Category: Covid-19 Vaccine

Page 326«..1020..325326327328..340350..»

Covid-19 Vaccines Are Now Reaching Poor Countries, but Not Peoples Arms – The Wall Street Journal

November 14, 2021

After months of severe shortages, Covid-19 vaccine supplies for the worlds poorestnationsare finally ramping up.But many countries say they will struggle to get them into peoples arms, as they grapple with thepotentialdelivery of more vaccines in the coming weeks than they have received so far this year.

Authorities lackfunds to conduct public awareness campaigns and set upmorevaccination sites, including the necessary fridges and freezers to store the shots. Misinformation and lowcasenumbers have also left many in poor countries skeptical of the shots.

See more here:

Covid-19 Vaccines Are Now Reaching Poor Countries, but Not Peoples Arms - The Wall Street Journal

COVID-19 vaccination requirements apply to bargained-for employees | The University Record – The University Record

November 14, 2021

New federal COVID-19 vaccination mandates apply to bargained-for University of Michigan employees on all three campuses who are not currently covered by the universitys vaccination policy.

Seventy-two percent of this segment of the Ann Arbor campus workforce, including Michigan Medicine, already has voluntarily had their vaccination status verified.

An emergency regulation issued recently by the federal Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services requires COVID-19 vaccination of eligible staff at health care facilities that participate in the Medicare and Medicaid programs, as Michigan Medicine does.

As a result, Michigan Medicine has begun work to implement the vaccine mandate across all bargained-for employee groups that were not covered by the universitys original requirement. This requirement also applies in other patient-care settings at the university that participate in Medicare and Medicaid programs, such as University Health Service.

Employees covered by the federal regulation must receive their first vaccination by Dec. 6 and be fully vaccinated by Jan. 4.

A separate executive order for federal contractors applies to U-M employees working directly or indirectly on federal contracts or in the same physical location as those employees. As a result, employees covered by collective bargaining agreements who were not covered by the universitys requirement now must be fully vaccinated against COVID-19 by Jan. 4.

Our university community has overwhelmingly followed policies that help protect the health and safety of students, faculty and staff, said Rich Holcomb, associate vice president for human resources. Many bargained-for employees and several bargaining groups not covered by the universitys vaccination policy have already agreed to comply or have voluntarily self-reported.

With these new federal requirements, the expansion of vaccination eligibility to children and other public health measures in place, we should continue to minimize the prevalence of COVID at U-M and maintain a healthy workplace.

Vaccination information must be self-reported using the universitys vaccination forms. Instructions for submitting vaccination information can be found on the Campus Maize & Blueprint website.

Paid release time is available for COVID-19 vaccinations. Information about where to receive a vaccination at U-M or within the community can also be found on the Campus Maize & Blueprint website.

Employees can also speak with a trained adviser ready to answer questions about the COVID-19 vaccine and its safety by calling 734-764-8021 and selecting prompt No. 2. Advisers will not offer medical advice or address issues related to human resources or university policy.

Employees may request a medical or religious exemption using the universitys request process. Employees with an approved medical or religious exemption must continue to follow requirements such as weekly testing and wearing face coverings.

Human resources teams in Michigan Medicine and on campus have been working with union representatives to discuss the new requirements and how they will be enforced.

The universitys current vaccination policy remains in effect for all other employees, including approved medical and religious exemptions. Employees with an approved medical or religious exemption must continue to follow requirements such as testing and wearing face coverings.

More:

COVID-19 vaccination requirements apply to bargained-for employees | The University Record - The University Record

Idaho legislators return to consider bills on COVID-19 vaccines. Here’s what to expect – East Idaho News

November 14, 2021

BOISE (Idaho Statesman) The Idaho Legislature will return to session Monday with a long list of bills to consider around COVID-19 vaccine mandates.

The House must reconvene before the end of the year because of its vote in May to recess, rather than end, its regular legislative session. Because they are reconvening, state representatives also must tend to an ethics recommendation to censure a North Idaho lawmaker.

RELATED | Bedke: Legislators prepping for action on vaccine mandate starting Monday

House Speaker Scott Bedke, R-Oakley, said Republican leaders felt motivated to return to session after President Joe Biden announced sweeping plans to require COVID-19 vaccines or mandatory testing of employees who refuse to be vaccinated. Gov. Brad Little has also joined two multistate lawsuits to stop those requirements, one for federal contractors and another for business with 100 or more employees.

