Category: Corona Virus

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4 more free COVID tests will be available to each household ahead of the holidays – ABC News

November 21, 2023

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4 more free COVID tests will be available to each household ahead of the holidays - ABC News

COVID is not a concern for Americans heading into Christmas, other holidays, says survey: ‘Just another virus’ – Fox News

November 21, 2023

Being concerned about spreading COVID-19 is reportedly sooo last season.

As the U.S. heads into the fourth holiday season since the pandemic's onset, most Americans arent worried about COVID-19 spread or prevention during the holidays this year, a new study has revealed.

Many people have not received the latest vaccine, according to KFFs latest COVID-19 Vaccine Monitor survey which could be a reflection of the decreased concern.

COLD, FLU, COVID-19 AND RSV: HOW TO IDENTIFY THE DIFFERING SYMPTOMS AND STAY SAFE

About half of adults surveyed said they do not plan to get the newest COVID vaccine that was released this fall.

This includes three in 10 of those adults who were previously vaccinated.

A new survey found that half of adults plan to limit the spread of COVID with at least one prevention tactic. (iStock)

A quarter of the respondents said they intend to get the latest vaccine but only two in 10 adults have already received it.

COVID-19, FLU AND RSV VACCINES ARE ALL AVAILABLE THIS FALL: SEE WHAT SOME DOCTORS RECOMMEND AND WHY

The largest adopters of the vaccine include Democrats and people who are age 65 and older, the survey revealed.

About half (52%) of people who were previously vaccinated admitted they havent received the latest vaccine due to a lack of worry about COVID-19.

A quarter of the respondents intend to get the latest vaccine, but only two in 10 adults have already received it. (Scott Olson/Getty Images)

The study by KFF (formerly known as The Kaiser Family Foundation) also discovered that getting vaccinated isnt as much of a priority, as 37% of respondents said theyve been too busy or are waiting until later to get the vaccine.

Only about three in 10 people are worried about spreading COVID to friends and family over the holidays or becoming seriously sick from the virus.

COVID AND FLU VACCINE RATES ARE DECLINING FOR US HEALTH CARE WORKERS, CDC REPORTS

Just over a quarter of Americans worry theyll catch COVID during the holidays but 46% of people are concerned about a potential increase in hospitalizations.

The public is divided on taking precautions, the survey found: Half of adults say they plan to attempt to limit the spread with at least one safety procedure, including avoiding large gatherings, wearing a mask or testing for COVID before visiting friends and family.

The other half do not plan to implement any precautions at all.

The public is divided about taking precautions against COVID, a new survey found, as half of adults say they plan to attempt to limit the spread with at least one safety procedure. (iStock)

The KFF report findings are based on responses from a nationally representative sample of roughly 1,400 adults who were interviewed online and by telephone between Oct. 31 and Nov. 7, the group's website says. The group is headquartered in San Francisco.

Fox News contributor Dr. Nicole Saphier reacted to the survey results in an exchange with Fox News Digital, noting that concern about COVID during the holidays has "certainly evolved" over the last few years.

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"As we enter this holiday season, the majority of people have already had at least one COVID infection, most of which likely only experienced mild to moderate symptoms," she said.

With every holiday season, other viruses such as the flu and RSV are also waiting to "wreak havoc," which has pulled COVID out of the spotlight, said one health expert. (iStock)

Saphier pointed out that the greatest fear at the beginning of the pandemic was the unknown which prompted the public to take extra care when heading into the 2020 holidays.

"As vaccines and boosters became available for the higher risk [groups], and it became apparent that [these vaccines and boosters] did not prevent transmission and had little effect on preventing infection, non-high risk people became less inclined to get the boosters because the benefit no longer clearly outweighed potential risk in low-risk people," she told Fox News Digital.

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The doctor added that, as with every holiday season, other viruses such as the flu and RSV are also waiting to "wreak havoc," which has pulled COVID out of the spotlight.

"COVID is no longer the outlier, [but] rather just another virus among the masses," she said.

For more Health articles, visit http://www.foxnews.com.com/health.

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COVID is not a concern for Americans heading into Christmas, other holidays, says survey: 'Just another virus' - Fox News

More free COVID-19 tests available on government website – Scripps News

November 21, 2023

The federal government will begin shipping out kits next week to households who order free tests through a website.

The U.S. Department of Health and Human Services announced Monday that households are eligible for another set of fourfree at-home COVID-19 tests.

