Category: Covid-19 Vaccine

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UConn has approved more than 500 students for nonmedical COVID-19 vaccine exemptions, drawing criticism from a top Connecticut health care official -…

August 4, 2021

The filings, first reported by Connecticut Public, are part of an ongoing lawsuit between the UConn Board of Trustees and several students and families who argue the universitys policy requiring COVID-19 vaccines for students violates state and federal law, as well as the U.S. Constitution. But the state attorney generals office argues the accusers lack standing to sue, since they have either received a vaccine exemption or never sought to get one in the first place.

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UConn has approved more than 500 students for nonmedical COVID-19 vaccine exemptions, drawing criticism from a top Connecticut health care official -...

PeaceHealth to require all caregivers to get COVID-19 vaccine – KPTV.com

August 4, 2021

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PeaceHealth to require all caregivers to get COVID-19 vaccine - KPTV.com

Utahns won’t be forced to get COVID-19 vaccine, but there may be consequences, governor says – KSL.com

August 4, 2021

Gov. Spencer Cox speaks during a COVID-19 briefing at the Women's Pavilion at St. Mark's Hospital in Millcreek on Tuesday. He said while Utah won't ever force you to get a vaccine if you don't want one, you should be prepared to face consequences if you remain unvaccinated. (Scott G Winterton, Deseret News)

SALT LAKE CITY Gov. Spencer Cox made it clear Tuesday Utah won't be joining New York City in requiring COVID-19 vaccinations to eat inside restaurants or work out at a gym, but the state will provide N95 masks to schoolchildren under 12, who are too young to get the shots.

As New York City became the first in the nation to impose a vaccine requirement for public activities, Cox warned there may be other consequences for Utahns who won't get vaccinated, including hospitalization and death, sharing stories of people who thought they didn't need the shots until they contracted the deadly virus.

"While we've made a collective decision as a nation and as a state, a decision which I support, that the government will not force people to get the vaccine. That doesn't mean we're free from our consequence, that others won't choose to require vaccines," including employers and event organizers, he said.

Cox also told reporters at a news conference held at St. Mark's Hospital in Millcreek he wasn't sure he would follow new advice from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention that all Americans wear face coverings in hot spots, even if they are fully vaccinated, to slow the spread of the highly contagious delta variant of the virus.

"I've got to be honest with you, I don't know if I'm one of those people. I'm really tired. I'm really done with it. And I'm not real excited to have to sacrifice to protect someone who doesn't seem to care. But I'm glad there are some people willing to do that. Thank you," said the governor, who is fully vaccinated.

He pointed out that both the state and school districts are prohibited by the Utah Legislature's actions from mandating masks in schools, but said he is working to distribute the medical-grade masks to children not yet eligible for the COVID-19 vaccine.

The governor's plan was labeled "a great initiative" later Tuesday by Dr. Angela Dunn, executive director of the Salt Lake County Health Department. Dunn, who until this spring helped lead the state's COVID-19 response, called last month for children until 12 to return to school in masks.

Although Dunn said then any attempt to make masks mandatory in schools would be "futile" because of the limits state lawmakers put on other entities to impose any COVID-19 restrictions, opponents of requiring children to wear masks in schools filled a Salt Lake County Council work session.

Council members heard more than two hours of often emotional testimony from the crowd before Dunn gave a presentation that included a projection showing that without masks and other prevention measures, there would be an estimated 60 cases per day, with an average of one child being hospitalized with the virus every other day.

She said she was not putting forth a mask mandate in schools, which could be overturned by the County Council or state lawmakers. Instead, Dunn said, she wants to "continue this discussion" about keeping children under 12 safe from the virus.

Cox said that more than masks, getting adults vaccinated against COVID-19 is the best way to protect children under 12 from the virus. He said states that have very low vaccination rates are seeing more young children becoming seriously ill after catching the coronavirus.

The governor's announcement follows another new recommendation from the CDC, that everyone in K-12 schools nationwide wear masks. The reasoning behind the new recommendations is that the delta variant of the virus spreads more easily to even the fully vaccinated, although breakthrough cases are still rare and usually mild.