Mondays agenda lists 29 pieces of legislation that could be introduced from a defense fund for private businesses that wish to fight federal mandates, to banning mask mandates, to exemptions for vaccine or mask requirements. Some deal with prohibiting vaccine mandates or protecting information about vaccination status from employers.

For the most part, what has galvanized the House and, I believe, the entire Legislature is a response to the Biden administrations announcement on vaccine mandates, House Speaker Scott Bedke told the Idaho Statesman editorial board Friday.

The Biden administration vaccine rules were not announced until September, well after the House refused to adjourn as it normally would.

Idaho Association of Commerce and Industry President Alex LaBeau on Nov. 9 publicly released a scathing letter that criticized legislators over their decision to reconvene and consider prohibiting businesses from having vaccine mandates.

LaBeau said state elected officials lost their way and abandoned conservative principles by considering regulations on the private sector, all for the purpose of scoring political points and appealing to a tiny philosophical fringe.

Senate President Pro Tem Chuck Winder, R-Boise, told the Idaho Statesman that Senate Republican leaders support creating a $2 million defense fund to fight federal vaccine mandates. The money would come from the states general fund, he said Friday.

Winder said the Senate decided: OK, lets make our statement. Lets provide some funds to take some action against the mandates. But ultimately, the fight will be in the U.S. Supreme Court, he added.

What our position has been all along is that the real remedy is in the courts, and that the federal courts are the ones that are going to decide this, Winder said. Again it comes down to, yeah, the state can pass a variety of things that probably dont make a lot of difference in the long run because of the sovereignty of the federal government.

WHAT THIS LEGISLATIVE SESSION WILL LOOK LIKE

The House Ways and Means Committee will discuss draft bills starting at 7:30 a.m. Monday. The committee then will consider what draft legislation to introduce. All but one of the bills are sponsored by Republicans.

Bedke said he wants the committee to filter out pieces of legislation that can wait until Jan. 10, when the Idaho Legislature would reconvene for its 2022 session.

While the committee chairmen set their own agenda, Im urging everyone to be aware of the taxpayer here, Bedke said, and that we need to do this in an efficient, expedited way expedited, however, not to the point of short-circuiting the committee process.

By 9 a.m. Monday, House members expect to be on the floor. Thats when House members must vote on whether to accept the ethics committees report on Rep. Priscilla Giddings, R-White Bird. The committee unanimously recommended to censure her by removing her from the House Commerce and Human Resources Committee, which oversees laws around state employees.

RELATED | Ethics committee recommends punishment for Rep. Priscilla Giddings

This stems from hearings in August that centered around actions that Giddings took earlier this year. Giddings shared a post from a far-right outlet that identified the 19-year-old woman, known as Jane Doe, who accused former Republican Rep. Aaron von Ehlinger of sexual assault.

Ethics committee members said Giddings exhibited a pattern of dishonesty and disrespect to her colleagues, both in her August hearing and during the ethics hearing involving von Ehlinger, who resigned and has since been charged with rape and forcible penetration with a foreign object, both felonies.

Under House Rule 45, the members must vote on an ethics recommendation during the regular session of the Legislature in which the ethics committee reports.

Bedke said he told House members to expect long days Monday and Tuesday. The goal is for the session to last only a few days, he said.

In a press briefing Friday, Senate Democrats criticized Republicans decision to reconvene and questioned whether senators needed to return, since they voted to adjourn the legislative session in May.

Senate Majority Leader Michelle Stennett accused Republican lawmakers of political grandstanding and said the session seems like a colossal waste of taxpayer money and time.

Hopefully whatever we entertain will be thoughtful, Stennett said. And the rest of it, we just need to say no and go home.

Read this article:

Idaho legislators return to consider bills on COVID-19 vaccines. Here's what to expect - East Idaho News

Breakthrough infections rise in Minnesota, but unvaccinated at greatest COVID-19 risk – Minneapolis Star Tribune

November 14, 2021

Breakthrough infections are an increasing part of a prolonged COVID-19 pandemic wave in Minnesota, according to new data released Friday, but people who are unvaccinated still face the biggest risk and take up more hospital beds.