The tests can be requested through a government website and will be shipped directly to homes. HHS said the new tests will be shipped starting the week of Nov. 27.

It is the second time this fall households are eligible for free COVID-19 tests. On Sept. 25, the Biden administration relaunched covid.gov/tests, allowing households four free COVID-19 tests. The relaunch came after $600 million was allocated to manufacture the tests.

The $600 million would go toward making 200 million COVID-19 tests.

Households that have not ordered free COVID-19 tests since September are eligible for up to eight free at-home tests.

Related StoryGathering for Thanksgiving? Now is best time to get COVID, flu shots

Covid.gov/tests was originally launched in January 2022 during the height of the omicron variant. Nearly 40 million households requested free tests during the original launch.

The at-home tests generally give results within 30 minutes and do not require a lab drop-off.

Officials recommend using an at-home COVID-19 test after developing COVID symptoms such as a fever, sore throat, runny nose or loss of taste. They also recommend testing five days after coming into close contact with someone with COVID-19.

More than three and a half years after COVID-19 began spreading throughout the U.S.,the Centers for Disease Control and Preventionreported 16,239 hospitalizations for the week of Nov. 11.

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More free COVID-19 tests available on government website - Scripps News

‘Bamboozled’ Boris Johnson struggled to understand COVID-19 stats, UK inquiry hears – POLITICO Europe

November 21, 2023

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LONDON Scientists faced a real struggle in trying to get Boris Johnson to understand key terms and statistics relating to coronavirus, Britains COVID-19 pandemic inquiry has been told.

Extracts from the contemporary diary of Patrick Vallance the governments chief scientific adviser during the pandemic claim that on several occasions Johnson, then the prime minister, was confused and bamboozled when engaged in conversations about the virus.

Watching PM get his head around stats is awful, one extract from Vallances diary, dated June 11 2020 and read out at the inquiry Monday, reads. He finds relative and absolute risk almost impossible to understand.

Johnson was taken through the graphs but it was a real struggle to get him to understand them, another entry from February 2021 reads.

A third, from May 2020, said Johnson was clearly bamboozled by what Vallance described as a complicated meeting on the risks and science behind the question of reopening schools.

In another entry from September 2020, Johnson is said to be surprised to see a chart illustrating all the same stuff he was shown 6h[ours] ago.

Giving evidence to the inquiry in person Monday, Vallance said his former boss would be the first to admit that scientific concepts are not his forte. Vallance said fellow scientific advisers in Europe had often complained to him of a lack of scientific understanding among their own leaders.

But it was hard work sometimes to try and make sure that he had understood what a particular graph or piece of data was saying, the top scientist continued.

I would usually be persuaded that we had got him to understand what it was we were trying to say. But as one of the extracts showed, six hours later he might not have remembered what was in that presentation so I cant be sure that he kept in his mind all the time, he added.

Johnson will appear before the inquiry to give evidence in the next two weeks.

Earlier Monday, Vallance argued that the government failed to act quickly enough to deal with the pandemic in its initial phases. Asked about the early stages of the pandemic as cases began to rise in the U.K, Vallance said researchers had realized an estimated 75 percent reduction in contacts between individuals would be required to prevent the National Health Service becoming overwhelmed.

I am not convinced that there was a very effective operational response to that, he added.

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'Bamboozled' Boris Johnson struggled to understand COVID-19 stats, UK inquiry hears - POLITICO Europe

Fifth Covid-19 wave sees biggest bump in virus detection since … – New Zealand Herald

November 21, 2023

New Zealands fifth Covid-19 wave appears to be driving a larger spike in cases than our last bump in April. Photo / 123RF

New Zealands fifth Covid-19 wave appears to be driving the largest spike in infections seen all year, an epidemiologist says - and offers a glimpse of our long-term future with the coronavirus.

Health officials yesterday announced 7881 new reported Covid-19 cases over the week to Sunday, of which 1474 were probable cases that was up from 5947 and 1047 respectively on the week before.

Hospitalisation numbers, too, had ticked upward, from 284 to 349 week-on-week, as had virus detected in wastewater surveillance.

ESR data showed a national average of 5.06 million copies of the virus detected per person, per day in wastewater at November 12 double what was detected just a month before.

Of the indicators that are now the most valid wastewater and hospitalisations both have been at their highest levels since January, if you take their peak values, Otago University epidemiologist Professor Michael Baker said.

