Category: Covid-19 Vaccine

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Pfizer Forecasts $54 Billion in 2022 Sales From Its Covid-19 Vaccine, Treatment – The Wall Street Journal

February 9, 2022

As Pfizer Inc. forecasts strong sales this year for its Covid-19 vaccine and treatment, the drugmaker is on the hunt for deals to bolster its pipeline of experimental products.

Pfizer said Tuesday that surging sales of its Covid-19 treatment and continued demand for its shots should boost the companys revenue to around $100 billion this year. The company estimated that sales of its antiviral pill Paxlovid will reach about $22 billion while the vaccine will add $32 billion.

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Pfizer Forecasts $54 Billion in 2022 Sales From Its Covid-19 Vaccine, Treatment - The Wall Street Journal

athenahealth says COVID-19 vaccination required for limited number of employees – Healthcare IT News

February 9, 2022

In the wake of a U.S. Supreme Court ruling blocking the Biden administration's COVID-19 vaccine and testing mandatefor private companies, the electronic health record vendor athenahealth has sought to clarify its own rules for employees.

"Our current policy includes testing options and requirement for vaccination for some employees, based on job function," athenahealth representatives told Healthcare IT News this week.

That policy is not based on office location.

In response to follow-up inquiries about how many employees, and which job functions, were subject to the mandatory vaccination policy, the representatives characterized the group as "a limited number of employees including those who travel to interact with clients or prospects."

"The vast majority of our employees are vaccinated," said the representatives.

WHY IT MATTERS

The company's worker vaccination policy has been the subject of some recent confusion, according to local reporting.

The Republican Journal in Waldo County, Maine, where the company has a campus in Belfast, said that some employees had been under the impression that vaccination by April 1 was mandatory.

However, the employees told the outlet that the company revised this stance via a statement in late January, saying vaccinations were not mandatory for those who don't interact with clients.

As of Tuesday, 70.13% of Waldo County residents were considered fully vaccinated lower than the state rate of 76.48%, but higher than the national percentage.

athenahealth representatives told Healthcare IT News that the current plan is to return to in-person work in June.

For employees who dont wish to work in person because of the vaccine policy, athenahealth said that it "will provide reasonable accommodations on a case-by-case basis."

THE LARGER TREND

Other EHR vendors in the industry have taken differing approaches to employee vaccinations and work-from-home options.

In August 2021, Epic announced that all U.S. employees would be required to be fully vaccinated by October 1. Around the same time, it said that employees would need to return to the office nearly full time.

Meanwhile, Cerner announced its own vaccine mandate this past October, along with a hybrid in-person and virtual model for workers. It's unclear as of yet if the company's recently announced acquisition by Oracle will affect either policy.

ON THE RECORD

"We continue to evaluate our policy and make decisions based on evolving public health guidance, and legal and business considerations," said athenahealth representatives.

Kat Jercich is senior editor of Healthcare IT News.Twitter: @kjercichEmail: kjercich@himss.orgHealthcare IT News is a HIMSS Media publication.

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athenahealth says COVID-19 vaccination required for limited number of employees - Healthcare IT News

The U.S. Army is mandating the COVID-19 vaccine – FingerLakes1.com

February 9, 2022

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The U.S. Army is mandating the COVID-19 vaccine - FingerLakes1.com

Is Protection Conferred by Third COVID-19 Vaccine in Patients With MS? – Medscape

February 9, 2022

The study covered in this summary was published in medRxiv.org as a preprint and has not yet been peer reviewed.

There was only a minimal increase in antibody titers and seroconversion seen after the third SARS-CoV-2 mRNA vaccine in patients with multiple sclerosis who had been treated with the anti-CD20 therapy, ocrelizumab, as compared with healthy controls.

The time intervals between the ocrelizumab dose and the third vaccine dose did not correlate with antibody levels.

Patients with multiple sclerosis who are being treated with anti-CD20 are at high risk of severe complications from SARS-CoV-2 infection; therefore, it is important to have a vaccine that confers lasting protective immunity to this virus.