Detailed breakthrough data showed that fully vaccinated Minnesotans made up 197 of the 483 deaths from Sept. 5-Oct. 9 and 1,082 of the 3,492 COVID-19 hospitalizations. With 41% of the COVID-19 deaths in that time among the vaccinated, that is an increase from 29% over the previous four months.

The trend underscores the waning immunity in Minnesotans who received COVID-19 vaccine six or more months ago with the majority of breakthrough deaths being in the elderly and people with underlying health conditions who were prioritized for the first doses of vaccine.

"It's fair to say we are kind of in a perfect storm moment," said Kris Ehresmann, state infectious disease director. "We have delta as the dominant strain, so that certainly has changed the landscape since we first identified it in Minnesota in June. Then you do have the impact of waning immunity."

Boosters are recommended for all recipients of Johnson & Johnson COVID-19 vaccine and for recipients of the Moderna and Pfizer vaccine who are seniors or younger adults with health problems or workplace risks for viral exposure.

Minnesota has released the date of every COVID-19 positive test, hospital admission and death, but hesitated to provide similar details with breakthrough infections for fear they would be misconstrued and undercut vaccination progress.

More than 3.7 million people in Minnesota have received at least first doses of COVID-19 vaccine, or 66% of the population, leaving 2million unvaccinated people. That includes about 500,000 children 5-11 who became eligible for pediatric COVID-19 vaccine doses last week, as well as children younger than 5 who aren't eligible.

Unvaccinated people make up 33% of the population but 63% of the coronavirus infections Sept. 5-Oct. 9, according to new state data. Seniors were 17 times more likely to be hospitalized with COVID-19 and 19 times more likely to die of the infectious disease in September if they weren't vaccinated, Ehresmann said.

Hospital leaders implored unvaccinated people to seek COVID-19 vaccine and adults to seek boosters as recommended to address a worsening bed crisis.

COVID-19 hospitalizations increased to 1,245 on Thursday and combined with non-COVID cases to fill 8,219 inpatient beds in Minnesota. While Minnesota reached a single-day record of 1,864 COVID-19 hospitalizations last Nov. 29 before a vaccine was available there were only 6,991 total patients admitted on that date.

"We're above 100%," said Dr. Mark Sannes, who is leading the COVID-19 response for HealthPartners, which includes Regions Hospital in St. Paul and Methodist Hospital in St. Louis Park. "We have patients who are admitted to the hospital and have no bed who are boarded in our emergency center. We're having to manage them entirely in our emergency department."

One-third of the 447 COVID-19 patients admitted to HealthPartners hospitals in Minnesota and western Wisconsin over the past 30 days have been vaccinated. Among the 48 patients who needed ventilators to maintain adequate oxygen intake, 13 were vaccinated.

"The message cannot be that the vaccine is not working, because that is false," Sannes said. "This vaccine is keeping people out of the hospital."

Minnesota has the sixth-highest rate of new coronavirus infections, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. The state on Friday reported a 9.5% COVID-19 test positivity rate, another 4,849 coronavirus infections and 28 deaths. The state's pandemic totals are 841,625 infections and 8,996 deaths.

A few other states are providing breakthrough infections by date, and all of them are showing higher rates in the unvaccinated. California reported 245 COVID-19 deaths among vaccinated people in October and 1,271 deaths among the unvaccinated.

Breakthrough cases are a problem with any vaccine and infectious disease, but studies continue to show the COVID-19 vaccine remains highly protective against severe illness and death, Ehresmann said. Breakthrough infections are rising in long-term care facilities, but the death rates are not as severe as they were in previous pandemic waves.

"If my dream came true and 100% of Minnesotans were vaccinated, then all of our cases would be vaccine breakthroughs," she said. "No vaccine is 100%."

Minnesota's vaccinated population is at risk from waning immunity because it includes people who are older and have underlying health problems or high-risk jobs for viral exposure. Ehresmann said that makes the elevated rates of COVID-19 death and hospitalization more troubling in a younger and healthier unvaccinated population.

Vaccines take a couple of weeks to produce strong immune responses, so shots won't have an immediate impact on the current "COVID blizzard" of infections, Ehresmann said. She encouraged people to wear masks, practice social distancing and seek routine testing as they return to more indoor activities and plan for holiday gatherings.

