Category: Covid-19 Vaccine

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Almost all COVID-19 deaths in Travis County have been among people with chronic medical conditions – KUT

February 9, 2022

Nearly all of the Austin and Travis County residents who have died from COVID-19 had at least one underlying medical condition, according to Austin Public Health.

The health department said Tuesday that 95% of the 1,282 people who have died from COVID-19 in the area had a comorbidity. Comorbidities are often long-term conditions, such as hypertension, diabetes, asthma and cardiac disease. More than half of the people who died had two or more comorbidities, APH says.

These underlying conditions are known to put people at higher risk of developing severe illness if they catch COVID-19.

Much of our community is at high risk for COVID-19 due to comorbidities. These patients often experience severe symptoms of the virus, which can mean longer hospital stays and death, Austin-Travis County Health Authority Dr. Desmar Walkes said in a press release. Those who are higher risk must get vaccinated and boosted as soon as possible. Wear a mask, wash your hands and practice social distancing.

Studies show people from racial minority groups often develop chronic medical conditions at younger ages than other groups. That makes them more susceptible to severe illness from COVID-19. Hispanic people make up nearly 50% of COVID deaths in Travis County, and Black people make up about 12% despite making up 34% and 9% of the county's population, respectively.

The pandemic highlights the healthcare disparity that people of color experience daily, said Austin Public Health Director Adrienne Sturrup.

The health officials urge people, especially those with chronic illnesses, to get vaccinated and boosted as quickly as possible to protect themselves against COVID-19. About 71% of people eligible for vaccination (those 5 and older) are fully vaccinated in Travis County. So, about a third still are not.

The protection that we will get from vaccines will help us move to a new stage in this pandemic response, Walkes said during a meeting with local leaders Tuesday. It will help us make some changes in our mitigation strategies to allow for relaxation, but for now we need to continue to do what were doing with masking.

The omicron surge is now moving in the right direction and case numbers are decreasing, Walkes said, adding that the decline has correlated with an increase in the number of people wearing masks in public.

If we can protect ourselves with vaccine and boosting, and particularly when the under 5 vaccination is approved and available and get the rest of our vulnerable populations protected, we will be able to move forward and see the light at the end of this tunnel, Walkes said.

Austin Public Health offers walk-in COVID-19 vaccinations and testing. Find locations and times here. You can also find a vaccination location near you at Vaccines.gov.

KUT's Trey Shaar contributed reporting to this story.

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Almost all COVID-19 deaths in Travis County have been among people with chronic medical conditions - KUT

Andrea Bordeaux Says She ‘Was Fired’ from Run the World Series Over COVID-19 Vaccine Mandate – PEOPLE

February 7, 2022

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Andrea Bordeaux Says She 'Was Fired' from Run the World Series Over COVID-19 Vaccine Mandate - PEOPLE

Fertility Isn’t Impacted By COVID-19 Vaccines, Another ‘Reassuring’ Study Shows – San Diego Voice and Viewpoint

February 7, 2022

Originally published by The 19th

New research shows the Pfizer and Moderna COVID-19 vaccines do not reduce the likelihood of becoming pregnant, adding even more evidence against one of the most pervasive myths cited by people who are hesitant or unwilling to get vaccinated.

The research, published Tuesday in the journal Obstetrics and Gynecology one of the premier medical journals covering birth-related medicine followed almost 3,000 people undergoing in vitro fertilization.

The researchers identified almost 440 people who were fully vaccinated against the virus with a Pfizer or Moderna vaccine who completed in vitro treatment during the study period, which lasted from February to September 2021. About 1,740 completed the in vitro fertilization process and were completely unvaccinated.

The findings were overwhelming. The study found that the vaccine did not impact a patients ability to conceive or affect the health of the pregnancy, even after controlling for any variation in age or health between patients. While the study followed IVF patients, the authors said its findings can be applied to anyone trying to get pregnant or who has recently become pregnant.

This provides reassuring data for women who specifically are undergoing fertility treatment, but also for all patients who are trying to conceive or are in the early stages of pregnancy, said Dr. Devora Aharon, a reproductive endocrinologist at the Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai, and the studys lead author. COVID-19 vaccines should have no effect.

A big advantage of this kind of study is you can look at each individual step in the reproductive process, because everything with IVF is so closely monitored, said Amelia Wesselink, an epidemiologist at Boston University, who was not affiliated with the study but who has also researched the vaccines effects on fertility.

