Category: Covid-19 Vaccine

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Oregon study: COVID-19 vaccine not associated with cardiac deaths in healthy young people – Oregon Public Broadcasting

April 14, 2024

A study by the Oregon Health Authority found reassuring evidence that a complication of the COVID-19 vaccine myocarditis was not associated with cardiac deaths among previously healthy young people, in the 19 months following the initial vaccine rollout.

However, due to its limitations, the study could not rule out the possibility that in very rare cases, cardiac death may be a complication of the vaccine.

FILE: A 10-year-old girl shows off her bandage after receiving a vaccination at a pediatric COVID-19 vaccine clinic held at Clackamas Town Center in November 2021 in Happy Valley, Ore.

Kristyna Wentz-Graff / OPB

The study was published this week in the Centers for Disease Control and Preventions public health bulletin Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Report.

Myocarditis, which is essentially inflammation of the heart muscle, is a known but rare complication of the COVID-19 vaccine. It happens most often to adolescents and young males within seven days after the second dose of an mRNA COVID-19 shot.

The OHA study looked at deaths in Oregon that occurred following the initial rollout of the COVID-19 vaccine, from June 1, 2021, to Dec. 31, 2022.

The authors used the Oregon death certificate database to look for people aged 16-30 years old who died of cardiac causes or of undetermined causes during that time.

They found a total of 1,292 deaths among people in that age range. Of those, none had COVID-19 vaccination listed as a cause of death on their death certificate.

The authors then narrowed their focus to 66 males and 35 females whose deaths were due to cardiac events or unknown causes, according to their death certificates.

The researchers used the states vaccination records to see whether any of those young people had died within 100 days of receiving a mRNA COVID-19 vaccine dose. They found three deaths that met that criteria.

One male died 21 days after COVID-19 vaccination. His cause of death was listed as congestive heart failure attributed to hypertension and other chronic conditions. A second male died 45 days after vaccination, of an undetermined natural cause. One female died of undetermined causes four days after COVID-19 vaccination. Her death certificate listed chronic respiratory failure as a factor.

Lars Grosse-Wortmann, a pediatric cardiologist at Oregon Health & Science University and an expert on COVID-19 vaccine myocarditis, was not involved in the study.

He said that combining big datasets, as the study did, is a helpful approach to better understand a rare vaccine complication like myocarditis.

To me, the study is reassuring in the way that they didnt find a big smoking gun, Grosse-Wortmann said. They didnt all of a sudden identify a dozen patients where it had that close chronological association with their vaccine.

On the other hand, its neither big enough nor detailed enough for me to say, This study leads me to think theres no risk for sudden cardiac death, he added.

Without detailed medical records for the three patients the study identified who died within 100 days of vaccination, it was hard to draw firm conclusions in those cases.

In particular, the death of the female could plausibly have been vaccine-related, given the timeline in that case, Grosse-Wortmann said.

I would say we dont know, he said. The conclusion from the paper is correct, the data does not support the association, but it does not lay the question to rest whether sudden cardiac death could occur.

Grosse-Wortmann, at the Federal Drug Administrations request, has been leading an effort to compile research and better characterize myocarditis following mRNA vaccination.

That effort has found the prognosis of young patients with myocarditis related to the mRNA COVID-19 vaccine is generally positive. People with myocarditis after vaccination typically have mild cases of it, and they tend to recover quickly.

However, Grosse-Wortmann said, some show signs of heart injury and scarring in imaging scans that seem somewhat at odds with the mild clinical presentation of their cases.

Because the first cases were reported in 2021, the longest any patient has been followed is three years.

Thats long enough to say these patients do clinically well, but probably too short to say if the scars that some of them carry in their hearts have any significance for their long term health and survival, Grosse-Wortmann said.

Any risk due to a rare vaccine side-effect, Grosse-Wortmann said, has to be weighed against the benefits of vaccination. In the case of the COVID-19 shots, the potential benefits include protection against death, long ICU and hospital stays, long COVID, and the long-term cardiovascular risk factors of a COVID-19 infection.

The OHA study authors also looked at COVID-19 deaths among adolescents and young people during the same time period in 2021 and 2022. COVID-19 was cited as the cause of death for 30 Oregon residents in that age group. Almost all were unvaccinated.

It is clear that the risk, if any, of cardiac death linked to COVID-19 vaccination is very low, while the risk of dying from COVID-19 is real, said Paul Cieslak, co-author of the study. We continue to recommend COVID-19 vaccination for all persons 6 months of age and older.