Jeremy Olson 612-673-7744

Link:

Breakthrough infections rise in Minnesota, but unvaccinated at greatest COVID-19 risk - Minneapolis Star Tribune

10 states sue Biden administration over COVID vaccine mandate for health care workers – NPR

November 12, 2021

President Biden speaks about COVID-19 vaccinations in Elk Grove Village, Ill. Ten states are filing a lawsuit over the administration's rule requiring health care workers to be vaccinated. Susan Walsh/AP hide caption

President Biden speaks about COVID-19 vaccinations in Elk Grove Village, Ill. Ten states are filing a lawsuit over the administration's rule requiring health care workers to be vaccinated.

A group of 10 states has filed a lawsuit against the Biden administration and its requirement that health care workers in the U.S. to be vaccinated against COVID-19, saying the mandate is "unconstitutional and unlawful."

Led by Missouri Attorney General Eric Schmitt and Nebraska Attorney General Doug Peterson, the 10 states say the mandatory nationwide vaccine requirement will lead to shortages of health care workers and could threaten the jobs of "millions of health care workers" who risked their lives during the beginning stages of the pandemic.

In addition to Missouri and Nebraska, attorneys general from Arkansas, Kansas, Iowa, Wyoming, Alaska, South Dakota, North Dakota and New Hampshire also joined the lawsuit.

"Unfortunately, with this latest mandate from the Biden Administration, last year's healthcare heroes are turning into this year's unemployed. Requiring healthcare workers to get a vaccination or face termination is unconstitutional and unlawful, and could exacerbate healthcare staffing shortages to the point of collapse, especially in Missouri's rural areas," Schmitt said in a news release.

He says his office has been challenging the Biden administration's "illegal edicts" and this is the latest.

"This case illustrates why the police power over compulsory vaccination has always been the province of and still properly belongs to the States," the attorneys general argued in their lawsuit.

The 58-page lawsuit argues the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services vaccine mandate is intruding on states' police power, saying it's a violation of several acts and rights, including the Administrative Procedures Act, the Social Security Act, the Tenth Amendment and federalism.

"By ignoring the facts on the ground and unreasonably dismissing concerns about workforce shortages, the CMS vaccine mandate jeopardizes the healthcare interests of rural Americans," the lawsuit says.

In September, President Biden unveiled a series of steps to combat the surge of COVID-19 cases in the country, announcing that 17 million health care workers at hospitals and elsewhere that receive Medicare or Medicaid funding would have to be vaccinated.

Last week, CMS issued an interim final rule requiring COVID-19 vaccinations for health care workers in most settings such as hospitals and health systems that participate in the Medicare and Medicaid programs.

The new requirements, which went into effect Nov. 5, will apply to approximately 76,000 providers.

Go here to see the original:

10 states sue Biden administration over COVID vaccine mandate for health care workers - NPR

LIVE: Ohio health officials give update on children and COVID-19 vaccine – WLWT Cincinnati

November 12, 2021

Officials with the Ohio Department of Health are giving the latest update on COVID-19 vaccines for children between the ages of 5 and 11 years old. WATCH LIVE IN THE VIDEO PLAYER ABOVE. Heath director Bruce Vanderhoff, along with other state and local health officials, will be providing the latest information on coronavirus and vaccinations. With large family gatherings happening in just weeks, COVID-19 shots for kids 5 to 11 are giving parents more peace of mind."We really wanted to get our kids vaccinated coming up before the holidays just having everybody together we just feel safer, especially because of elderly people we have in our family," parent Jessica Martin said.Martin and her kids are looking forward to the holiday season they didn't get to experience last year. They didn't have any big celebrations since vaccine rollout was just beginning for adults.This year, Food and Drug Administration approval for 5 to 11-year-old's was exactly what martin was hoping for."We were really excited about it! All the adults in our family have been vaccinated so far, so this was kind of the last step that we needed to feel like we can have a safe holiday gathering," Martin said.So far in the United States, more than 900,000 doses have been given to the 5 to 11 age group.In Ohio, about 34,000 kids 5 to 11 have started the vaccination process."I think you're safest when you're going to be around other people who are also fully vaccinated," pediatrician with Pediatric Associates of Mount Carmel, Chris Peltier said.Peltier said many kids won't be fully vaccinated by Thanksgiving or the start of Hanukkah, so wearing a mask is probably safest until both shots are given.By Christmas and New Year's Eve and Day, though, the process will be completed for those who've already gotten their first dose.For those who want to be fully vaccinated by Christmas Day, these are the last dates to start being vaccinated:For the Pfizer vaccine, available for adults and children 5 and older, Nov. 20.For the Moderna vaccine: Nov. 13.For the Johnson & Johnson single-dose vaccine: Dec. 11.Peltier says it won't be hard to get your hands on one for your child."You know people were struggling to try to get the vaccine that's not the case with this dosage there is plenty of supply," Peltier said.