The paper builds on a growing body of research that shows the COVID-19 vaccines in particular, the messenger RNA-based vaccines developed by Pfizer and Moderna, which are the most widely used COVID shots in the United States have no negative consequences on ones ability to get pregnant and to have a healthy birth. The Johnson & Johnson vaccine, which used a different immunization mechanism and which the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention says is not a preferred vaccine in the United States, was not included in the study.

This is a really nice complement to whats already known on this topic, and its really reassuring, Wesselink said.

Data published in January from the CDC found no negative side effects among people who were already pregnant and got vaccinated.

Another study published earlier this month, headed by Wesselink, also suggested that a COVID-19 vaccine had no effect on fertility. That paper also found that a COVID-19 infection can lower sperm quality for about 60 days, making it temporarily harder to conceive.

Meanwhile, other evidence shows that unvaccinated pregnant people who contract COVID-19 are more likely to suffer severe complications and even require intensive hospital care,outcomes that could also affect the health of the pregnancy.

Its just adding to the evidence that we have that the vaccine is safe and protects patients from severe infection and harmful impacts during pregnancy, Aharon said.

None of the current research tracks the effect of a COVID-19 vaccine years down the line, because the vaccines themself have only been widely available for less than a year. But based on the science of how the vaccines work, side-effects, on fertility or anything else, should have likely emerged by now.

Any adverse effects or benefits of the vaccine should appear in the first couple of months, Wesselink said. Its extremely unlikely anything would emerge beyond a few months after vaccination.

Concerns about the vaccines potential impact on fertility have abounded since the shots first became available, persisting even as research builds an ever-clearer picture that getting vaccinated poses no risk to the ability to conceive. Polling from last October showed that about 3 in 10 adults had heard the vaccines could harm fertility, and either believed it to be true or werent sure. (For comparison, 3 in 10 is roughly the same number of adults who had either believed Ivermectin an anti-parasitic pill with no proven benefits in fighting COVID-19 was a safe treatment for the virus, or were open to the idea.)

Studies like this one could help address those fertility concerns. But convincing unvaccinated people to get the shots remains an uphill battle.

Currently, about 67.4 percent of eligible people in the United States anyone 5 or older are fully vaccinated against the virus. (The percentage of people with a third booster shot remains far lower.) The contagious Omicron variant so far has not spurred a sizable increase in unvaccinated people getting shots.

Polling from the Kaiser Family Foundation shows that unvaccinated people still say they are unlikely to get the shots. The large majority identify as Republican, suggesting that political affiliation plays a sizable role in vaccine decision-making. But not every unvaccinated person has opted out for political reasons.

With regards to fertility, specifically, Wesselink pointed to a historic oversight among vaccine researchers. Typically, clinical trials do not initially collect data on pregnancy-related issues or side effects. For the COVID-19 vaccines, she said, that oversight may have sowed the seeds for skepticism.

Initially, the COVID-19 vaccines did not include pregnant people in their trials. Researchers also did not initially track where the vaccines had any implications for menstrual health. (Since then, one study has shown a temporary and small effect on the length of ones menstrual cycle.)

Now, given the role fertility-related health has played in some peoples decision not to get vaccinated, she hopes that vaccine development will pay greater attention to those issues, too.

Its been pretty well recognized that concerns about fertility and pregnancy and menstrual health, all these things are really having an effect on peoples decision-making around vaccination, she said. We need to be focusing on studying these outcomes for future vaccines and future health innovations and medicines, so we can have rapid, high-quality data that will provide people with what they need to make informed choices.

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Fertility Isn't Impacted By COVID-19 Vaccines, Another 'Reassuring' Study Shows - San Diego Voice and Viewpoint

Flint will provide COVID-19 vaccines and testing through police mini stations – MLive.com

February 7, 2022

FLINT, MI - The City of Flint has teamed up with the Michigan Department of Health and Human Services to offer COVID-19 vaccines and testing through clinics at Flint Police mini stations.

Starting Monday, Feb. 2, clinics will be held thrice-weekly at three mini stations with plans to change the schedules as needed, according to a news release.

The mini stations opened in late October 2021 as part of an initiative by Flint Police Chief Terence Green to engage with the public to help combat crime in the city.

Related: Four mini stations open in Flint as police work to engage community

Genesee County has recorded 96,087 COVID-19 cases and 1,526 deaths since the beginning of the pandemic, according to health department figures.

