J&J vaccine can be given to adults 30+ but mRNA vaccines still preferred: NACI

The National Advisory Committee on Immunization (NACI) recommended on Monday that provinces give the Johnson & Johnson vaccine to adults 30 years of age and older.

By MIA RABSON, THE CANADIAN PRESS

The National Advisory Committee on Immunization (NACI) recommended on Monday that provinces give the Johnson & Johnson vaccine to adults 30 years of age and older.

The NACI said the single-dose vaccine should be limited to people in that age group who don’t want to wait for the Pfizer-BioNTech or Moderna vaccines.

The advice is almost identical to that issued for the Oxford-AstraZeneca vaccine last month and comes as both are suspected of causing a new and very rare blood clotting syndrome.

In Canada there have been seven known cases of vaccine-induced thrombotic thrombocytopenia, or VITT, one of them fatal.

As of April 24, 1.7 million people in Canada have been given at least one dose of the AstraZeneca vaccine.

No J&J doses have been injected in Canada thus far, but in the U.S. they have documented 17 cases of the blood-clotting disorder in about eight million doses given.

Health Canada had paused its distribution of 300,000 J&J doses after discovering they were partly made at an American facility cited for safety and quality-control violations.

NACI also recommended that provinces use the J&J vaccine on populations that may have trouble booking a second dose if they were given a different vaccine.

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