has asked that parents test their children for coronavirus at least twice a week regardless of whether they have symptoms or not once the new academic year starts in September.

All 16 and 17-year-olds in Wales have now been offered the vaccine and 12 to 15-year-olds who are clinically vulnerable will also be offered vaccination before term starts.

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