Officials with the Ohio Department of Health are giving the latest update on COVID-19 vaccines for children between the ages of 5 and 11 years old.

WATCH LIVE IN THE VIDEO PLAYER ABOVE.

Heath director Bruce Vanderhoff, along with other state and local health officials, will be providing the latest information on coronavirus and vaccinations.

With large family gatherings happening in just weeks, COVID-19 shots for kids 5 to 11 are giving parents more peace of mind.

"We really wanted to get our kids vaccinated coming up before the holidays just having everybody together we just feel safer, especially because of elderly people we have in our family," parent Jessica Martin said.

Martin and her kids are looking forward to the holiday season they didn't get to experience last year. They didn't have any big celebrations since vaccine rollout was just beginning for adults.

This year, Food and Drug Administration approval for 5 to 11-year-old's was exactly what martin was hoping for.

"We were really excited about it! All the adults in our family have been vaccinated so far, so this was kind of the last step that we needed to feel like we can have a safe holiday gathering," Martin said.

So far in the United States, more than 900,000 doses have been given to the 5 to 11 age group.

In Ohio, about 34,000 kids 5 to 11 have started the vaccination process.

"I think you're safest when you're going to be around other people who are also fully vaccinated," pediatrician with Pediatric Associates of Mount Carmel, Chris Peltier said.

Peltier said many kids won't be fully vaccinated by Thanksgiving or the start of Hanukkah, so wearing a mask is probably safest until both shots are given.

By Christmas and New Year's Eve and Day, though, the process will be completed for those who've already gotten their first dose.

For those who want to be fully vaccinated by Christmas Day, these are the last dates to start being vaccinated:

For the Pfizer vaccine, available for adults and children 5 and older, Nov. 20.

For the Moderna vaccine: Nov. 13.

For the Johnson & Johnson single-dose vaccine: Dec. 11.

Peltier says it won't be hard to get your hands on one for your child.

"You know people were struggling to try to get the vaccine that's not the case with this dosage there is plenty of supply," Peltier said.

Read the rest here:

LIVE: Ohio health officials give update on children and COVID-19 vaccine - WLWT Cincinnati

Here’s how you get your COVID-19 vaccine record to show up in the iPhone Wallet app – fox13now.com

November 12, 2021

SALT LAKE CITY, Utah As more places require proof of COVID-19 vaccines, more apps are providing ways for you to put digital vaccine records on your smartphone.

In Utah, New Jersey, and Minnesota people can use the Docket app to look up their vaccination records from their local health department.

Under the COVID-19 vaccine section, there is now a QR code, which can be tapped to open a larger version.

Docket

This QR code or SMART Health Card is provided by SMART Health IT and can be used to verify someone's COVID-19 vaccine status anywhere where it is required.

Docket

The app itself doesn't provide an option for you to add it to the Wallet App on iPhones, but there is a way to get it on there with a little workaround.

All you have to do is scan a screenshot or a paper copy of the SMART Health Card with the camera app and tap the link and it will open the SMART Health Card in the Wallet app and ask you if you would like to add it.

Apple

Once it's added to the Wallet app on an iPhone you can pull it up and present it to any venue that requires proof that you're fully vaccinated against COVID-19.

Apple

SMART Health Cards contain just the information required to display your vaccination history and the choice to share your card is up to you.

In most cases, that means your legal name and date of birth and your clinical information (vaccination type, date, and location).

They should not contain your phone number, address, government-issued identifier, or any other health information.

Apple added support for verifiable COVID-19 vaccination records with the launch of iOS 15 in September 2021.