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Oregon study: COVID-19 vaccine not associated with cardiac deaths in healthy young people - Oregon Public Broadcasting

The CDC just killed another right-wing Covid vaccine conspiracy theory – MSNBC

April 14, 2024

A new study out of the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention dispels a popular coronavirus-related conspiracy theory thats been popular among right-wingers.

For a while now, anti-vaxxers have pointed to highly publicized incidents of people particularly, young people suffering cardiac arrest and concluded that their conditions must have been caused by the Covid-19 mRNA vaccine. Several Fox News hosts, for example, tried to blame the vaccine for LeBron James Jr.'s suffering a cardiac arrest last summer.And prominent right-wing conspiracy theorists waged a similar disinformation campaign around Damar Hamlin, a player for the Buffalo Bills who suffered cardiac arrest during a game in January 2023.

The CDC conducted tests over multiple years that disprove a link between mRNA vaccines and cardiac arrest. The study looked at more than 1,000 death certificates of young people who died of heart conditions or of unknown causes from June 2021 to December 2022, a period in which nearly 1 million young people got vaccinated.

As NBC News explains:

The authors refined their focus to people who got an mRNA Covid vaccine from Pfizer or Moderna and died within 100 days of being vaccinated. Out of 40 deaths that occurred among people who got an mRNA Covid vaccine, three occurred within that time frame. Two of the deaths were attributed to chronic underlying health conditions. The third death was recorded as an undetermined natural cause, with toxicology tests returning negative for alcohol, cannabis, methamphetamine or other illicit substances. The medical examiner could neither confirm nor exclude Covid vaccination as the cause of death; however, none of the death certificates attributed the fatalities to the vaccines.

Dr. Leslie Cooper, chair of the cardiology department at the Mayo Clinic, told NBC News that the researchers behind the study went above and beyond to try and capture any possible cardiac death from vaccinations, yet they found none.

To be crystal clear, this is precisely why reputable health experts have tried so hard to dispel conspiracy theories that link the Covid vaccine to cardiac arrest. Because the evidence for people having cardiac arrest as a result of taking a vaccine is nonexistent. And the potential for any heart problems as a result of taking a vaccine is extremely rare while experiencing heart problems after catching Covid is not.

Seems like a pretty obvious incentive to get vaccinated unless your doctor suggests otherwise. But that right-wingers ran with the cardiac arrest conspiracy theory is another manifestation of the conservative war on public health, which you can read more about here.

Ja'han Jones is The ReidOut Blog writer. He's a futurist and multimedia producer focused on culture and politics. His previous projects include "Black Hair Defined" and the "Black Obituary Project."

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The CDC just killed another right-wing Covid vaccine conspiracy theory - MSNBC

Spring Covid-19 vaccinations campaign begins in Lincolnshire – BBC.com

April 14, 2024

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Spring Covid-19 vaccinations campaign begins in Lincolnshire - BBC.com

CDC Releases Hidden Treasure of COVID-19 Vaccine Injury Reports – St Vincent Times

April 14, 2024

The CDC disclosed previously hidden reports of facial paralysis and other adverse occurrences after COVID-19 vaccine. The 780,000 reports obtained shortly after the COVID-19 vaccines were introduced show that people experienced heart inflammation, miscarriages, and seizures.

Immediate loss of consciousness and seizure after injection. One person reported being taken by ambulance to the ER.

I was diagnosed with Bells Palsy today due to left-sided facial numbness and paralysis, claimed another. V-Safe, a CDC text-message system for COVID-19 vaccination side effects, received the reports.

The CDC withheld V-safe data for years, issuing studies that said the findings reassured shot safety. According to 2022 data, approximately 8% of the 10 million users needed medical attention or hospitalisation following immunisation, while many others missed school, work, or other routine activities.

Topline statistics obtained from check-the-box surveys.

The same court who ordered the release of the data ordered the agency to divulge free-text submissions from a different part where people could discuss their experiences in January. Matthew Kacsmaryk, appointed by former President Donald Trump, rejected the governments claims that processing the responses and redacting sensitive material would be too laborious.

Among the 780,000 reports from 523,000 people, dozens reported heart irritation, hundreds reported facial paralysis, and thousands reported tinnitus.

Multiple persons had suicidal thoughts due to the situation. I was too tired to stay awake for 24 hours following the dose. I also have intense suicidal thoughts. One person wrote, No appetite.

Another person reported allergic reactions. Since Im allergic to PEG, I read that this vaccine shouldnt be given to me. The person said calling me would be reassuring because I only find dead ends.