Monday, the Utah Department of Health released a new set of guidelines to help schools deal with COVID-19 that encourages those 12 and older who are eligible to be vaccinated to get the shots as well as mask-wearing indoors at schools.

Vaccinations are what's key, Cox said, to stopping the latest surge, which is threatening to fill Utah hospitals at levels not seen since cases rose dramatically after the start of the 2020 school year and continued to climb through the Thanksgiving, Christmas and New Year's holidays.

Greg Bell, head of the Utah Hospital Association, said at the news conference that when the delta variant began to take hold last month, the state's intensive care units went from 10% COVID-19 patients to 30% as of Sunday on top of an already busy summer trauma season.

"We can't handle it," Bell said, citing burnout among many in the medical profession on top of facilities at near-capacity. His "grandfatherly" advice to the unvaccinated? "The wrong decision could kill you and you won't know until it's too late."

The governor said he's hopeful the state is nearing the crest of the cases "but nobody can tell me when this is going to turn around ... we need that vaccination rate to go up. Less than half of all Utahns are fully vaccinated, meaning it's been two weeks or more since their final dose.

Utah officials, including those from local and public health agencies, "are doing all we can to keep you safe. But all we can do is make recommendations," Cox said. "Now the responsibility is in your hands to get vaccinated. Together we can save lives and help health care workers."

Utah Gov. Spencer Cox, along with Lt. Gov. Deidre Henderson, Utah Hospital Association president Greg Bell and Utah Department of Health Deputy Director Dr. Michelle Hofmann, spoke at a news conference Tuesday. Watch the replay of the event below.

He did offer what he termed good news, that Utah's vaccination numbers are starting to go up a bit, but "not nearly enough." The governor said Utahns should listen to the voices they trust, including the Catholic pope and the president of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, who both praised the vaccines.

And, Cox said, "if politics is your religion, then believe Donald Trump, who was so instrumental in getting this vaccine to us, who got the vaccine himself and has encouraged others to get the vaccine." He also suggested Democrats turn to President Joe Biden, who just met his July 4th goal of 70% of the nation's adults getting at least one dose.

"It's one of those rare things that so many people can agree on, from different walks of life, from different races, from different religions," the governor said. "This is here to save lives. We don't have to be going through this again right now if you will just please, please, please get the vaccine."

Lt. Gov. Deidre Henderson said she still struggles with shortness of breath and other long-term effects from having COVID-19 a year ago, before vaccines were available. As Utah's case numbers rise again, Henderson told reporters, she's been "feeling a little bit of unease and nervousness and distrust" because of her experience.

"The thing about COVID is, you just never know. You never know who it's going to affect and how. You never know if you're going to be one of the lucky ones and there are a lot of lucky ones or if you're going to be one of the ones who are unlucky," she said. "I do consider myself one of the lucky ones, even though I was very sick."

Henderson said vaccines were "supposed to be the tool that fixed all of this for all of us and somehow, that has been politicized and somehow, we've got a large portion of the population that has chosen not to get vaccinated." She said she believes their minds won't be changed.

Tuesday, the Utah Department of Health reported 728 new COVID-19 cases and five additional deaths from the virus since Monday. The department's deputy director, Dr. Michelle Hofmann, said Utah has the nation's ninth-highest case incidence rate, at 136 per 100,000 people per week.

Hofmann said since July 1, Utah COVID-19 cases have increased 5% and hospitalizations, 7%, with the 12th highest hospitalization rate and 11th highest percent positivity rate in the country but rank 33rd for the number of residents who are fully vaccinated.

The rolling seven-day average for positive tests is 877 per day, and 6,018 people were tested and 10,576 tests conducted since the last report. The rolling seven-day average for percent positivity of tests is 10.6% when all results are included, and 15% when multiple tests by an individual are excluded.

The daily increase in vaccinations is 6,830 doses.

Currently, there are 395 people hospitalized in Utah with COVID-19. Utah's death toll has reached 2,471 with the five deaths reported Tuesday. They are:

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Utahns won't be forced to get COVID-19 vaccine, but there may be consequences, governor says - KSL.com

Poll: Nearly two-thirds of Mainers support mandating COVID-19 vaccine – Bangor Daily News

August 4, 2021

Nearly two-thirds of Mainers would support a universal COVID-19 vaccine requirement, according to a new survey that comes as a more contagious strain continues to drive up cases here among the states unvaccinated population.