Read this article:

Here's how you get your COVID-19 vaccine record to show up in the iPhone Wallet app - fox13now.com

KISD: Hundreds of children received free COVID-19 vaccine Thursday – The Killeen Daily Herald

November 12, 2021

Hundreds of Bell County children received a free COVID-19 vaccine this week, according to the Killeen Independent School District.

KISD hosted its first vaccination opportunity Thursday for children 5 years and older. The Food and Drug Administration authorized the Pfizer-BioNTech COVID-19 vaccine for emergency use in children 5 through 11 years of age on Oct. 29.

The joint effort to provide COVID-19 vaccinations to the Bell County community was largely successful resulting in the vaccination of 266 (5 to 11 years old) children on the first day, Killeen ISD spokeswoman Taina Maya said in a news release Friday.

Of 429 total vaccinations, Maya said 266 of those were children ages 5 to 11 years old. More than 120 people ages 18 and older received a COVID-19 booster shot Thursday, KISD said.

Twenty-five people aged 12-17 received either their first or second dose of the COVID-19 vaccine, according to the district.

Killeens weekly vaccine clinics are now handled by a partnership with the Killeen Independent School District, which replaced the previous program that was held at the Killeen Special Events Center.

For the next eight weeks, the former Nolan Middle School, 505 E. Jasper Drive in Killeen, will host two-day vaccine and testing clinics for any person 5 years and older, including booster shots for approved individuals.

Vaccinations will be provided as walk-in opportunities only, no appointment necessary, Maya said in a news release Tuesday.

The district does not require staff or students to receive the COVID-19 vaccine.

As of Friday morning, there were 31 active reported cases of COVID-19 among 23 students and 8 staff members, according to KISDs online dashboard.

The site will be open from 10 a.m. to 8 p.m. on the following days:

All minors must be accompanied by a parent or legal guardian, KISD said.

Additionally, KISD offers free rapid COVID-19 tests for school-aged children, employees and campus visitors from 7:15 a.m. to 6 p.m. at individual school campuses on school days, KISD said.

KISD remains dedicated to mitigating the spread of COVID-19 and is grateful for the staff at City of Killeen, Bell County, Bell County Public Health District and the Texas Military Department for their commitment to the health and safety of the community, Maya said.

Read the original here:

KISD: Hundreds of children received free COVID-19 vaccine Thursday - The Killeen Daily Herald

Kids COVID-19 vaccinations off to great start in Utah, doctor says – Deseret News

November 12, 2021

After getting a COVID-19 shot at school earlier this week, 7-year-old Etta Bastian has some advice for other Utah children.

I would tell them that they should get the shot and they should really be brave about it, Etta, a first grader at Hillsdale Elementary School in West Valley City, said. Although she admitted being nervous beforehand, it just felt like a little pinch on my arm.

While Etta said she doesnt talk much about COVID-19, she said she worries about people getting sick and dying.

The shot is worth it to feel protected against the virus and help others, she said.

I knew I was going to be safer for a while, Etta said, and able to do what she has missed most during the pandemic, to get in an airplane and travel to see my family. Now, Etta is looking forward to a Christmas trip to see her mothers relatives in Houston, after unexpectedly losing her father earlier this year to a non-COVID-19 illness.

It was a very easy decision, Cortney Bastian said of getting Etta vaccinated. Shes a brave little girl and she wanted to do her part. We both felt like it was the right thing to do. We have confidence enough in science to know this is something more beneficial than harmful.

Since the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention gave final approval last week for children 5 to 11 years old to be vaccinated against COVID-19 with two pediatric doses of Pfizer vaccine three weeks apart, nearly 5% of Utahns in that age group have already gotten the first of two shots, according to the Utah Department of Health.

While the smaller doses of the Pfizer COVID-19 vaccine theyre one-third the dose given to those 12 and older were available in some places in Utah last week, the shots are continuing to roll out to local health departments, pharmacies and doctors offices.

Utahs numbers look good so far to Dr. Andrew Pavia, chief of the division of pediatric infectious diseases at University of Utah Health and director of hospital epidemiology at Intermountain Primary Childrens Hospital in Salt Lake City.

It is a really great start. In just one week, with still fairly limited places where people can get their kids vaccinated, weve vaccinated 17,000 children or almost 5% of the eligible kids, Pavia said, calling it great news that the vaccine is being embraced enthusiastically.

But it comes as coronavirus cases in young children are hitting record levels.