Looking at hospitalisations in particular, it seems to be a bigger peak than what we saw in the fourth wave. This may be showing us what we can expect in the long term, which is peaks and troughs.

Modellers still didnt see this wave reaching the height of the one that took off around this time in 2022 - when case numbers reached the mid-8000s and weekly hospitalisations nearly topped 600 as it was growing off a much lower base.

There was also nothing to suggest any game-changing new subvariant was helping build any wave the size of 2022s largest ones, in what was now a highly-exposed and highly-vaccinated population.

The latest ESR sampling showed a mix of Omicron subvariants albeit with the EG.5 or Eris type and its relatives now making up more than half of genomes sequenced - still driving spread.

It remained to be seen whether infection rates would keep rising as Christmas neared - with wastewater detections having taken a slight dip.

It looks like were seeing the wave perhaps peaking in some parts of New Zealand, but rising in others - so theres now a bit of regional variation, Baker said.

But the overall pattern is really clear. Were in a large wave and we need to respond to it.

Longer term, Baker said a national approach was needed to manage these peak periods.

Thats because a lot of people are getting sick, are going to hospital and putting pressure on the system and unfortunately, deaths are going up too.

The 20 further deaths reported from last week added to a total 3522 since the beginning of the pandemic.

We have already invested extensively in all these surveillance systems, so now I think we need to act on the information that theyre giving us.

He singled out several priority areas he felt required addressing, including promoting boosters; supporting to help people self-isolate, and consistent policy for ventilation standards and mask use in healthcare settings.

Last week, Baker and colleagues called on the Government to set up a dedicated centre for disease control like that in the US, and now being established in Australia - to better prepare for future pandemics.

Jamie Morton is a specialist in science and environmental reporting. He joined the Herald in 2011 and writes about everything from conservation and climate change to natural hazards and new technology.

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Fifth Covid-19 wave sees biggest bump in virus detection since ... - New Zealand Herald

Coronavirus: US faces COVID winter wave and hospitalization; learn preventive measures to safeguard health – IndiaTimes

November 21, 2023

According to the last US CDC (Centers for Disease Control and Prevention) maps, fourteen states have a big increase in Coronavirus hospitalizations. There's an 8.6 percent increase in cases in the US, with 16,239 new hospital admissions in the week ending November 11. According to US News, the increase comes after new COVID-19 weekly hospital admissions have mostly been trending downward or remaining stable since early September.

The spike in cases is higher in the upper Midwest, parts of the South Atlantic, and southern Mountain regions. As per reports, hospitalizations had steadily risen since late June, peaking in early September but remaining stable around 15,000 through October and November. While this is significantly lower than the January 2021 peak of over 150,600, the latest data reveals concerning trends in several states.

As per reports, Vermont leads with a 70 percent rise, followed by Iowa and Alaska at 60 percent. Montana, Minnesota, and Hawaii have seen increases of over 30 percent. Virginia, Tennessee, Wisconsin, Nebraska, North Dakota, New Mexico, Arizona, and Washington D.C. report over 20 percent hikes.

According to health experts, colder weather makes Coronavirus spread more easily. "Colder weather tends to lead to an increased spread in viruses and other infections," notes the CDC. According to a 2020 study, the COVID virus can last longer in cold and dry conditions.

Read more: Do you find it difficult to exercise? You may have flat feet

During a two-week period ending on November 11, COVID-variant HV.1 accounted for 29% of new COVID-19 infections in the US, according to the CDC. After HV.1, the next most common variant was EG.5, which made up about 22% of cases. This was followed by FL.1.5.1 or Fornax, and XBB.1.16 or Arcturus.

Simple yet tried-and-tested preventive measures suggested by the WHO to protect yourselves from COVID in winters include wearing a well-fitting mask when needed, maintaining physical distance of at least 1 meter, ventilating indoor spaces by opening windows and/or doors, avoiding closed, confined or crowded spaces, keeping hands clean, and coughing or sneezing into a bent elbow or tissue. It is also important to be fully vaccinated and avoid traveling if you are at risk.

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Coronavirus: US faces COVID winter wave and hospitalization; learn preventive measures to safeguard health - IndiaTimes

Computer simulation suggests mutant strains of COVID-19 emerged in response to human behavior – Medical Xpress

November 21, 2023

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Using artificial intelligence technology and mathematical modeling, a research group led by Nagoya University has revealed that human behavior, such as lockdowns and isolation measures, affects the evolution of new strains of COVID-19. SARS-CoV-2, the virus that causes COVID-19, developed to become more transmissible earlier in its lifecycle. The researchers' findings, published in Nature Communications, provide new insights into the relationship between how people behave and disease-causing agents.