The survey, conducted in June and July by researchers at four universities, found that nearly 66 percent of Maine respondents would somewhat or strongly back a government mandate for the COVID-19 vaccine. The margin of error was 5.6 percent. Support in Maine was just over national levels, with 64 percent of adults across the U.S. favoring a mandate, the survey found.

It was released amid a sharp rise in COVID-19 infections in Maine and nationally. The seven-day average of new cases here sat at 81 as of Monday, compared with 28 just three weeks prior. Cases are at their highest level since February nationwide. Health officials have attributed much of the rise to the proliferation of the delta variant, which may be close to twice as transmissible as original strains of the virus.

The variant is largely infecting unvaccinated people, one reason that cases in Maine remain lower than most of the rest of the U.S. Nearly 79 percent of adults here have received at least one COVID-19 vaccine dose here, according to the latest federal data. Only four states Vermont, Massachusetts, Hawaii and Connecticut have higher rates.

Some leading policymakers though not in Maine have proposed vaccine mandates in recent weeks as current vaccination levels have not been enough to blunt the virus and the rate of new vaccinations has slowed considerably compared to the spring. President Joe Biden is requiring federal employeesto get vaccinated or face strict masking and testing rules, while governors in New York and California have rolled out mandates for certain workers.

Approval for similar mandates varies broadly based on geography and politics, the survey found. State-level approving ratings for a general vaccine mandate ranged from 45.7 percent in conservative Wyoming to 81.1 percent in liberal Massachusetts. Nationwide, 84 percent of Democrats approved compared with 45 percent of Republicans. Seventy-three percent of urban residents supported a mandate compared with 53 percent of rural residents.

Support for making the vaccine required in Maine is lower than several other highly vaccinated New England states. Along with Massachusetts, Vermont and Connecticut both saw more than 70 percent of adults favoring a mandate, the survey found.

The majority support in Maine still fits with the states recent electoral history. In March 2020, Maine voters overwhelmingly rejected a bid to overturna state law that eliminated religious and philosophical exemptions to vaccine mandates for public school students. Seventy-three percent of voters favored upholding the law, although the referendum took place on the same day alongside a competitive Democratic presidential primary.

State officials here have given little indication so far that they are considering a vaccine mandate, however. Maine Center for Disease Control and Prevention Director Nirav Shah said earlier this summer that the state was working on education to increase vaccination rates among health care workers, saying he preferred to start with the carrot, rather than the stick.

Mandates are more likely to come from businesses or institutions. In the survey, Mainers were slightly more supportive of vaccine requirements for boarding a flight or for students returning to college in the fall, compared with a mandate for the general population.

Northern Light Health, the states largest hospital system, announced Monday that it will require staff to get vaccinatedonce the U.S. Food and Drug Administration approves a vaccine for full use. The University of Maine system has indicated the same policy, while several private colleges are already requiring students to get the vaccine before they can return to campus in the fall.

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Poll: Nearly two-thirds of Mainers support mandating COVID-19 vaccine - Bangor Daily News

List of places in Minnesota that now require the COVID-19 vaccine – Bring Me The News

August 4, 2021

The rapidly spreading delta variant has sparked a rapid upturn in COVID-19 infections and hospitalizations. Federal health officials now recommend the use of face masks in indoor public spaces in areas with substantial or high levels of transmission, regardless of vaccination status.

In response, many businesses, organizations, venues, events and buildings are updating their own COVID-19 protocols.

Here is a running list of those that have announced a vaccine requirement with the dates they announced the requirement in parentheses.

Carleton College (announced April 28)Students, faculty and staff must be fully vaccinated by Aug. 1.

Gustavus Adolphus College (May 18)The college is requiring students get vaccinated, and strongly encouraging faculty and staff to do so as well.

Hamline University (July 16)Calling the mandate "necessary" to return to normal, Hamline's president announced all students, staff and faculty will be required to be vaccinated for the fall semester.

Macalester College (April 23)Students and employees who are on campus must be fully vaccinated by Aug. 2.

Minnesota College of Art and Design (May 11)All students, faculty and staff who are on campus must be fully vaccinated by Aug. 1. The fall semester will also begin with a six-week indoor masking requirement.