The findings from this study point to the need for a way to increase B cells in these patients, possibly by using monoclonal antibodies or other ways of repleting the B cells prior to SARS-CoV-2 vaccination.

This was a prospective, longitudinal, observational study that included patients 18 years of age or older with multiple sclerosis who were being treated with anti-CD20 (ocrelizumab).

The patients were seen at one of two Danish clinics or the Multiple Sclerosis and Neuroinflammation Center at the University of California, San Francisco.

The patients had already received two doses of the SARS-CoV-2 mRNA vaccine and were eligible for a third (booster) vaccine.

Blood samples to measure the IgG antibody levels of the SARS-CoV-2 spike receptor binding domain were taken before and after all three doses of the vaccine.

Measurements of B cells, T cells, and spike-specific T-cell responses were also done.

Detectable antibodies were found in 14% of the participants 07 days before the second vaccine; this increased to 37.7% by 24 weeks after that vaccine. It then decreased to 24.0% at 07 days before the third vaccine; 33.3% of the patients who had antibodies at the 2- to 4-week point had no antibodies by 07 days before the third vaccine.

The antibodies were significantly lower at the 0- to 7-day point than they were at the 2- to 4-week postsecond vaccine point (P = .0020).

Following the third vaccine, 33.3% of the participants had positive antibodies, with 25.6% of participants having detectable antibodies at both 24 weeks after the second vaccine and 24 weeks after the third vaccine. Of the participants who did not have detectable antibodies prior to the third dose, 13.2% had detectable levels after the third vaccine.

Regarding the levels of antibodies needed for protection against infection, 7.4% of the participants had low levels that would confer less than 50% protection; 24% had intermediate levels, giving above 50% protection; and 1.8% (only one patient) had high levels, giving more than 80% protection.

The levels of B cells and T cells were not different between the patients who had detectable antibodies (seropositive) and those who did not (seronegative) 07 days before the third booster.

The frequencies of the spike-reactive T cells increased from before the first vaccine compared with after the second vaccine; however, there was only a slight increase after the third vaccine.

The median age of the participants did not differ between the seropositive and seronegative individuals (P = .2254).

The interval between the time a patient received their last dose of ocrelizumab and their third vaccine dose did not correlate with their antibody levels (r2 = 0.04008, P = .44).

Additionally, the interval between the second and third vaccine doses did not correlate with the patient's antibody levels (r2 = 0.00097, P = .90).

The time frame used was short; therefore, there were missing samples at the last two blood collections (07 days before the third booster vaccination and 24 weeks after the third booster vaccination).

The levels of responses used as cutoffs were based on the previous variants of SARS-CoV-2; they did not include the Delta or Omicron variants.

This study was conducted with fundings from the Danish Neurological Society, Lundbeck, and Roche.

Joseph J. Sabatino, Jr, has received research support from Novartis.

Riley Bove has received research support from Biogen, Roche Genentech, and Novartis; has received personal consulting fees from Alexion, Biogen, EMD Serono, Novartis, Roche Genentech, and Sanofi Genentech; and is funded by a Harry Weaver Award from the National Multiple Sclerosis Society and the National Institutes of Health.

Scott S. Zamvil has received consulting honoraria from Alexion, Biogen-Idec, EMD-Serono, Genzyme, Novartis, Roche/Genentech, and Teva Pharmaceuticals, Inc, and has served on data safety monitoring boards for Lilly, BioMS, Teva, and Therapeutics.

Tobias Sejbaek has received travel grants from Biogen, Merck, Novartis, and Roche; has received research grants from Biogen; and has served on advisory boards for Biogen, Merck, and Novartis.

Hamza Mahmood Bajwa, Frederik Novak, Anna Christine Nilsson, Keld-Erik Byg, Isik S. Johansen, Christian Nielsen, Dorte K. Holm, A. B. Jacobsen, Kristen Mittl, and William Rowles have disclosed no relevant financial relationships.