As with any other living organism, viruses evolve over time. Those with survival advantages become dominant in the gene pool. Many environmental factors influence this evolution, including human behavior. By isolating sick people and using lockdowns to control outbreaks, humans may alter virus evolution in complicated ways. Predicting how these changes occur is vital to develop adaptive treatments and interventions.

An important concept in this interaction is viral load, which refers to the amount or concentration of a virus present per ml of a bodily fluid. In SARS-CoV-2, a higher viral load in respiratory secretions increases the risk of transmission through droplets. Viral load relates to the potential to transmit a virus to others. For example, a virus like Ebola has an exceptionally high viral load, whereas the common cold has a low one. However, viruses must perform a careful balancing act, as increasing the maximum viral load can be advantageous, but an excessive viral load may cause individuals to become too sick to transmit the virus to others.

The research group, led by Professor Shingo Iwami at the Nagoya University Graduate School of Science, identified trends using mathematical modeling with an artificial intelligence component to investigate previously published clinical data. They found that the SARS-CoV-2 variants that were most successful at spreading had an earlier and higher peak in viral load. However, as the virus evolved from the pre-Alpha to the Delta variants, it had a shorter duration of infection. The researchers also found that the decreased incubation period and the increased proportion of asymptomatic infections recorded as the virus mutated also affected virus evolution.

The results showed a clear difference. As the virus evolved from the Wuhan strain to the Delta strain, they found a 5-fold increase in the maximum viral load and a 1.5-fold increase in the number of days before the viral load peaked.

Iwami and his colleagues suggest that human behavioral changes in response to the virus, designed to limit transmission, were increasing the selection pressure on the virus. This caused SARS-CoV-2 to be transmitted mainly during the asymptomatic and presymptomatic periods, which occur earlier in its infectious cycle. As a result, the viral load peak advanced to this period to spread more effectively in the earlier pre-symptomatic stages.

When evaluating public health strategies in response to COVID-19 and any future potentially pandemic-causing pathogens, it is necessary to consider the impact of changes in human behavior on virus evolution patterns.

"We expect that immune pressure from vaccinations and/or previous infections drives the evolution of SARS-CoV-2," Iwami said. "However, our study found that human behavior can also contribute to the virus's evolution in a more complicated manner, suggesting the need to reevaluate virus evolution."

Their study suggests the possibility that new strains of coronavirus evolved because of a complex interaction between clinical symptoms and human behavior. The group hopes that their research will speed up the establishment of testing regimes for adaptive treatment, effective screening, and isolation strategies.

More information: Isolation may select for earlier and higher peak viral load but shorter duration in SARS-CoV-2 evolution, Nature Communications (2023).

Journal information: Nature Communications

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Computer simulation suggests mutant strains of COVID-19 emerged in response to human behavior - Medical Xpress

Image-guided treatment may restore sense of smell in long-COVID … – Radiology Business

November 21, 2023

Marty Stempniak has covered healthcare since 2012, with his byline appearing in the American Hospital Association's member magazine, Modern Healthcare and McKnight's. Prior to that, he wrote about village government and local business for his hometown newspaper in Oak Park, Illinois. He won a Peter Lisagor and Gold EXCEL awards in 2017 for his coverage of the opioid epidemic.

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Image-guided treatment may restore sense of smell in long-COVID ... - Radiology Business

The new Covid-19 vaccine is receiving shockingly little interest from the US public – Vox.com

November 19, 2023

The Covid-19 vaccines were hailed as a miracle upon their arrival. They were delivered earlier than anyone thought possible and proved exceptionally effective in preventing hospitalizations and deaths. More than 80 percent of all Americans, and more than 90 percent of adults, received at least one dose of the vaccines, remarkable penetration in a country where less than half of people get their flu shot every year.

But so far this year, just 14 percent of adults have received a dose of the new vaccine formulation that became available in September compared to 28 percent who have gotten a flu shot.

This raises a question that would have seemed unthinkable three years ago: What if we make a miraculous vaccine and nobody wants it?

Ever since that first shot, the publics interest in subsequent Covid-19 vaccines has been steadily dropping. Less than 70 percent of the US finished their initial two-dose vaccine series. Less than 20 percent of the country received last years bivalent booster shot.