Mitchell Hamline School of Law (May 17)Anyone on campus for the fall semester must be vaccinated by Aug. 1.

St. Catherine UniversityAll students, faculty, staff and residents age 12 and up will need to complete their vaccine series by Aug. 16, 2021.

St. Olaf College (June 15)All students, faculty and staff must be fully vaccinated by the start of the fall semester.

University of St. Thomas (Aug. 2)Students, staff and faculty must be vaccinated before returning to campus. The university had previously been offering incentives, but not mandating the vaccine.

Not requiring University of Minnesota Twin CitiesThe university is not requiring vaccinations at this point, though has implemented an indoor mask mandate.

Not requiring University of Minnesota statewide campusesJust like in the Twin cities, the university is not requiring vaccinations at this point, though has implemented an indoor mask mandate.

First Avenue (Aug. 2)As of Aug. 2, guests must prove they have been vaccinated for COVID-19, or show they have recently tested negative. Masks are recommended for unvaccinated.

Walmart (Aug. 1)Some traveling managers and corporate employees, but not guests or store employees, are required to get a vaccine. In counties with high or substantial transmission levels, Walmart requires customers to wear a face mask while in the store.

Follow Bring Me The News on Twitter for the latest breaking news

Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis (July 8)The Minnesota Fed is requiring all current employeesto get the COVID vaccine by the end of August.

Allina Health (Aug. 3)

Vaccinations for both COVID-19 and influenza will be required for staff, volunteers, students and vendors by Oct. 1, with some exemptions for medical issues and religious concerns.

Episcopal Homes in St. Paul (July 31)All staff at the senior living home must be vaccinated by Sept. 1.

Mayo Clinic (July 26)The Mayo Clinic is requiring employees to get vaccinated, but it will not fire those who don't. Instead, employees who do not get the vaccine will have to complete education modules, as well as wear a face mask at all times and socially distance while on campus.

M Health Fairview (Aug. 3)

Vaccines for both COVID-19 and influenza required in staff, students, volunteers, and vendors by October 31.

Sanford Health (July 22)Sanford Health is requiring all employees to get the vaccineand report it by Nov. 1.

VA Health System (July 26)

All VA health care workers will be required to be vaccinated by the middle of September, or they will have to undergo weekly testing.

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List of places in Minnesota that now require the COVID-19 vaccine - Bring Me The News

Covid-19 vaccine: Can employers and the government legally require it? – Vox.com

August 4, 2021

In 1902, the city of Cambridge, Massachusetts, faced a smallpox outbreak. In response, the local health board ordered the citys residents over the age of 21 to be vaccinated against this disease. Violators faced a $5 fine.

After a local pastor was fined for violating this vaccine mandate, he appealed his case all the way to the Supreme Court. The Court told him to pound sand in Jacobson v. Massachusetts (1905).

The liberty secured by the Constitution of the United States to every person within its jurisdiction does not import an absolute right in each person to be, at all times and in all circumstances, wholly freed from restraint, Justice John Marshall Harlan wrote for the Court. He added that there are manifold restraints to which every person is necessarily subject for the common good.

Under Jacobson, state and local governments though not necessarily the federal government may mandate vaccines for nearly all of their residents.

That decision has obvious relevance today. We now have multiple vaccines against Covid-19 that are both safe and shockingly effective, and they are available for free for all Americans. Yet the pandemic continues to rage in the United States because a large minority of Americans have yet to get a shot. While some people may face legitimate obstacles, others are just obstinate. Policymakers and other leaders, in other words, may need to take a page from Cambridges early 20th-century health board.

Some already are. Many of the first mandates are from employers: The state of New York, for example, recently announced that all of its employees will have to either get vaccinated or submit to weekly coronavirus testing, and President Joe Biden plans to impose similar requirements on federal employees.

Many private employers also require vaccines Google, for example, will insist that its employees be vaccinated in order to enter the companys offices. More than 600 colleges and universities require at least some of their students, faculty, and staff to be vaccinated.

These sorts of mandates will undoubtedly trigger lawsuits from vaccine resisters. In some cases, individuals with religious objections to vaccines or people with disabilities that preclude them from being vaccinated will have strong legal claims much like schoolchildren who can already seek exemptions from schools vaccination requirements if they have religious objections.