There are now an average of nearly 59 cases a day for every 100,000 Utah children 5 to 10 years old, based on a seven-day rolling average calculated by the state health department. Thats compared to a rolling seven-day average of 56.6 cases a day per 100,000 children that age at the peak of the pandemic last winter.

School-age children accounted for about one-fifth of the states 1,531 new COVID-19 cases Wednesday, including 172 who are 5 to 10 years olds. Since the start of the pandemic, more than 600 Utahns 14 or younger have been hospitalized with COVID-19, and two young people from Salt Lake County have died.

We thought we would never see anything worse, Pavia said, than the darkest days of last January.

Younger children are being hit much, much harder by the delta variant of the virus because its so easily transmitted, the doctor said, and colder weather means theyre spending more time indoors. An even bigger factor, Pavia said, is that Utah schools no longer require masks.

Most of the blame, I think, has to be laid at the fact that we did an excellent job last year at making schools safe with masking and distancing and testing. And we have abandoned most of those practices in many but not all of our schools, he said, after the Utah Legislature made it difficult for such mandates to be imposed.

Jennifer Whipple, who teaches first grade at Eastwood Elementary School in Salt Lake City, said it was important to her as both a parent and an educator to get her daughters, Abbie, 10, and Norah, 6, vaccinated against COVID-19 as soon as possible.

As a teacher, I felt it was important for me to have my kids get it so that they have a level of protection when they were at school, Whipple said, as well as helping to ensure they dont unknowingly spread the virus to their teachers and classmates.

Kids are carriers and dont always know it. I feel like having them vaccinated kind of helps slow the spread, she said, since children can be more likely to have the virus without showing symptoms. Its hard for their parents to keep them at home if they dont know that theyre sick.

Getting the shots gives her peace of mind about her own children being at school, Whipple said.

My children have worn their masks, even though theres not a mask mandate, she said. I feel a little bit more at ease to say, OK, once youre fully vaccinated we can lighten up a little bit. They can feel a little more comfortable and less worried about all of that stuff. I feel like the less worried they have to be about these things, the more they can enjoy life.

Two days after getting their shots at another area elementary school that offered vaccinations sooner than Eastwood, both Abbie and Norah said they felt fine after having sore arms where they got the shot. Norah, her mother said, is like most children her age who doesnt like getting any shots.

I think I felt, I dont know, like kind of happy that I got it because again, its not very much fun having to wear masks, Abbie said. But I also did it to be a better influence on my little sister, and also to protect my dad, who recently had surgery.

Getting the vaccine makes you feel safer, knowing that theres less chance that you could get really sick and have to go to a hospital, the 10-year-old said. I was pretty excited to get it, but I still had that one like gut feeling, like is there going to be any side effects. But after I got it, I felt pretty good.

The shot also seemed like a grown-up thing, she said.

Knowing like almost every other grown-up has it that wants to get it. ... I felt like it was pretty cool I could be included in that, Abbie said, adding that most of her friends are also getting vaccinated and looking forward to when they can hang out more without masks and stuff like that.

It takes two weeks after the second pediatric dose for children to be fully vaccinated against COVID-19, so starting the shots now means they can be fully protected before Christmas, Pavia said. Even a first dose can provide children some protection for Thanksgiving, Pavia said, advising parents not to wait.

A lot of people say, I dont want to go first. I want to see how it goes, which is a very understandable feeling. I think now, with a million children vaccinated in the U.S., youre not going to be the first, he said. With the benefits of getting your family protected by Christmas, now is the time to go ahead.

Doctors feel confident recommending the vaccine because of the success of the clinical trials, where no serious side effects were reported. The smaller dose for children should improve the safety of the shots, Pavia said, although it remains to be seen if there are any side effects, expected to occur at a rate of about one in a million.

For the most part, the doctor said children are tolerating the vaccine better than teenagers and young adults, experiencing fewer fever, chills, muscle aches and headaches, likely due to receiving a smaller dose. Sore arms, however, are common, he said, and tiredness, chills and fever will happen to some.

Jesus Rubio, of West Valley City, said he and his wife, Velia, were initially hesitant about vaccinating Derek, 10, and Delilah, 6, but roused them off the couch Saturday to get them to a vaccination clinic. Rubio said what changed their minds was his wifes experience with COVID-19 patients as a critical care technician in a hospital intensive care unit.