Experts say the publics disinterest in the latest Covid shots is likely a combination of poor messaging from authorities, a diminishing fear about a virus that three years ago was wholly unknown, and the political polarization of the pandemic itself. But whatever the reasons, that vaccine ambivalence still poses a health threat.

Elderly people and very young infants continue to have a higher chance than the rest of the population that they will be hospitalized with Covid-19. Vaccination rates have fallen off for the former group, who are also most likely to die from an infection, and they were never strong to begin with for the latter; 95 percent of children under 4 are unvaccinated. About half of seniors being hospitalized for Covid-19 these days have never gotten a vaccine, experts say, affirming that the unvaccinated continue to be hit much harder by the virus.

Infectious disease experts saw 2023 as a pivotal year for the countrys transition out of the pandemic. It would test whether the US health system could marshal a strong response to the winter Covid-cold-and-flu season, specifically through a successful vaccination campaign. The dismal start to that campaign may force a difficult question upon the public health community: If Americans dont care about getting vaccinated against Covid-19 anymore, what do we do now?

Part of the story is simply human nature. Covid-19 arrived in 2020 behaving strangely (with so much asymptomatic transmission) and incurring a deadly toll (the first iteration of the virus was notably more virulent than the flu). Much of the economy shut down and people were confined to their homes. It was a scary time and vaccines offered hope for a future in which not only would you be less likely to get seriously ill but that life could get back to normal. When shots went out to hospitals, pharmacies, and vaccination clinics in December of 2020, Americans were eager to get them.

But three years and multiple new vaccine formulations later, the novelty is gone.

Americans arent as worried about Covid-19 now. More than 70 percent of US adults said they were not concerned about getting seriously ill from Covid-19 in a November survey from the KFF health policy think tank. That figure has been about the same for the flu and RSV, suggesting Americans have come to view the novel coronavirus as a similar health risk to other cold-weather illnesses that have been circulating for a long time. Half of the people who were previously vaccinated but do not plan to get the updated Covid-19 vaccine cited a lack of concern about the virus as a reason for skipping the latest shot, per KFF.

People arent scared of this virus anymore, Paul Offit, director of the Vaccine Education Center at the Childrens Hospital of Philadelphia, told me.

As evidence, he recounted that he had ridden the subway with 100 screaming, maskless football fans heading to the Eagles-Cowboys game. No one on that subway car had a mask on, he said. We are close to winter, and this is in theory a winter virus.

Familiarity is one part of that change in attitudes. Another is political polarization: Republicans, both the rank-and-file and their political leaders, have grown more and more hostile toward the Covid-19 vaccines, with a general skepticism toward government mandates spilling into conspiracy theories and disinformation. (Offit marveled at that turn of events: These vaccines are the most amazing medical and scientific accomplishment of his lifetime and the greatest accomplishment of the Trump administration. And yet.)

Only 23 percent of Republicans said in KFFs November poll that they had or would get the latest version of the Covid-19 vaccine this fall or winter. Another 43 percent of the party said they received an earlier dose but will not get the new shot and 34 percent said they have never been vaccinated at all. To compare, 40 percent of independents said they had or would get the new shot and 72 percent of Democrats said the same. While reality does not exactly match up to those responses, the gap between Republicans and the rest shows partisanship is driving vaccine attitudes.

Its become part of somebodys identity that theyre not somebody who gets Covid shots in particular, said Dr. Cline Gounder, a senior fellow at KFF and editor-at-large for Public Health at KFF Health News. That may spill over to vaccines, but it starts with Covid.

There are worrying signs of a more general resurgence in vaccine skepticism: 3 percent of US schoolchildren reported a vaccine exemption for the coming school year, the highest share on record according to the CDC. Ten states have an exemption rate above 5 percent; only two did three years ago.

But while that uptick is worrying, it is clear, as Gounder noted, that Covid is a special case for Americans. Flu vaccination rates last season were in line with rates from before the pandemic: Lower than youd like (57 percent for kids, 46 percent for adults) but historically unremarkable. Flu vaccinations this year are on track with last years pace, according to the CDC.

People were already accustomed to the annual flu vaccination campaign before the pandemic and they seem to be mostly sticking to old habits. So why do so many seem so immune to the public health communitys plea that they get a Covid-19 shot at the same time?

The other factor may be that Americans have become inured to such public health messaging after years of living through a public health emergency.