This is a summary of a preprint research study, "Persistently Reduced Humoral and Cellular Immune Response Following Third SARS-CoV-2 mRNA Vaccination in Anti-CD20-Treated Multiple Sclerosis Patients," written by Hamza Mahmood Bajwa and colleagues from the Department of Neurology, Hospital Southwest Jutland, University Hospital of Southern Denmark, Esbjerg, Denmark, and the Department of Regional Health Research, University of Southern Denmark, Odense, Denmark, on medRxiv, provided to you by Medscape. This study has not yet been peer reviewed. The full text of the study can be found on medRxiv.org.

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Medscape Medical News2022

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Cite this: Is Protection Conferred by Third COVID-19 Vaccine in Patients With MS?-Medscape-Feb08,2022.

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Is Protection Conferred by Third COVID-19 Vaccine in Patients With MS? - Medscape

Doctor on developing global COVID-19 vaccine: We got zero help from the U.S. government – Yahoo Finance

February 9, 2022

Dr. Peter Hotez, Co-Director of the Center for Vaccine Development at Texas Childrens Hospital, joins Yahoo Finance Live to discuss the development of a new coronavirus vaccine, global vaccine inequity, and vaccine technology.

EMILY MCCORMICK: Dr. Peter Hotez is co-director of the Center for Vaccine Development at Texas Children's Hospital and Dean of the National School of Tropical Medicine at Baylor College of Medicine. Dr. Hotez, thank you so much for joining us, and congratulations on your nomination last week for the Nobel Peace Prize by Congresswoman Lizzie Fletcher for your work with Dr. Maria Bottazzi. I do want to ask about that work on the Corbevax vaccine. Tell us how this differs from the COVID-19 vaccines we've seen widely in the US from Pfizer, Moderna, and J&J.

PETER HOTEZ: Yeah, sure, Emily. It's an older technology. It's a recombinant protein vaccine that's made in yeast. And that means it's a vegan vaccine, number one-- no mammalian cells, no animal cells, no animal protein, human protein. People find that attractive. But also it's a technology that's been around a couple of decades. And it's similar to the yeast fermentation technology used to make the recombinant hepatitis B vaccine.

And the reason that's significant is the ability to make that vaccine at large scale is in place in multiple low and middle income countries, in Brazil, Argentina, in Bangladesh, in Vietnam, in Indonesia, in India, and the list goes on. So that if you want to make a global health vaccine locally and make billions of doses-- we need 9 billion doses for the world's low and middle income countries-- this is the one because it produces high levels of virus neutralizing antibody and T-cells.

No limit to the amount you can make, simple refrigeration. It's the lowest cost COVID-19 vaccine. The Corbevax, the one we licensed to India will be 145 rupees, which I had to look up. It means about $1.90 a dose, so it'll be the least expensive of the COVID vaccines. So it checks, really, a lot of the boxes that you would want for resource-poor settings for global health vaccines without sacrificing any of the quality in terms of its ability to protect against COVID. So we're very excited about it.

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ANJALEE KHEMLANI: And Dr. Hotez, to emphasize on that fact, you did license it for free to these companies. And I know that you've been working with one of the companies here, or at least, your partner in India is working with a company here to get that through the FDA process. But looking at what we have globally as the scene, right, we've seen other companies really falter when it comes to certain manufacturing issues. The surges over time have weighed in, supply chain issues.

And when it comes to the mRNA vaccines, while they do remain very popular globally, they don't necessarily suit the needs of some of the destinations where we still see largely unvaccinated or low vaccinated populations. How do you plan to overcome that? Or do you see the route to overcoming that so that we can get out of this pandemic?

PETER HOTEZ: Well, the problem, Anjalee, was the science policy makers never really understood the scale of what's required. If you've got a billion people on the African continent, a billion in the smaller, low income Southeast Asian countries, almost a billion in the Latin American countries, especially the low and middle income ones, that's 3 billion people. We're talking about 9 billion doses of vaccine.

