According to this link, no vials with the Comirnaty label are currently available in the US. If they aren't labeled Comirnaty, then they are still the old Emergency Use Authorized version. The reason this is important is liability. An approved product could put liability on the manufacturer. Products that are Authorized for Emergency Use offer liability protection to the manufacturer and to those responsible for injecting it.
It appears that manufacturers want to get these authorized for all age groups of children. Once they get them authorized for all children, the next step will be to get them on the children's vaccine schedule.
Due to the 1986 Vaccine Injury Compensation Act, manufacturers bear no liability for any injuries suffered from their products. Instead, injuries are compensated from a federal fund which is collected as a tax when injectable products are administered. This program has become notoriously difficult to succeed in receiving compensation. There is a statute of limitations and an adversarial system where you must prove that your child has been injured. They have a schedule of injuries so if you are claiming something other than what is on the schedule you are out of luck. Despite the challenges to receiving compensation, there have been over $4 billion in damages awarded from this program.
According to this link, no vials with the Comirnaty label are currently available in the US. If they aren't labeled Comirnaty, then they are still the old Emergency Use Authorized version. The reason this is important is liability. An approved product could put liability on the manufacturer. Products that are Authorized for Emergency Use offer liability protection to the manufacturer and to those responsible for injecting it.
https://www.cdc.gov/vaccines/programs/iis/COVID-19-related-codes.html#codes
It appears that manufacturers want to get these authorized for all age groups of children. Once they get them authorized for all children, the next step will be to get them on the children's vaccine schedule.
Due to the 1986 Vaccine Injury Compensation Act, manufacturers bear no liability for any injuries suffered from their products. Instead, injuries are compensated from a federal fund which is collected as a tax when injectable products are administered. This program has become notoriously difficult to succeed in receiving compensation. There is a statute of limitations and an adversarial system where you must prove that your child has been injured. They have a schedule of injuries so if you are claiming something other than what is on the schedule you are out of luck. Despite the challenges to receiving compensation, there have been over $4 billion in damages awarded from this program.