Partly, the vaccines are a victim of their own success. The initial clinical trials reported incredible results not only in stopping severe disease (the primary public health goal) but in stopping any illness at all. The gobsmacked headlines may have led the public to expect to never get sick at all, and public health messages failed to break through with the reality check that while you may still feel sick, it is much less likely youll end up in the hospital and that should count as a win. When reality didnt meet expectations, seeds of doubt and distrust were sown.

For the later shots, Gounder said the public health messaging itself, which generally encourages everyone to get another Covid-19 shot, may be part of the problem. People are more familiar with the virus now and that means many have a general idea of how it works. They may know, for example, that age and chronic health conditions are the best indicators of ones risk of serious illness or death from an infection.

Other countries, such as the United Kingdom, have targeted their recommendations to people over 65 and people at a heightened risk because of their health, as well as the people who live with and care for those at-risk folks.

The United States has to date instead erred toward simplicity with its vaccine messaging and recommendations: Everyone older than 6 months is recommended for yet another shot. Experts acknowledge there is an argument for that strategy. But as Covid-19 has become a more familiar illness and people have a better understanding of it, there may be a better argument for a more nuanced approach.

At this point, people have likely lived through an infection of their own and have firsthand experience with Covid-19. The initial vaccination campaign was crucial because people had no immunity to Covid-19 at all; the population was naive. But the public health reality has changed three years later: Most people have either been vaccinated or infected or both.

So when the official vaccine guidance remains largely unchanged, and the messages public health authorities are sending fail to acknowledge the varying risks or that people do possess some immunity, they may end up being ignored.

I understand some of the skepticism, Gounder said. When you tell everyone youre all at risk, get your shot, it doesnt correspond with your lived reality.

There are short-term steps the US could be taking to bolster Covid-19 vaccine uptake, particularly for the most vulnerable. Additional funding for nursing homes to hold vaccination campaigns, for example: Only 17 percent of nursing home residents are up to date on their shots. Experts also stressed the importance of communicating to people that the very young can get seriously ill with Covid-19; even if they dont die, the health complications can be serious. Gounder said shed like to see that messaging start with more of a focus on pregnant women, who can pass some immunity to their unborn child.

But there is a larger question brewing when only 10 percent of the US population is showing much urgency about getting a Covid-19 vaccine: How are we going to keep doing this?

Pfizer said in September that it expected about one in four Americans to get the latest shot. Though there is still time, current vaccination rates are well short of that goal. It is an open question how the for-profit pharmaceutical manufacturers who produce these vaccines will respond to what the market is telling them.

Gounder said it is difficult to imagine a cessation of Covid-19 vaccinations entirely. The public health case for immunizing the elderly in particular is strong. But drug makers may scale back their production, especially if the governments recommendations become more targeted.

The federal government is putting a lot of money behind pharmas pursuit of a universal Covid vaccine, but until those efforts bear fruit (if they ever do), there may also be less interest in producing new formulations of the vaccine after uptake for this seasons new shot was so paltry.

The known unknowns for the future, which could spur another round of investment and interest in updated Covid-19 vaccines, are biological. The virus has been evolving and will continue to evolve and could, in theory, reach a point where the current vaccines are ineffectual.

The other question mark is inside of us. The reason many people still enjoy protection from serious illness is because our bodys T-cells are familiar with the virus and can activate when they detect it. They may not be able to stop an infection entirely (that is the role of antibodies, which are quicker to fade) but they can stamp out the virus before a person becomes too sick.

What we dont know today is how long our T cells memory will last, and how durable that immunity really is. The only way to find out is for more time to pass.

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The new Covid-19 vaccine is receiving shockingly little interest from the US public - Vox.com

KFF COVID-19 Vaccine Monitor November 2023: With COVID Concerns Lagging, Most People Have Not Gotten Latest … – KFF

November 19, 2023

Key Takeaways

The latest KFF COVID-19 Vaccine Monitor survey suggests the lack of public concern about getting sick from COVID-19 may be why many people have not gotten the latest vaccine and why half of the public are not planning on taking precautions to limit the spread of the virus during the coming months.

The November KFF COVID-19 Vaccine Monitor investigates uptake for the new, updated COVID-19 vaccine, which has been recommended by the CDC for people ages 6 months and older. Two months after the vaccine became available, about half of adults say they have gotten or will get the shot, but another half say they wont get the latest shot and a third seem steadfast in that decision.