And so you hear the president of the United States, President Biden a few weeks ago said-- you know, boasts that the US is going to donate 400 million doses of mRNA vaccines. Well, it's not a drop in the bucket, but it's 5% of what we need.

And so with our vaccine that, as you point out, we've licensed with no patent, no strings attached, or as I like to say, when your house is on fire, you don't call the patent attorney, you call the fire department, and we're the fire department. We've licensed it with no strings attached or patent to vaccine producers in India, Indonesia, Bangladesh, and now Southern Africa and Botswana.

And [INAUDIBLE] is the furthest along. They have 250 million doses ready to go. They're now making 140 million doses a month. That's a billion doses. And that could really start having some impact, as I say, and at the lowest cost possible. So it's a privilege for us at our Texas Children's Hospital Center for Vaccine Development to make that kind of impact.

The irony was we got zero help from the US government. And we got zero help from the G7 countries. We were able to do this through private philanthropy raised in modest amounts raised in Texas and also New York with the JPB Foundation. And that's what did it. We would have been a lot further ahead had we gotten more support. Who knows? Maybe the world could have been vaccinated by now. We never would have seen the Omicron variant. But hopefully now we can make up for lost time, and we're doing that.

BRAD SMITH: That certainly would have required the absence of politicization of this virus and the vaccination process as well, we do know. But in one of the points that you mentioned as well, it also comes down to, in the future, when companies do shift to a for-profit model for vaccine production and having them be as accessible and producing in the quantity that is necessary to continue to curb any type of variant that comes forward in the future, what does that reality look like? And ultimately, how can we ensure that people still have access and that it is affordable in the future?

PETER HOTEZ: Well, as they say, I think we've figured that out, at least for this virus. The problem is whenever you start with a brand new technology like mRNA or adenovirus or particle vaccines, there's a learning curve before you can go from 0 to 9 billion. And as any engineer will tell you, it doesn't matter whether it's mRNA or new technology widgets. It takes time to learn how to make it at scale. So I think moving forward, we need manufacturing hubs, and not only focused on mRNA because mRNA has weaknesses as well.

You show me a different type of vaccine technology, I'll tell you about its strengths and its weaknesses. So we need lots of shots on goal so we should have manufacturing hubs in place all over the world for mRNA, for adenovirus, for particle vaccines, for yeast fermentation recombinant protein technology, for Vesicular Stomatitis Virus, VSV technology. Remember that one? That was used to prevent Ebola in DR Congo. That was spectacularly successful.

So we have to have all of those in place. And we have to also give greater autonomy to the low and middle income countries. Right now, all of the so-called stringent regulators, called stringent by the World Health Organization, are in Canada, the US, the UK, Europe, Australia, and Japan. And so there's no low and middle income country stringent regulators. So it's discrimination, it's colonialism. We need to give that authority to excellent regulatory authorities in India and Brazil.

And while the multinational companies, a lot of people throw stones at them, they do important work. They're important for providing vaccines for the Gavi Alliance. I don't have a problem with the big pharma companies. But you do not want to be exclusively reliant on them because you see what you got. You've got this gross health disparity between the north and the south. So what we need to do is balance it out, support the multinational pharma companies, or they find a pretty good way to support themselves.

But also support the low and middle income country vaccine producers. Support non-profit product development partnerships based on academic medical centers like ours that are helping them in actually developing the vaccines and doing this without patent or strings attached. That's the way to do it. And we have to break out of this one dimensional that only the multinationals can do this because, one, it's not true. And two, it produced truly gross vaccine disparities and inequalities over the last two years.

ANJALEE KHEMLANI: Absolutely, and we've been keeping an eye on that. Dr. Hotez, I apologize. I did misspeak. You do not have a partner just yet in the US. And so I wondered if you could update us on that and whether or not you've received interest, especially after the attention around your vaccine. And then really quickly, moving forward from there, just where do you see after the news of the African hub producing and being able to reproduce Moderna's vaccine and the focus on that Global South and South Africa's role in there, if maybe not in time for this pandemic, but maybe they're on the path for the next pandemic, do you see that as potential?

