Seventy children in Prince George鈥檚 County, Maryland, received expired doses of Pfizer鈥檚 pediatric COVID-19 vaccine, the county鈥檚 health department said Thursday.
It happened Friday, Nov. 26, at the county鈥檚 Sports and Learning Complex in Landover.
The Prince George鈥檚 County Health Department said it has notified the families of the children, ages 5 to 11, who received expired first or second doses of the Pfizer vaccine after they were mistakenly stored in a refrigerator with usable doses.
The county health department said there is no risk to the children, although the expired doses are likely to be less effective at protecting against COVID-19.
The department will be offering special private clinics for the affected families at its Cheverly Health Center (3003 Hospital Drive) on Sunday, Dec. 5, and Saturday, Dec. 11, from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. Both walk-ins and appointments will be accepted.
If the families want to get revaccinated sooner, they can go to any of the regular clinics offered at certain or at the .
鈥淲e deeply regret the error and we apologize for the concern and inconvenience this has caused families,鈥 George L. Askew, the county鈥檚 deputy chief administrative officer for health, human services, and education, said in a news release.
鈥淎s a pediatrician, I want to assure parents that receiving an expired COVID-19 vaccine dose or receiving a replacement dose does not endanger your child鈥檚 health. An expired dose may not provide the maximum protection that these vaccines give and that鈥檚 why the County quickly made arrangements for each of these children to get revaccinated,鈥 Askew said.
On Nov. 19, the Prince George鈥檚 County Health Department received 300 pediatric Pfizer doses from a provider that was unable to administer them before they expired on Nov. 24.
HealthCare Dynamics International, the vaccination vendor at the Sports and Learning Complex clinic, administered all but 70 of the doses before the expiration date.
But the remaining 70 doses were not discarded, which is what should鈥檝e happened, and instead were mistakenly stored in the refrigerator with viable vaccines, according to the health department.
On Nov. 26, those 70 expired doses were placed on a tray with viable doses and administered at the clinic that day.
鈥淭he vaccination vendor at the Sports and Learning Complex has been retrained on vaccine storage and administration protocols, and the County has been assured from the vendor administering vaccine that it has taken corrective action that will prevent this from happening again,鈥 said Prince George鈥檚 County Health Officer Ernest Carter.
There have been various incidents of children across the country receiving the wrong dosage of the Pfizer-BioNTech vaccine after it was approved for use in children ages 5 to 11 last month. That includes an instance in Loudoun County, Virginia, where an adult dose was cut in third in an attempt to create a child-size dose.
The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention says that when a lower dose is given, a child should receive a repeat dose.
As for expired doses, the CDC says to contact the manufacturer.
The Prince George鈥檚 Health Department said it consulted 鈥渆xtensively鈥 with the CDC, Maryland Department of Health (MDH) and Pfizer before deciding that the 70 affected children should be revaccinated.
The department has reported the error to the MDH and to the CDC鈥檚 .
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