But, assuming that the courts follow existing law and assuming that Republican state governments do not enact new laws prohibiting employers from disciplining workers who refuse to be vaccinated most challenges to employer-imposed vaccination requirements should fail.

Under Jacobson, moreover, states should be free to order everyone within their borders to be vaccinated against Covid-19, although its far from clear whether the federal government could do the same.

Of course, there is no guarantee that the Roberts Court, which is eager to impose limits on public health officials and not especially bothered about overruling precedents, will follow Jacobson if a state does enact a vaccine mandate. But there is good reason to believe that it will. Even Justice Neil Gorsuch, one of the most conservative members of the current Court, recently described Jacobson as a modest decision that didnt seek to depart from normal legal rules during a pandemic.

The bottom line, in other words, is that, under existing law, numerous institutions within the United States may require their employees and, in some cases, their citizens to be vaccinated against Covid-19.

Employment relationships in the United States are typically at-will, meaning that an employee can be fired at any time and for any reason, even if that reason is completely arbitrary. If you have an at-will relationship with your employer, your boss can fire you because they dont like your haircut. Or because they dont like what you had for breakfast last Tuesday.

Or, for that matter, because you refuse to get a Covid-19 vaccine.

The general rule, in other words, is that your employer can fire you for any reason unless some outside legal force a federal or state law, or maybe an individual or collective bargaining contract between you and your employer intervenes to give you additional job security. And there is no federal law prohibiting employers from requiring nearly all of their employees to get vaccinated.

That said, some federal laws may allow a small number of workers to seek an exemption from their employers decision to mandate vaccination.

Neither of these laws prevents an employer from requiring all employees physically entering the workplace to be vaccinated for Covid-19, according to the EEOCs guidance on Covid-19 in the workplace. But employees may be entitled to a reasonable accommodation if their religion or disability precludes them from getting vaccinated, so long as this accommodation does not pose an undue hardship on the operation of the employers business.

Some examples of reasonable accommodations that might be offered to certain employees include requiring these workers to wear a face mask, work at a social distance from coworkers or non-employees, work a modified shift, get periodic tests for COVID-19, be given the opportunity to telework, or finally, accept a reassignment. But not every employee will be entitled to each of these accommodations, even if they are protected by a law like the ADA or the Civil Rights Act.

The specific accommodation will depend on an individual employees job duties someone who does work that can only be done at a particular job site, for example, may not be allowed to telework. And employers are not required to employ people who cannot do their job even with reasonable accommodations.

It should be noted that some states may have existing laws that place additional restrictions on employers. And theres always a risk that Republican state lawmakers will pass new laws prohibiting employers from requiring their employees to be vaccinated. But the law should permit most employers to require nearly all of their workers to get vaccinated.

So long as Jacobson remains good law, state and local governments may require their residents to get vaccinated. Indeed, states currently require their residents to get a wide range of vaccines by mandating that children be vaccinated before entering school or certain forms of child care. The only reason why a Covid-19 vaccine mandate would need to apply to adults is that the virus recently emerged, so most Americans were well past school age when they needed a vaccine.

That said, the Supreme Court will likely permit some individuals to seek exemptions from a Covid-19 vaccine mandate. Ever since Justice Amy Coney Barrett gave conservatives a 6-3 majority on the Court last fall, the Court has been extraordinarily aggressive in granting religious exemptions to Covid-related public health orders.

Federal law also restricts state governments ability to regulate people with disabilities; the ADA prohibits state and local governments from discriminating against many people with disabilities. It is likely, in other words, that at least some people will be able to get an exemption from a statewide or citywide vaccine mandate if they have a medical condition that precludes them from being vaccinated.

Another question is whether a state could require non-residents who enter their borders to be vaccinated.

As a general rule, a resident of one state who visits another is subject to the laws of a state they are merely passing through. If a resident of Florida takes a trip to New York, they may be prosecuted by New York officials if they commit a crime in New York. That said, the Supreme Court recognizes a constitutional right of all Americans to travel among the states. So an unvaccinated resident of Florida might claim that this right to travel is violated if New York tells them that they must be vaccinated if they wish to visit.

