2 Garland Children Mistakenly Given Adult Dose Of COVID-19 Vaccine

11/3/21 UPDATEThe mother of the 7-year-old mistakenly given an adult COVID vaccine dose, says her son is doing "okay" after getting the shot.

GARLAND, Texas (CBSDFW.COM) - It's not uncommon to see vaccination opportunities at events around North Texas, but this weekend in Garland, a Trunk or Treat went very wrong.

Now, a family wants answers. Their 6-year-old son, and a neighbor's 7-years-old son mistakenly received adult doses of the COVID-19 vaccine at a pop up clinic run by the City of Garland's health department.

It happened Sunday, Oct. 31 at Mount Hebron Missionary Baptist Church when nurses running the clinic recommended the shot to the families of the two boys, claiming that they were eligible.

The families were then given a Pfizer COVID-19 vaccine consent form, indicating the same.

Though on Sunday, the vaccine had yet to be approved by the CDC for children aged 5-11.

"They asked us our kids ages, and so we told them 4 and 6, and they said 'the 6-year-old can obviously get it if you'd like to go ahead and do that,' said Julian Gonzalez, the parent of the 6-year-old.

"Going off their confidence and what we read [on the form] we were all for it," he said.

It wasn't until Monday that the Gonzalez family, and the family of the 7-year-old, received a call from the Garland Health Department letting them know not only were the two boys not supposed to get the vaccine, but that they each received adult doses three times the recommended amount.

"We found out after the fact that the vials for the children's vaccine should have been different, the needles should have been different…it should have been labeled specifically for kids so…where did that decision come from? Who was it that told them they could go ahead and offer it?" Gonzalez said.

The City of Garland released the following statement on the matter:

"The City of Garland Health Department (GHD) is reporting that two children under the age of 12 were administered doses of the Pfizer vaccine in error this weekend. GHD officials are in communication with the parents of the children involved, who are monitoring the children for side effects. GHD also has reported the incident to state health officials and are further investigating the circumstances leading up to the error. The safety and privacy of our patients is always our top priority. Due to patient privacy, we cannot share additional information at this time."

Gonzales says his son experienced moderate side effects yesterday but today is feeling better.

Fortunately the family's pediatrician says he will likely be okay, but for now they're monitoring his condition.

The state of the other boy is unknown.

Still, Gonzalez said he's frustrated and scared.

"We're just on edge completely until we see this through."

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