According to previously published records, the CDC knew the shots could induce adverse effects like heart inflammation, but only the free-text component of the surveys allowed individuals to report them. Other records showed the CDC knew the immunisations could cause myocarditis and pericarditis early in 2021 but kept it from the public.

In a lawsuit initiated by the organisation Informed Consent Action Network (ICAN), Judge Kacsmaryk ordered the publication of government materials related to the COVID-19 outbreak.

According to Barbara Loe Fisher, co-founder and president of the National Vaccine Information Centre, ICAN had to sue the Centres for Disease Control in order to gain access to the COVID-19 shot V-safe adverse event data, which is yet another shameful chapter in the decades-long history of federal health officials trying to cover up vaccine risks by ignoring patterns of vaccine reaction symptoms in reports made to the government.

Repeated reports of symptoms, such as shortness of breath and heart palpitations, after receiving mRNA COVID doses, should alert the public. It raises questions about what else government health professionals are hidden, she said.

The free-text entries are undated. ICAN attorney Elizabeth Brehm said the group wants CDC report dates. The group knows the CDC received the entries first. As vaccines were introduced in late 2020, V-Safe was launched. Rolling out the remaining entries is expected.

A CDC spokesman declined to address numerous queries, including entry dates.

VAERS reports were requested from V-safe participants who received medical care after vaccination. The spokesman told The Epoch Times that if they made a VAERS report and the adverse events were serious (as defined in the Code of Federal Regulations), the CDC tried to get further medical, hospital, and other information. All VAERS data is analysed and evaluated for unexpected patterns or large numbers of rare and serious adverse events following immunisation.

VAERS data helped the agency uncover vaccine-related illnesses like myocarditis, she said.

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CDC Releases Hidden Treasure of COVID-19 Vaccine Injury Reports - St Vincent Times

Approximately 17 Million American Adults Have Long COVID Right Now – Contagionlive.com

April 14, 2024

The CDC is collaborating with the Census Bureau, and the National Center for Health Statistics in conducting the Household Pulse Survey.

Post-acute sequelae of SARS-CoV-2 (PASC), or Long COVID, continues to be a difficult and challenging condition for millions of Americans. And according to new survey data from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) and being reported by KFF, we have some figures on how many Americans are affected by it.

In fact, there are an estimated 17 million American adults who currently have Long COVID. According to the Census Bureau, there are 258 million American adults, and in the latest CDC Household Pulse Survey, 6.7% of respondents say they have Long COVID right now. The data suggest approximately 3 in 10 report having Long COVID at some point, and roughly 1 in 10 report having long COVID now.1

These figures come from the CDCs Household Pulse Survey. The CDC has an ongoing partnership with the Census Bureau, and the National Center for Health Statistics (NCHS) and they have included select health-related questions as part of theHousehold Pulse Survey.

Other interesting survey data includes the breakdown of Long COVID in terms of location, sex, age group, race, and education.

LocationIn the most recent survey that covers the period between February 6 to March 4, 2024, people across the states were asked if they were currently experiencing Long COVID and as a percentage of all adults, Vermont ranked the highest with 10.4%, and a nearby New England state, Rhode Island, ranked last with 4.4%. In reviewing the survey data, there are just a few states where there are clusters of Long COVID considered in the highest bracket (7.7% to 10.4%). The neighboring states of Nebraska, Kansas, and Oklahoma are in this highest bracket, as well as Nevada and Utah are also in the highest brackets.2

SexThere was a marked difference between male, female, and transgender, with the last group having the highest percentage. When asked if they Ever experienced long COVID, as a percentage of all adults, 21.1% who identified as cisgender female said they experienced the condition; 14.9% who identified as cisgender male; and 26% who identified as transgender had experienced Long COVID.2

Age GroupWhen asked if they Ever experienced long COVID, as a percentage of all adults the highest percentage of people with Long COVID were in the 40- to 49-years old range (20.3%), and the lowest was 80 years and above (9.9%). Aside from that major difference all the other age groups were in the mid-to-high teens in terms of percentage, for the exception of the 70-to 79-years old age range, which was the second lowest percentage (11.3%).2

RaceWhen asked if they, Ever experienced long COVID, as a percentage of all adults the highest percentage of people with Long COVID identified as Non-Hispanic, other races, and multiple races at 22.2%. The next highest group identified as Hispanic or Latino at 20.9% The lowest group was Non-Hispanic Asian, single race at 11.0%. Non-Hispanic Black, single race was 14.9%, and Non-Hispanic White, single race was 17%.2

EducationWhen asked if they, Ever experienced long COVID, as a percentage of all adults the highest percentage of people with Long COVID said they had Some college/Associates degree at 20.6%. The lowest group was Bachelors degree or higher at 15.1%.2

The CDC's Household Pulse Survey is an ongoing project.

