KEY POINTS
  • The Food and Drug Administration's independent experts will meet on June 15 to review the data and make a recommendation on whether Pfizer and Moderna's vaccines for the youngest kids should receive authorization.
  • The FDA said it will complete its review of Pfizer and Moderna's applications within days of each other.
  • If the data supports authorization, parents could start getting their kids vaccinated early this summer.

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Bridgette Melo, 5, prepares for her inoculation of one of two reduced 10 ug doses of the Pfizer BioNtech COVID-19 vaccine during a trial at Duke University in Durham, North Carolina September 28, 2021 in a still image from video.

The Food and Drug Administration's expert committee will meet June 15 to review new data on Pfizer's and Moderna's Covid vaccines for infants and toddlers, setting the stage for the shots to receive emergency use authorization early this summer.

"We know parents are anxious for us to determine if these vaccines are safe & effective," the FDA said in a post Monday on Twitter. "We are working as quickly as possible to carefully review all the data."

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