She saw everything going on, people passing away. She was like, I dont want that to happen to us, Rubio said. He said they explained to their children, You dont want to get your grandma and grandpa sick, do you? Their answer was no but at first they were kind of scared.

But both children got the shots after their father dismissed the misinformation about the vaccines theyd picked up on social media. Derek had a mild headache and Delilah, a sore arm after being vaccinated, but both were fine the next day, Rubio said.

They got on board. Theyre just better off. We dont have to worry about them being sick or getting somebody else sick, he said. The children will continue to wear masks at school and in crowds, Rubio said, but hopefully change by the end of the year.

I know its a hassle for them, but theyre understanding it now. They see the outcome of being vaccinated, Rubio said, adding hed like to see more Utahns making the same choice. Lets get this thing rolling. The more people that get it, the better off we are.

See the original post here:

Kids COVID-19 vaccinations off to great start in Utah, doctor says - Deseret News

Dear Doctor: Think COVID-19 vaccinations dont protect others? Think again – OregonLive

November 12, 2021

DEAR DR. ROACH: You recently replied to a question regarding vaccination among health care workers by saying they are ethically obligated to get the vaccine in order not to infect their patients. But isnt it true that the vaccinated are getting COVID and also infecting others? It is protection for the vaccinated, but its not protection for those around them. -- S.C.

ANSWER: You are mistaken that the vaccine does not protect others. While it is true that there can be breakthrough infections among the vaccinated, the risk of an infection is much lower among vaccinated than unvaccinated. Consequently, the risk of spreading the disease is much lower. People who have had a breakthrough infection are infectious for a shorter period than unvaccinated people and have less infectious virus overall. It is the unvaccinated who are continuing this pandemic, and if everyone (or even nearly everyone) were vaccinated with currently available vaccines, there would be no more pandemic.

Many people say that since the vaccine isnt 100% effective, they wont take it. No medical treatment is 100% effective. Even a partially effective vaccine is beneficial, and the currently available vaccines are all very effective.

Another excuse is that mandatory vaccines are an infringement on a persons freedom. This is true. No freedoms are absolute. Other peoples freedoms must be considered. Vaccinations have been mandated by public schools for many years. Personal freedoms must be balanced by the responsibility to protect others. Vaccine mandates have been repeatedly found to be legal during a public health emergency. Requiring health care workers, who are at particularly high risk for infecting others, to be vaccinated makes medical and scientific sense.

DEAR DR. ROACH: After I was diagnosed with polycythemia vera, I started to donate blood when my hemoglobin level was elevated. I go every two months to donate a pint of blood. So far, so good. My regular doctor and hematologist are happy with the result. Are there any vitamins I should take? -- P.P.F.

ANSWER: In polycythemia vera, the bone marrow makes too much red blood cells. It is a myeloproliferative neoplasm, which is a type of blood cancer.

P. vera may cause many complications, but the most common is either abnormal blood clotting or bleeding, but it can also transform to a more aggressive blood cancer, such as leukemia. Aspirin is almost always used to reduce abnormal blood clotting in people with P. vera. In more advanced cases, chemotherapy drugs, such as hydroxyurea, are used to control blood production.

Phlebotomy, the therapeutic removal of blood, is a mainstay of people with early or mild P. vera. Historically, phlebotomy was used to treat many diseases, but today it is the standard treatment only in hereditary hemochromatosis and polycythemia vera. The potential that abnormal bone marrow cells will be present in the blood means its never transfused into another person.

You might think that minerals like iron would be useful in people with P. vera, but iron supplements are not given, because low iron levels help control the excess blood production. Similarly, vitamin B12 and folic acid, necessary for red blood cell production, also may stimulate blood cell production. They should not be taken except under express orders from your hematologist.

Dr. Roach regrets that he is unable to answer individual letters, but will incorporate them in the column whenever possible. Readers may email questions to ToYourGoodHealth@med.cornell.edu or send mail to 628 Virginia Dr., Orlando, FL 32803.

(c) 2021 North America Syndicate Inc.

All Rights Reserved

View original post here:

Dear Doctor: Think COVID-19 vaccinations dont protect others? Think again - OregonLive

Page 326«..1020..325326327328..340350..»