To learn more about the respondent data, interested readers can visit their website by clicking the link below.

CDC Household Pulse Survey

Contagion recently spoke with Jacob Teitelbaum, MD, a board-certified internist in integrative medicine with more than 35 years of experience in chronic fatigue syndrome and post-viral conditions, offered insights into Long COVID. The symptoms are varied and can be due to multiple underlying causes. It's not sufficient to treat everyone for a single issue, says Teitelbaum. It's crucial to differentiate among the various conditions that could be contributing to the patient's symptoms.

Watch the video below to hear more of Teitlbaum's perspective.

References 1.Burns A. As Recommendations for Isolation End, How Common is Long COVID? KFF. April 9, 2024. Accessed April 11, 2024. https://www.kff.org/coronavirus-covid-19/issue-brief/as-recommendations-for-isolation-end-how-common-is-long-covid/

2. Long COVID Household Pulse Survey. CDC. Last Reviewed: March 21, 2024. Accessed April 11, 2024. https://www.cdc.gov/nchs/covid19/pulse/long-covid.htm

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Approximately 17 Million American Adults Have Long COVID Right Now - Contagionlive.com

Conspiracy Theorists Said People Who Got the COVID Vaccine Would Be Dropping Like Flies. That Hasn’t Remotely … – Futurism

April 14, 2024

Image by Getty / Futurism

Conspiracy theorists have for years now insisted that COVID-19 vaccines were the real killers, especially among young men but a new study shows that there's no data to back that up.

Published in the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention'sMorbidity and Mortality Weekly Report, the new study conducted by the Oregon Health Authority's public health division used data from June 2021 through December 2022 to investigate whether there was any actual link between COVID vaccines and cardiac deaths in young men, which conspiracists have relentlessly claimed are linked.

Looking at death data from that time period in the state of Oregon, the OHA identified only three cases out of nearly 1,300 young men aged 16-30 who'd had mRNA vaccines within 100 days of their untimely passages. Of those, two had had underlying illnesses that resulted in their deaths, while the cause of death for the last person had remained undetermined.

While these findings would seem to pretty conclusively put to bed vaccine misinformation campaigns claiming that the jab causes cardiac arrests in otherwise healthy young men as was the case when Buffalo Bills safety Damar Hamilton collapsed on the field in early 2023 due to such a rare heart event it's hard to say whether it will put a dent in any conspiracy theories, which tend to operate in an emotional realm beyond concrete data and evidence.

All the same, however, the researchers behind the study felt they had to try.

"When Damar Hamlin went down, immediately comments were getting made that it was possibly vaccine-related," Dr. Paul Cieslak, the OHA's medical director of communicable diseases and immunizations and a study coauthor, told NBC. "This is kind of what we were trying to address with this analysis."

As Cieslak noted, 30 people in the same age range in the state died from COVID itself during the same time frame that the study was looking into, the majority of whom were unvaccinated.

"When youre balancing risks and benefits," the doctor said, "you have to look at that and go, 'You got to bet on the vaccine.'"

According to Dr. Leslie Cooper, the chair of the Mayo Clinic's cardiology department who was not involved in the study, the 100-day post-vaccine window was actually "quite generous."

"They went above and beyond to try and capture any possible cardiac death from vaccinations," he toldNBC.

Because such events are quite rare in people under the age of 35 and generally are considered to occur due to genetic factors, looking into any potential links between mRNA vaccines and cardiac deaths in young men does indeed seem worthwhile especially given that there has been demonstrated aminor link between the vaccines and myocarditis, or inflammation of the heart.

All the same, the data clearly shows that among the substantial sample population in Oregon, COVID vaccines did not kill them.

"Their conclusions are quite reasonable," Cooper said.

More on health conspiracies: Joe Rogan's Idiotic New Theory: AIDS Is Caused by Poppers

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Conspiracy Theorists Said People Who Got the COVID Vaccine Would Be Dropping Like Flies. That Hasn't Remotely ... - Futurism

Who got the COVID-19 vaccine and did shaming shape the decision? – Deseret News

April 12, 2024

While most people believe COVID-19 vaccines are safe and their side effects are now clear, a new HarrisX poll conducted for the Deseret News finds a big partisan difference in how people view COVID-19 vaccine safety and effectiveness.