The most recent COVID-19 numbers -- for the week of Jan. 22-28 -- shows 926 cases per 100,000 residents, or a 31.7% positivity rate, down from 38% the week prior.

For more information about COVID-19 vaccines or upcoming pop-up clinics, visit the Genesee County Health Departments website here.

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Flint will provide COVID-19 vaccines and testing through police mini stations - MLive.com

Who needs a Covid vaccine booster now and who should wait for an omicron-specific shot? – Vox.com

February 7, 2022

Before the omicron wave ripped through the country, infecting even those with multiple doses of the Covid-19 vaccines, evidence was already emerging that the effectiveness of vaccines to protect against infection started to wane after several months. Booster shots were soon approved in response, to recharge peoples immunity against a virus that is still widespread.

By now, for some Americans, its been months since those booster shots. Israel, which has taken one of the most aggressive approaches to vaccination, is considering fourth doses for all adults. So that raises the question for boosted Americans: Am I going to need a fourth shot?

For now, experts say, it depends. If you are immunocompromised, yes, you should get a fourth shot and youre already eligible. For everyone else, the jury is still out, although a fourth shot doesnt appear to be immediately on the horizon.

Experts say that because immunocompromised people are more vulnerable right now, it makes sense for them to get another dose of the vaccines currently available. For everybody else, scientists are still assessing whether another dose is actually necessary, as well as what kind of dose it should be.

Immunocompromised people already qualify for four doses under the CDCs recommendations. Eligible patients include people who are receiving cancer treatment, people who have received an organ transplant, people with HIV infections, and people who have autoimmune disorders or who are taking medications that can suppress their immune system.

Immunocompromised people did not receive the same level of protection from the initial two-dose regimen of the Pfizer and Moderna vaccines, which is why they were one of the first groups made eligible for booster shots last fall. For them, three doses effectively serve as their first vaccine course, with a booster to be given several months after that.

Preliminary studies out of the UK, US, and France have indicated that about half of the immunocompromised people who did not see any immune response after two doses did experience a response after the third dose, and more robust research is underway to assess the effectiveness of a fourth shot, particularly for immunocompromised people.

There have been reports of people who meet those criteria being turned away at pharmacies, another example of poor communication in the US pandemic response. But the Biden White House held a call with pharmacists last week to more clearly lay out who is eligible for an additional shot and ensure those people are not denied the opportunity to bolster their immune systems response to Covid-19.

So immunocompromised people are the priority for fourth shots right now. For everybody else, experts say well need to wait and see.

One Israeli study found a strong antibody response after four doses of the original vaccine, though it wasnt sufficient to fully prevent infection from the omicron variant. Israel, one of the most aggressive countries on booster shots, has made all adults over 60 years old, health care workers, and nursing home residents eligible for a fourth shot. It is considering fourth shots for all adults over 18, after at least five months has passed since their third dose or a Covid-19 infection.

For the time being, the half-dozen experts I asked about fourth shots were unanimous that an additional dose makes sense for the immunocompromised, but they also agree the evidence is not yet persuasive for the wider population, at least until some of the studies being conducted on fourth shots and on omicron-specific vaccines are completed.

Pfizer and Moderna are focusing on omicron-specific doses; Pfizer has said that vaccine could be available as soon as March, and Moderna also expects results from its clinical trials next month.

Im not persuaded that fourth shots are necessary. Well have to see when the actual data comes out, Angela Rasmussen, a virologist with the Vaccine and Infectious Disease Organization, told me. With, as you point out, the exception being immunocompromised people.

The next shot that many people receive may be more targeted to the latest variant. Some scientists even argue we need vaccines that combine the old and the new formulations, in case the next variant after omicron has genetically more in common with earlier strains.

The underlying point is, the original version of the vaccines may be in need of an update. But the data is still coming in on how urgent those additional shots are for most people.

And be aware: The thinking could change in the coming months. Monica Gandhi, an infectious disease researcher at the University of California San Francisco, told me that she thought people over 75 with multiple chronic conditions might benefit from another dose. William Hanage, a Harvard epidemiologist, said that if a fourth shot were shown to prevent any infection, even for a short time, it might make sense to again inoculate medical workers during future surges to prevent hospitals from becoming understaffed.

The science is always changing. And we could be moving into a future where periodic Covid-19 boosters are a part of the usual vaccine schedule, like annual flu shots. Modernas chief medical officer told CNBC this week that he thought omicron-specific vaccines could fill that role going forward.