PETER HOTEZ: Yeah, a couple of things. So, you know, I'm getting and my science co-partner, Dr. Bottazzi, she's getting as well, about a dozen emails every day, saying, hey, doc, I'm not going to take that mRNA vaccine, but I'll take your vaccine. Well, it's-- I mean, I think I know what they mean, our recombinant protein vaccine. And, you know, unfortunately, we do not have a path in the US.

We don't have an interested industry partner. We don't have any of the Operation Warp Speed or US government support to make that happen. So I just have to explain to them why you still need to go ahead and get your mRNA vaccine. Maybe that'll change in time. But I do think it could help a lot closing the vaccine hesitancy gap in the United States if we could have it made available.

In terms of Africa, we've also now licensed it to Immunity Bio, headed by Patrick Soon-Shion, who is based in Los Angeles, but has a commitment to do something for the African continent. And he's now building infrastructure in South Africa, as well as in Botswana. So we've licensed our vaccine to him so he can make it as well. So in time, I'd like to see a kind of a rich ecosystem built in Africa for producing vaccines of multiple different technologies like mRNA, recombinant proteins like ours.

And we have to do that because you never know which technology is going to work or not work for a given pathogen. I mean, the VSV technology was a spectacular success for Ebola. It did not hold up so far as we know with COVID-19. mRNA may be the inverse. Even though it's working this time for COVID-19, there's no guarantee it's going to be a good vaccine for the next pathogen to come around. So, again, each vaccine has strengths and weaknesses.

EMILY MCCORMICK: Dr. Peter Hotez is co-director of the Center for Vaccine Development at Texas Children's Hospital and Dean of the National School of Tropical Medicine at Baylor College of Medicine. Thank you so much again for your time. And thank you as well to our own Yahoo Finance's Anjalee Khemlani.

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Doctor on developing global COVID-19 vaccine: We got zero help from the U.S. government - Yahoo Finance

Some immunocompromised individuals should receive four doses of COVID-19 vaccine – Washington State Department of Health

February 9, 2022

For immediate release: February 3, 2022(22-023)Spanish

Contact: DOH Communications

Public inquiries: State COVID-19 Information Hotline, 1-800-525-0127

People who are immunocompromised are especially vulnerable to COVID-19

OLYMPIA A fourth dose of COVID-19 vaccine can help some people with weakened immune systems be less likely to catch COVID-19 and get severely ill. Certain individuals who are immunocompromised may receive up to four doses of COVID-19 vaccine, which includes two primary doses of an mRNA vaccine (Pfizer-BioNTech or Moderna), an additional primary dose, and a booster dose.

The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) recommends people ages 5 and older who are moderately or severely immunocompromised should get an additional primary shot (third dose) of an mRNA vaccine 28 days after receiving their second dose. An additional primary shot may prevent serious and possibly life-threatening COVID-19 in people who may not have responded well to their two-dose mRNA COVID-19 vaccine primary series. Currently, no additional primary shot is recommended for people who received the Johnson & Johnson vaccine.

Everyone 12 years of age and older, including immunocompromised people, should get a booster shot when they are eligible. Those who received Pfizer or Moderna should get a booster 5 months after completing their primary series and people who received the single-shot Johnson & Johnson vaccine should get a booster 2 months after their first dose.

COVID-19 vaccines are safe and effective, but some immunocompromised individuals dont get strong enough immunity following their initial two-dose series, said Dr. Tao Sheng Kwan-Gett, MD, MPH, Chief Science Officer. Receiving an additional primary dose and a booster dose will help protect those who are more susceptible to the disease. Getting everyone up to date on all vaccine doses they are eligible to receive can also help protect the most vulnerable in our communities.

According to the CDC, people are considered moderately or severely immunocompromised if they have:

People should talk to their trusted healthcare provider about their medical condition, and whether getting an additional primary shot is appropriate for them. For more information, visit the Frequently Asked Questions section of the Washington State Department of Healths website.