That finding is part of a larger tale about the divides that marked much of the public reaction to the COVID-19 pandemic and the challenges it posed, particularly in the early days when many people were dying, schools and businesses were closing, jobs were vanishing and public health officials sometimes contradicted not just each other, but even themselves.

While overall 59% of those polled are confident the vaccines are safe and their side effects now known, only 44% of Republicans agree, compared to 78% of Democrats and 53% of independents. The other 56% of Republicans and 22% of Democrats say COVID-19 vaccines are not safe and they may have side effects that havent been revealed.

The survey was fielded March 25-26 by HarrisX and included 1,010 registered U.S. voters. The margin of error is plus or minus 3.1 percentage points.

Public health experts believe confusing messaging built distrust early in the pandemic as the unfamiliar illness was ripping through communities, often with lethal results. And some think public shaming attacking those with whom you disagreed or who questioned mandates like the orders to get a vaccine or else, including if you already had COVID-19 played an oversize role that locked people into largely intractable positions.

Dr. Paul Offit, a pediatrician who directs the Vaccine Education Center at Childrens Hospital in Philadelphia and is a voting member of the National Vaccine Advisory Committee, thinks how closely or whether people followed public health vaccine advice has largely hinged on whether individuals had much interaction with a doctor or the health care system.

People who got the vaccine as a general rule were people who were informed about it, said Offit, who noted many people dont have a lot of interaction with health care providers.

Dr. Leisha Nolen, state epidemiologist in the Utah Department of Health and Human Services, said age also played a role. Older people who were hit hardest in terms of severe COVID-19 were at greater risk of death, and more of them were willing to get vaccines.

Offit said because of Medicare, older Americans were also more likely to have a relationship with a health care provider who could answer questions.

Those who were used to getting flu shots were also probably more apt to be comfortable being vaccinated for COVID-19.

But all the experts consulted for this story believe partisan politics made a difference, too.

Folks who questioned the efficacy of vaccines or asked questions about public health pronouncements were sometimes shouted down. And they, in turn, often belittled others who held a different view.

The problem with shaming, according to Han Kim, a public health professor at Westminster College in Salt Lake City, is its a tool that never worked in public health. It might have short-term benefits, but long term, it can cause a serious breakdown in trust toward not only public health, but toward each other.

Disrespect and disdain for open dialogue came from multiple directions, not all political, Kim said. Public health experts shut down people who questioned what health officials saw as science and authority. Politicians used shaming to drive partisan wedges. And lots of folks simply disagreed with each other, each convinced the other was wrong.

I probably participated in this as much as anybody else, Kim admitted in a recent phone call. That, I regret deeply. I think thats going to be something that were going to live with for a while, because overall trust, not only in vaccines, but in public health, has declined dramatically I think.

He said public health isnt effective without trust in the institutions, and in COVID-19, some trust was breached.

Kim said people often expect public health to know all about diseases. But when something new like this comes along, were trying to figure things out. I think we did an extraordinary job of figuring things out in a very short amount of time with COVID-19. The development of vaccines so fast is a perfect example. At the same time, any sort of mixed message definitely breaks down that institutional trust. And unfortunately, our messaging system was not very robust during COVID.

He points to officials saying masks dont work, then reversing and mandating them, as one example.

Its not a challenge unique to COVID-19. Medical advice changes often as more is learned about diseases. But in a pandemic, with the stakes high and lives on the line, reversals create doubt.

Politics had a big effect, said Offit, noting that while that has long been part of vaccine discussion, COVID-19 raised the pitch. Whats always been there, just never to this extent, is the notion of individual freedoms, personal bodily autonomy, individual rights. I dont want the government telling me what to do. There was enormous political pushback to vaccine mandates.

The mandates were the right thing to do in a public health crisis unfolding in real time, hospitals overrun to the point that nonemergency surgeries were canceled and people were 12 times more likely to be hospitalized or die in 2021 if you werent vaccinated than if you were, Offit said. By 2022, it dropped to six times more likely because there was more natural protection out there, including natural immunity. Look at it from a doctors point of view: Here you are, working double shifts, all hands on deck. People come into the hospital with an option to get a vaccine, which is free and dont yet theyre perfectly willing to avail themselves of the hospital service, the treatment part but not the preventive part.