One in five (20%) adults now say they have received the new, updated COVID-19 vaccine that became available in September. An additional one in four adults say they will definitely get (13%) or probably get (15%) the updated shot. Consistent with demographic differences across other COVID-related behaviors, uptake is highest among those ages 65 and older (34%) and Democrats (32%). This is meaningful given that those ages 65 and older are more vulnerable to COVID-19, as theyre more likely to get seriously sick and experience complications that could result in hospitalization. This is in comparison to smaller shares of younger adults ages 18-29 (18%), Republicans (12%) and independents (16%) who report getting the latest vaccine. Similar shares across racial and ethnic groups report having gotten the updated vaccine, including 26% of Black adults, 20% of Hispanic adults, and 19% of White adults. However, when combining the shares who have gotten the shot and those who intend to get it, Black adults (59%) and Hispanic adults (59%) both outpace White adults (42%).

Uptake of the newest vaccine matches closely to uptake of the updated bivalent booster measured in December 2022, just after the updated bivalent COVID-19 booster had become available for use. About two in ten adults said they had received the booster dose (22%).

One in three (34%) adults say they will definitely not get the new COVID-19 vaccine, and another 17% say they will probably not get the vaccine. The share who say they probably or definitely wont get the new COVID-19 vaccination has remained unchanged from the September COVID-19 Vaccine Monitor, which was fielded immediately prior to when the vaccine became available.

Majorities of those who have never received any COVID-19 vaccine (94%), Republicans (77%), independents (59%), those who live in rural areas (65%), White adults (58%), and those under the age of 65 (55%) continue to say they will not get the updated COVID-19 vaccine.

The survey finds that partisanship is continuing to play an outsized role in vaccine attitudes. While nearly six in ten White adults say they do not plan to get the new vaccine, this increases to eight in ten among White adults who self-identify as Republicans. This is more than twice the share of White adults who are Democrats (29%) who say they will either definitely not or probably not get the vaccine. In fact, three in ten (31%) White adults who are Democrats have already gotten the new vaccine, compared to 11% of their Republican counterparts.

Most adults (79%) say they have heard at least a little about the updated COVID-19 vaccine, with one in five (22%) saying they have heard a lot. A small share (21%) say they have heard nothing at all about the updated vaccine.

Awareness is high across demographic groups, including the vast majority (92%) of adults ages 65 and older who have heard at least a little about the updated vaccine compared to a somewhat smaller share, but still a majority, of younger adults, including six in ten of those ages 18 to 29. Larger shares of Democrats are also more aware of the vaccine, with 86% who have heard at least a little compared to three-quarters (74%) of Republicans.

With most people aware of the latest vaccine, many, including large shares of previously vaccinated adults, have not yet received the updated shot and some dont plan to. About six in ten (58%) adults are previously vaccinated and have yet to get the updated vaccine. This group is roughly divided between people who say they will get the vaccine and those who say they are not planning to get the latest shot. The latest COVID-19 Vaccine Monitor survey explores why this group of previously vaccinated people have not gotten the latest dose.

Around half of adults (47%) have both previously received a COVID-19 vaccine and also say they will get or have already gotten the updated vaccine. On the other hand, one in five (20%) adults are previously unvaccinated and say they will not get the updated vaccine. That leaves three in ten (31%) who have previously been vaccinated but now say they will not get the updated shot.

More than four in ten Republicans (43%) and one in three independents (35%) say they are previously vaccinated but wont get the updated shot, compared to 19% of Democrats. A larger share of White adults (34%) also report being previously vaccinated but not planning on getting the latest shot compared to Black adults (20%). Around a quarter of Hispanic adults (26%) are previously vaccinated but now do not plan to get the latest vaccine.

In 2021, KFF surveys examining initial vaccine rollout found that concerns about vaccine safety were the driving reason why people didnt get vaccine. Even as those concerns dissipated among most of the public, a small share of the public remained steadfast and never received a COVID-19 vaccine. Yet, subsequent booster never reached the same uptake levels as seen in the initial vaccine rollout. And as the country enters its fourth year of COVID-19 concerns, it appears this trend continues.

When asked about a series of reasons that could explain why people are not getting the latest vaccine, not being worried about getting COVID-19 tops the list. About half (52%) of those who were previously vaccinated say lack of worry about COVID-19 is at least a minor reason why they havent gotten the vaccine, including a quarter who say it is a major reason. Getting vaccinated may also not be a priority for some with around four in ten (37%) saying being too busy is at least a minor reason why they have not gotten it yet, and another third saying they are waiting to get it a later date. Experiences from previous doses may also be keeping people from getting the new vaccine with about a quarter saying that bad side effects from a previous COVID-19 vaccine dose is a reason why they have not gotten the new vaccine.