The DOHwebsite is your source for a healthy dose of information. Find us on Facebook and follow us on Twitter. Sign up for the DOH blog,Public Health Connection.

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Some immunocompromised individuals should receive four doses of COVID-19 vaccine - Washington State Department of Health

Boston’s ‘B Together’ COVID-19 vaccination requirement will end when these targets are met – WCVB Boston

February 9, 2022

Boston Mayor Michelle Wu on Tuesday defined a set of public health metrics that, when achieved, would trigger an end to the city's COVID-19 vaccination requirement for indoor businesses. The rule, known as the "B Together" policy, will remain in place until the Boston Public Health Commission reports the city has met three conditions:Fewer than 95% of ICU beds are occupiedFewer than 200 COVID-19 hospitalizations per dayA community positivity rate below 5%, as defined by the Boston Public Health Commissions 7-day moving average"We have continued to see trends in the right direction. The reporting that happens on a weekly basis shows that our city-wide community positive rate is a little over 7%," Wu said during an event Tuesday morning. "Boston Public Health Commission has set three key thresholds for those metrics and as those metrics change, we are looking to adjust our policies, as well."Wu first announced the vaccination requirement in December, and it took effect on Jan. 15. Patrons 12 and older are required to show they have received at least one vaccine dose to enter indoor dining, bars, nightclubs, gyms and entertainment venues. Proof of full vaccination will be required for adults by Feb. 15.When the three metrics are achieved, Wu said the policy will be lifted but it could be restored if the pandemic surges again in the future.Wu added Tuesday that the city is focused on closing the gap in disparities in the pediatric vaccination rate. She said the city is planning to focus on getting more children vaccinated during the February school vacation.The mask mandate, we are not yet there in terms of pulling, Wu said. "We had lots of conversations about other policies in place."Outgoing Boston Public Schools Superintendent Brenda Cassellius said the mask mandate for city schools will also continue.We are going to continue to look at (Department of Elementary and Secondary Education) guidance around mask mandates, as well as the city of Boston, Cassellius said. Right now, we are holding with our current policies that we have at this time.

Boston Mayor Michelle Wu on Tuesday defined a set of public health metrics that, when achieved, would trigger an end to the city's COVID-19 vaccination requirement for indoor businesses.

The rule, known as the "B Together" policy, will remain in place until the Boston Public Health Commission reports the city has met three conditions:

"We have continued to see trends in the right direction. The reporting that happens on a weekly basis shows that our city-wide community positive rate is a little over 7%," Wu said during an event Tuesday morning. "Boston Public Health Commission has set three key thresholds for those metrics and as those metrics change, we are looking to adjust our policies, as well."

Wu first announced the vaccination requirement in December, and it took effect on Jan. 15.

Patrons 12 and older are required to show they have received at least one vaccine dose to enter indoor dining, bars, nightclubs, gyms and entertainment venues. Proof of full vaccination will be required for adults by Feb. 15.

When the three metrics are achieved, Wu said the policy will be lifted but it could be restored if the pandemic surges again in the future.

Wu added Tuesday that the city is focused on closing the gap in disparities in the pediatric vaccination rate. She said the city is planning to focus on getting more children vaccinated during the February school vacation.

The mask mandate, we are not yet there in terms of pulling, Wu said. "We had lots of conversations about other policies in place."

Outgoing Boston Public Schools Superintendent Brenda Cassellius said the mask mandate for city schools will also continue.

We are going to continue to look at (Department of Elementary and Secondary Education) guidance around mask mandates, as well as the city of Boston, Cassellius said. Right now, we are holding with our current policies that we have at this time.