A mandate should not have been needed, Offit added, but he acknowledges those mandates were tough. People were fired from their jobs.

Nolen, Utahs state epidemiologist, said contradictory public messaging didnt help.

I think there were a lot of things that impacted if people got vaccines and a lot of voices telling them different things, she told the Deseret News. It was really unfortunate we got such confusing messaging from different leaders, different organizations, different community groups. I think it made it hard for people to know who to trust and who to lean to when they were making those choices for themselves and their families.

Utahs version of the national Behavioral Risk Factor Surveillance Survey showed political philosophy had at least some influence on who took the vaccine or planned to, she said. In public health, we really dont want that. We want to do whats right for everybody without political sway to it.

Nolen and Kim both believe that public health experts learned from COVID-19 that how a message is presented really matters. Officials had figured people would follow their advice.

Instead, they learned that public health needs to work with different communities to make sure we talk in a way that resonates with them, that highlights their values. And we all have different values, said Nolen. We all have different risks and to tell someone to just do this because of the science of it isnt going to work. Hopefully, public health has learned through this pandemic that we need to think more actively about how were talking about things to whatever population were talking to.

Another challenge is how the public health system works, Kim said. The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention is set up to provide information, but much power rests with state and local health departments, so sometimes messages are very mixed.

The good news, according to Nolen, is that COVID-19 has been around a while, knowledge has grown and those giving the public message are more clear about the diseases mechanics and what people should know.

Kim agrees. We learn more from our mistakes than from our successes, he said. I wish everyone had more patience and understood science and, again, didnt think so black and white, but it seems to be the environment we live in.

Offit differed with many of his peers on the question of natural immunity for COVID-19. He voted not to mandate vaccines for people whod recently had COVID-19 infection. He was outvoted.

Its certainly true that if youve been naturally infected, youre going to be protected against at least severe disease. Vaccinated or naturally infected or both, you develop an antibody response against at least mild disease for about three to six months. You also develop memory cells: memory B cells which make antibodies and memory T cells which can kill a virus and are much longer lived, he said.

The question then is how much longer lived. A year? Two? 10? I think well find out. Offit said he had three doses of vaccine, the last in November 2021 and had COVID-19 once. He has no health problems, so he figures he has plenty of memory T cells to protect him from severe disease. I dont know how long, but well see.

Experts have long told the Deseret News that not knowing who had COVID-19 unless it was lab confirmed or how long natural immunity lasts drove vaccine mandates. Most people who got sick dealt with it at home without lab confirmation.

Kim sees another issue: One could argue natural immunitys better than vaccine-induced immunity, other than the fact that you actually have to get the disease, which is never a good thing. I would prefer a vaccine than to actually get the disease.

In the poll, more men view the vaccine as safe, the side effects known, compared to women, 62% versus 56%.

The survey also found age differences. The vast majority of people 65 and older view the vaccines as safe (71%). Thats true for 54% of those ages 18-34, 52% of those 35-49 and 59% of those 50-64.

Hispanics in smaller shares are convinced the vaccines are safe and side effects known at 52% compared to both whites and Blacks, which each come in around 60%.

More than two-thirds of those with a four-year college degree or more believe the vaccines are safe, compared to 54% of those with less education.

By income, theres more doubt among people with household incomes below $75,000 (57% say safe) compared to those with higher incomes (62% say safe).

Southerners are more skeptical than other regions of the country. Theyre divided about 50-50, compared to those in the West (67% say safe), Northeast (64%) and Midwest (60%).

The survey found big differences in uptake of vaccines, sometimes based on politics, but more commonly on age. The youngest cohort, 18-34, is more likely to say theyre unvaccinated (29%) than those 65 and older (12%). Overall, 28% of Republicans say they are not vaccinated, comparable to 26% of independents, but a far cry from 12% of Democrats. More women (24%) than men (29%) say they have never had a COVID-19 vaccine. Overall, 28% have never been vaccinated.

About one-third overall got a booster in the past six months.

The survey found 3 of 10 Democrats have had at least four COVID-19 shots, compared to 1 in 4 Independents and 1 in 7 Republicans.

How much of the uptake is really about politics or ideology? Experts admit theyre still not sure, since other factors also made a difference

Nolen said that most public health experts, herself included, expect COVID-19 to move to the flu model, with a seasonal vaccine to protect folks. That depends, of course, on whether there are drastic mutations to the virus that make it more dangerous again.

I think if things continue where its a slower mutation with nothing dramatic, it will be a yearly dose that will be updated for the most recent viruses, she said. If we have a big, dramatic change, we might need to get another booster thats going to be specific to that really dramatic version.