As Peter Hotez, who leads the Center for Vaccine Development at Texas Childrens Hospital, told me: We need clarity on the durability of mRNA vaccines.

But what should not be lost in this debate is that the vaccines we do have, and the doses already administered, are doing a lot of good. People with three doses had a 96 percent reduced risk of hospitalization from omicron, according to a recent CDC study; even people with only two doses saw an 81 percent reduced risk. Though immune responses vary by age and health, the vast majority of elderly people still showed an immune response five months after their third shot.

A projection from the Commonwealth Fund estimated the Covid-19 vaccines had saved as many as 1.1 million lives through November 2021. So while the situation is always changing, as omicron reminded us, the basic value of vaccination has not. Some of us might need an additional shot right now. The rest of us might need one later.

But the takeaway remains the same: Get your shots as recommended. They save lives.

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Who needs a Covid vaccine booster now and who should wait for an omicron-specific shot? - Vox.com

Marion Co., West Virginia, Health Dept. to raise awareness of COVID-19 vaccine, testing availability through new campaign – WV News

February 7, 2022

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Marion Co., West Virginia, Health Dept. to raise awareness of COVID-19 vaccine, testing availability through new campaign - WV News

Is the COVID vaccine safe? Does it work? Whos at risk? – Dayton Daily News

February 7, 2022

Area hospital officials say nearly nine out of 10 of those hospitalized in intensive care units for COVID-19 in the most recent surge and nearly five out of six of the over 370 people who died were unvaccinated.

Q: How many people have been injured or died from the vaccine?

The longstanding Vaccine Adverse Event Reporting System is being used to track possible COVID-19 side effects. In addition, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention has a proactive system for investigating these side effects, as well as the voluntary V-safe self-reporting system. These monitoring systems are so sensitive that they have identified rare side effects that occur with only a few cases out of a million vaccines.

Serious adverse events after COVID-19 vaccination are rare but might occur. For example, anaphylaxis after COVID-19 vaccination is rare and has occurred in approximately 5 people per 1 million vaccinated in the United States.

The standards for safety for COVID vaccines are rigorous and high. For example, the rare occurrence of side effects with the Johnson & Johnson vaccine (such as thrombosis reported in 57 cases out of 18 million J&J doses administered) contributed to the CDC updating its recommendation to prefer Pfizer or Moderna shots over J&J. This further demonstrates that the threshold for safety is high.

The risk of illness, death or long-haul symptoms if an unvaccinated person contracts COVID-19 are much higher than any rare risks of the vaccine.

Q: Was the vaccine rushed? Why did it come out so fast?

While COVID-19 vaccines were developed rapidly, all steps were taken to make sure they are safe and effective:

Scientists have been working for many years to develop vaccines against viruses like the one that causes COVID-19. This knowledge helped speed up the initial development of the current COVID-19 vaccines. All vaccines in the United States must go through three phases of clinical trials to make sure they are safe and effective. During the development of COVID-19 vaccines, phases overlapped to speed up the process, but all phases were completed.

Before vaccines are available, the U.S. Food and Drug Administration assesses the findings from clinical trials. The FDA determined that three COVID-19 vaccines met FDAs safety and effectiveness standards and granted those vaccines Emergency Use Authorizations. This allowed the vaccines to be quickly distributed to control the pandemic. Before recommending COVID-19 vaccination for children, scientists conducted clinical trials.

The FDA gave the Pfizer-BioNTech COVID-19 vaccine emergency authorization to use in children 5 to 15 and full approval to use in those 16 and older. This week, the FDA gave the Moderna vaccine full approval for individuals 18 and older.

COVID-19 vaccine safety monitoring has been the most intense and comprehensive in U.S. history. Over 540 million vaccine doses have been administered nationwide.. Through several monitoring systems, CDC and FDA continue to provide updated information on the safety of these vaccines.

Q: Are the COVID-19 deaths inflated? Arent those people really dying from something else and officials are just saying it was COVID?

COVID deaths include all the people who would still be alive if they had not caught COVID at the point in time. People with preexisting conditions (such as high blood pressure, heart and vascular disease and diabetes) are more likely to have worse disease and worse outcomes with any respiratory infections. In COVID deaths, whatever the underlying conditions, it is the COVID infection that tips the balance and causes the deaths.

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Is the COVID vaccine safe? Does it work? Whos at risk? - Dayton Daily News

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