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Boston's 'B Together' COVID-19 vaccination requirement will end when these targets are met - WCVB Boston

City of Boston will drop COVID-19 vaccination mandate when key metrics are met – WCVB Boston

February 9, 2022

City of Boston will drop COVID-19 vaccination mandate when key metrics are met

Updated: 6:44 PM EST Feb 8, 2022

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JOHN: THE NUMBERS ARE TRENDING IN THE RIGHT DIRECTION. ONE OF THOSE KEY THRESHOLDS HAS ALREADY BEEN MET. >> IT HAS BEEN A ROLLER COASTER TWO YEARS. JOHN:HE T PANDEMIC HAS BEEN BRUTAL FOR BUSINESSES AND THE VACCINE MANDATE THAT WENT INTO EFFECT HAS BEEN ANOTHER HURDL E.FOR HEALTHWORKS ITHN E BACK BA THE MANDATE BROUGHT THE GYM MEOR BUSINESS. >> WE SAW AN INCREASE IN BUSINESS WHEN WE ROLLED OUT THE MANDATE. JOHN: THE MAYOR SAYS THE VACCINATION CHECKS CAN AND IF THREE KEY BENCHMARKS ARE M.ET WE ARE DOING WELL BY THE FIRST MEASURE. THE MAYOR WANTS I SEE YOU CAPACITY BELOW 95%. RIGHNOT W IT IS 91%. HOSPITALIZATNSIO ARE TOO HIGH RIGHT WNO AT 387 PER DAY. THE MAYOR AND OFFICIALS WANT THE NUMBER BOWEL 200. THE POSITIVITY RATE IS ALSO A FEW POINTS HIGHER THAN THE MAYORS 5% BENCHMARK. THE TRENDS ARE ENCOURAGING, AND POINT TO A DAY WHEN REGULATIONS WILL BE LIFD.TE >> ONCE WE ARE UNDER ALL THREE THRESHOLD, WE INTEND TO LIFT THE PROOF OF VACCINATION REQUIREMENT. JOHN: FOR NOW, THE VACCINE MANDATE STANDS. STARTING NEXT WKEE YOU WILL HAVE STOHOW PROOF YOU ARE FULLY VACCINATED TO GET INTO PLACES LI RKEESTAURANTS, GYMS A NDTHEA

City of Boston will drop COVID-19 vaccination mandate when key metrics are met

Updated: 6:44 PM EST Feb 8, 2022

Those three key benchmarks are trending in the right direction and one of those thresholds has already been met.

Those three key benchmarks are trending in the right direction and one of those thresholds has already been met.

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City of Boston will drop COVID-19 vaccination mandate when key metrics are met - WCVB Boston

No, the federal government isn’t requiring COVID-19 vaccine passports to go to the movies – PolitiFact

February 9, 2022

A recent Facebook post accuses the Biden administration of hypocrisy, suggesting that the federal government is more lenient with people who illegally cross the U.S.-Mexico border than with Americans who wont get a COVID-19 vaccine.

"COVID passports to visit the movies but not actual passports to cross the southern border?" the post says. "Thats the federal government for you."

This post was flagged as part of Facebooks efforts to combat false news and misinformation on its News Feed. (Read more about our partnership with Facebook.)

The federal government does not require "COVID passports" to go to the movies.

In April, White House Press Secretary Jen Psaki responded to a reporters question about "a federally organized vaccine passport of some kind."

"Does the president see that maybe as some kind of tool that could be used, or would he lean more on the side of people who have raised objections over privacy and so on?" the reporter said.

Psaki said, "The government is not now nor will be supporting a system that requires Americans to carry a credential. There will be no federal vaccinations database and no federal mandate requiring everyone to obtain a single vaccination credential."

Jeff Zients, the White Houses COVID-19 response coordinator, echoed the message later that month.

"The government is not now nor will we be supporting a system that requires Americans to carry a credential," Zients said.

RELATED VIDEO

Some states and cities have required so-called vaccine passports evidence that a person has been vaccinated against COVID-19 to access certain places and businesses. In New York City, for example, movie theaters among other establishments must verify that staff and patrons are vaccinated against COVID-19. Other states, meanwhile, have banned such passports.

But the federal government is not requiring people to flash proof that they were vaccinated. We rate claims that it is False.

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No, the federal government isn't requiring COVID-19 vaccine passports to go to the movies - PolitiFact

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