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Who got the COVID-19 vaccine and did shaming shape the decision? - Deseret News

Annual COVID-19 vaccine proves to be a wise investment for personal health and pocketbook – News-Medical.Net

April 12, 2024

In a recent study published in The Journal of Infectious Diseases, a team of researchers from the United States (U.S.) attempted to understand whether individuals experienced any economic benefits in getting an annual coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) vaccine, given that the morbidity and mortality rates associated with the disease have decreased and the government no longer covers the vaccine costs.

Study: What is the economic benefit of annual COVID-19 vaccination from the adult individual perspective? Image Credit:eamesBot/ Shutterstock

The rapid development of vaccines to combat the severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2) has helped significantly reduce the disease's severity and limit the transmission of the virus. Although subvariants of SARS-CoV-2 continue to emerge and circulate, the virus's virulence and transmissibility seem to have reduced due to the protection afforded by large-scale vaccination efforts worldwide.

With the drop in hospitalization and mortality rates, COVID-19 is no longer considered a significant public health risk, leading to a substantial decrease in vaccination rates across the U.S. Furthermore, employment organizations and businesses are no longer mandating booster COVID-19 vaccination shots. With the government no longer funding the cost of the vaccine, individuals have to pay for the COVID-19 booster shots either out-of-pocket or through their insurance. However, the gradual decrease in vaccination coverage and waning of infection-induced immunity could influence the control of viral transmission and disease severity.

In the present study, the researchers examined the benefits of getting annual COVID-19 vaccines, similar to the influenza vaccine, from an individual perspective instead of from the perspective of a third-party payer or society, which has already been examined in previous studies. The researchers believe that while the findings might not contribute to recommendations and decisions made by governments or insurance companies, they will help individuals assess the merits of an annual COVID-19 vaccination from their perspective.

The study developed and used a Markov computational simulation model to assess the values and trade-offs of getting the annual vaccine. This model used eight mutually exclusive states of SARS-CoV-2 infections and the economic and clinical outcomes for each state.

The state at which an individual begins is the state of no infection with pre-existing protection from previous vaccinations or infections. Based on factors such as risk of infection, probability of clinical outcomes based on age, and pre-existing protection levels, the model calculates the probability of an individual moving to a COVID-19 state. The model also calculates the probabilities of returning to the non-infected state or developing long COVID based on various levels of symptoms ranging from asymptomatic to severe.

These probabilities are calculated twice for each individual, once with and once without the annual COVID-19 vaccination. Minor to severe adverse effects, as well as changing vaccine efficacy, are also factors that are incorporated into the model. The economic measures are calculated based on factors such as loss of productivity due to vaccination absenteeism, mortality, out-of-pocket costs, presenteeism, healthcare visits, and medications. The cost-benefits were calculated for each scenario. Sensitivity analyses were also conducted for varying disease severity based on different SARS-CoV-2 variants.

The results suggested that an individual stood to benefit clinically and economically by getting vaccinated annually against COVID-19. The model showed that adults between the ages of 18 and 49 saved an average of $30 to $603 if they did not have health insurance, while insured individuals of the same age group saved $4 to $437.

These estimates were on the assumption that the efficacy of the vaccine against SARS-CoV-2 started at greater than or equal to 50%, the individuals interacted with about nine people a day, the infection probability was more significant than or equal to 0.2%, the infection prevalence was 10%, and the conditions were for the Omicron variant of SARS-CoV-2 during the winter of 2023-2024.

For individuals between the ages of 50 and 64, the average economic benefits were even higher, with savings of $119 to $1706 and $111 to $1278 for individuals with and without insurance, respectively. Furthermore, in cases where the previous vaccination was nine months ago, and 13.4% of the pre-existing protection remained, the model showed that the risk threshold was greater than or equal to 0.4%.

Overall, the study found that the annual COVID-19 vaccine was economically and clinically beneficial to individuals with or without health insurance. The economic value of getting the COVID-19 vaccine was higher for individuals between 50 and 64 years of age.

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Annual COVID-19 vaccine proves to be a wise investment for personal health and pocketbook - News-Medical.Net

Younger people in wealthy New York City areas snatched up COVID vaccine reserved for seniors – University of Minnesota Twin Cities

April 12, 2024

Massimo Giachetti / iStock

Many younger people in high-income New York City neighborhoods accessed COVID-19 vaccinations before they were eligible, risking the lives of older people in low-income areas by pushing them down the queue, according toresearch in the Journal of Urban Health.