Small shares say there are other barriers to getting the vaccine including 16% who say they cannot take the time off work and 13% who say they havent been able to get an appointment. One in ten (11%) say their doctor told them to wait or to not to get the updated vaccine.

Among Hispanic adults who were previously vaccinated but have not gotten the new shot, about half (55%) say they arent worried about getting COVID-19, they are too busy (51%), or they are waiting to get it at a later date (48%). In addition, a third (35%) of Hispanic adults as well as a quarter (22%) of Black adults cite not being able to take time off work, compared to just one in ten (9%) White adults.

Democrats top reasons for not getting the updated COVID-19 vaccine suggests there will likely still be additional uptake in this group, while Republicans top reasons may indicate more resistance to the latest vaccine. Among those who were previously vaccinated but havent gotten the new shot, half of Democrats (49%) say being too busy is a major or minor reason they havent gotten the updated vaccine yet, compared to 22% of Republicans and 35% of independents. On the other hand, two-thirds of Republicans (66%) and more than half of independents (57%) say not being worried about getting COVID is at least a minor reason why they have not gotten the updated vaccine, compared to a third of Democrats (35%).

With fall and winter holidays coming up, the possibility of a further wave of COVID-19 infections is looming with increased indoor gatherings and time with friends and family. Yet, most of the public is not worried about spreading or catching COVID-19 over the coming months. About three in ten adults are worried they will spread COVID-19 to people close to them (31%) or they will get seriously sick from COVID-19 (28%), and about a quarter (26%) are worried they will get COVID-19 over the holidays. A larger share of the public is worried about increased hospitalizations, with almost half (46%) saying they are very or somewhat worried that there will be an increase in hospitalizations in the U.S. this winter.

Older adults are not more worried than younger adults about the spread of COVID-19 this holiday season except for concerns about increases in cases and hospitalizations. Around half (53%) of adults ages 65 and older say they are worried that there will be an increase in COVID-19 cases and hospitalizations this winter, compared to smaller shares (44%) of those under the age of 65.

Around the same share say they are very or somewhat worried about an increase in COVID-19 cases and hospitalizations this winter as were in December of last year when there was a similar uptick in COVID-19 cases.

In addition to not being worried about COVID-19 during the upcoming holidays, the public is divided on precautions, with half of adults saying they arent planning to take any of the precautions asked about in the survey, while the other half report they plan to take at least one precaution this fall and winter. The most common precautions people said they planned to take were avoiding large gatherings (35%) or wearing a mask in crowded places (30%). Smaller shares say they are avoiding travel this fall and winter as a precaution against COVID-19 (25%), avoiding dining indoors at restaurants (19%), or taking a COVID-19 test before visiting with friends or family (18%).

The share who say they plan to take precautions to limit the spread of COVID is similar to the share of the public who said they were taking precautions because of the tripledemic back in January of this year. Back then, about half (46%) of adults said the news of COVID-19, RSV, and the flu spreading that winter had made them more likely to take a precaution, including three in ten (31%) who said they were more likely to wear a mask in public and a quarter (26%) who were more likely to avoid large gatherings.

While four in ten (39%) White adults say they will take at least one precaution, majorities of Black adults (72%) and Hispanic adults (68%) report they are planning to take any of the precautions mentioned.

Similarly, partisanship and previous vaccine uptake continue to be strong predictors of whether people plan to take precautions to limit the spread of the virus. Two thirds (66%) of Democrats and half (48%) of independents say they plan to take at least one precaution, compared to three in ten (29%) Republicans who say the same. Just over half (53%) of vaccinated adults say they are taking any of the precautions, compared to four in ten (39%) unvaccinated adults.

Similar shares of younger and older adults report that they will be taking at least one precaution during the fall and winter. However, four in ten (41%) adults ages 65 and older say they plan to avoid large gatherings, compared to a third (33%) of those under the age of 65. While younger adults are less likely to say they will avoid large gatherings, larger shares of younger adults say they will take a test for COVID-19 before spending time with friends of family, with 21% who say so (including 25% of those ages 18-29), compared to one in ten (10%) of those ages 65 and older.

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KFF COVID-19 Vaccine Monitor November 2023: With COVID Concerns Lagging, Most People Have Not Gotten Latest ... - KFF

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