Led by researchers at the University of Witwatersrand in South Africa and Columbia University, the study used linked data from the Census Bureau and New York City Health.

Starting on December 14, 2020, New York administered vaccines to high-risk hospital workers, expanding to adults 70 years and older on January 4, 2021, 60 and older on March 10, 50 and older on March 23,and those 30 and older on March 30.

In the first 3 months of COVID-19 vaccine availability, low-income neighborhoods with higher percentages of people 65 years and older had lower vaccine coverage (average vaccination rate, 52.8%; maximum coverage, 67.9%) than higher-income areas (average vaccination rate, 74.6%; maximum coverage in the wealthiest quintile, 99%). Over the year, low-income areas also had higher death rates.

If New York had focused limited vaccine supply on low-income areas with high proportions of residents 65 or older, overall mortality might have been lower.

Despite limited vaccine availability, many younger peopleespecially in high-income neighborhoodsjumped the queue to get vaccinated before they were eligible(average coverage, 60% among residents 45 to 64years in the most affluent quintile).A year later, when vaccines were broadly available, older residents' median vaccine uptake was 87%, including in the poorest area.

"Our analysis provides clear evidence of why U.S. policymakers must target their distribution approach to providing access to lifesaving technologies in short supply, focusing first on those most at risk of severe morbidity and mortality," lead authorNina Schwalbe, of Columbia University, said in a Columbianews release.

The greatest risk factor for COVID-19 death was older age, the authors noted.

"When rolling out a new vaccine, policymakers must account for local contexts and conditions of high-risk population groups," they wrote. "If New York had focused limited vaccine supply on low-income areas with high proportions of residents 65 or older, overall mortality might have been lower."

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Younger people in wealthy New York City areas snatched up COVID vaccine reserved for seniors - University of Minnesota Twin Cities

Dear Doctor: CDC recommends ages 65+ get an additional COVID vaccine this spring. Is that necessary? – OregonLive

April 12, 2024

DEAR DR. ROACH, I just read an article stating that the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention is now recommending that seniors 65 and up get an additional COVID vaccine. The article says that the current version is highly effective. I got my last Moderna vaccine in October 2023. Should I get another? -- J.L.I.

ANSWER: The downside of another COVID vaccine is small for the vast majority of people. The benefit is that they can increase their protection against COVID, especially severe COVID, which is the kind that puts people in the hospital.

I strongly recommend another vaccine this spring for those at a high risk, including those who are over 65 with additional risk factors like diabetes, heart, or lung disease, and those who live in a nursing home. The benefit for 65-year-olds who have been fully vaccinated so far and are otherwise healthy is small. People who are considerably older -- in their 80s or more -- would also benefit from an additional vaccine this spring, even if they are otherwise healthy.

The data are becoming clear that an annual vaccine for COVID-19 is effective. While it isnt yet proven, it may be that higher-risk people can benefit from getting vaccines twice a year. In my opinion, those at a very high risk, such as the people I mention above and people with immune system disorders, should take an extra vaccine now.

DEAR DR. ROACH: Would you recommend the most reliable literature source(s) for vitamin and supplement information and interactions? For instance, health magazines give these examples of supplement information:

-- J.L.

ANSWER: The problem with health magazines is that reliable information can be interspersed with information that isnt so reliable. Sometimes a claim is hopeful and based on experimental or animal data; sometimes it is demonstrably false, either by error or to sell an advertisers supplements. For the examples you mention above, vitamin D (D2 or D3) improves absorption of calcium and magnesium, but this doesnt mean that you need them. I dont recommend them unless theyre prescribed.

Piperine absolutely increases the absorption of curcumin, which is the most active ingredient in turmeric. This increases both effectiveness and toxicity. Zinc and iron compete for absorption, so they should not be taken at the same time; if you are deficient, they should be separated. However, neither pine bark nor L-arginine had a benefit on coronary disease in clinical trials.

The first literature source that I recommend is MedlinePlus.gov, which is curated by the National Library of Medicine. It is also part of the National Institutes of Health. Most of the answers above can be found there. Some large institutions, like Johns Hopkins and the Mayo Clinic, have highly reliable information about many medical subjects.

Your local pharmacist is another source, as is your own physician, but some questions require either special expertise or the time and ability to look up the answers.

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.

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Dear Doctor: CDC recommends ages 65+ get an additional COVID vaccine this spring. Is that necessary? - OregonLive

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