But theres some recent evidence that even the Roberts Courts right flank is unlikely to smile upon such a claim. Justice Clarence Thomas recently denied relief to a man who claimed that requiring him to wear a mask while flying on a commercial airline violates his right to travel.

To be brief: Neither Congress nor President Biden can likely force citizens to be vaccinated, although the federal government can use financial carrots and sticks to encourage vaccination.

To be longer (and wonkier): In NFIB v. Sebelius (2012), the Courts first major Obamacare case, the Supreme Court imposed a novel new limit on Congresss power. Congress may not use its broad power to regulate the national economy in order to regulate inactivity. If someone does not want to take a particular action, the federal governments ability to require them to take that action is limited.

NFIBs holding on this point, in the words of one very conservative federal judge, had no support in either the text of the Constitution or Supreme Court precedent, but lower courts are required to follow the Supreme Courts decisions even if they are arbitrary or lawless. And NFIB has pretty clear implications for a federal vaccine mandate.

Indeed, this very issue came up during oral arguments in NFIB. Justice Stephen Breyer posed a hypothetical to Michael Carvin, one of two lawyers arguing that the Affordable Care Act is unconstitutional, about what might happen if the Court adopted his proposed legal standard. If it turned out there was some terrible epidemic sweeping the United States, he said, would the federal government have the power to get people inoculated?

Carvins response: No, they couldnt do it.

Yet, even if the courts endorse Carvins reading of the federal governments authority to mandate vaccines, Congress could still use financial incentives to encourage vaccination.

The simplest way to do so would be to pay people to get vaccinated or to offer a tax break to everyone who gets the vaccine. The tax code gives all sorts of benefits to taxpayers who engage in activity that Congress deems desirable ranging from buying a home to having a child to driving an electric vehicle.

Another option is to require unvaccinated people to pay a much higher percentage of their income in federal taxes in order to incentivize them to become vaccinated. Such a policy might elicit some outrage, but its entirely constitutional even under NFIB.

But Congress also has fairly broad authority to attach conditions to federal benefits. It could require everyone who receives health coverage through a federal program such as Medicare, Medicaid, or the Affordable Care Act to become vaccinated if they want to keep those benefits.

One group the federal government could easily impose vaccines on: immigrants. Federal law already requires foreign nationals who apply for an immigration visa or who want to become lawful permanent residents to be vaccinated against certain diseases. The government could add a Covid-19 vaccine to this list.

Having laid out what the law says about vaccine mandates, there is a danger that a judiciary dominated by Republican appointees will ignore that law. As NFIB taught us, the mere fact that a legal argument has no basis in law or precedent is no guarantee that it wont win approval from five justices.

Theres also a risk that a conservative lower court judge well call this hypothetical conservative judge Reed OConnor could issue an injunction blocking any attempt to require people to become vaccinated. Even if this injunction is lawless, and even if it is ultimately vacated by a higher court, that process could take months or even years.

But existing law is clear that employers have broad latitude to require most of their workers to become vaccinated. It is equally clear that state governments may impose vaccination requirements. And, while the federal governments power is probably less broad, it is broad enough to give every American a powerful financial incentive to become vaccinated.

1905, the year Jacobson was handed down, is one of the most infamous years in the Supreme Courts history. It is the same year the Court handed down Lochner v. New York, a now-discredited decision stripping lawmakers of much of their authority to ensure that workers are not exploited. Lochner is now widely taught in law schools as an example of how judges should never, ever behave.

And yet, even most of the right-wing justices who joined the majority in Lochner recognized that striking down a state vaccine mandate would go too far. Even they realized that the government must have the power to protect the public health.

There is good reason to hope, in other words, that the current Supreme Court wouldnt be so reactionary as to strike down a vaccine mandate.

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Covid-19 vaccine: Can employers and the government legally require it? - Vox.com

Barbie debuts doll in likeness of British COVID-19 vaccine developer – Reuters UK

August 4, 2021

LONDON, Aug 4 (Reuters) - British coronavirus vaccine developer Sarah Gilbert has many science accolades to her credit but now shares an honor with Beyonce, Marilyn Monroe and Eleanor Roosevelt: a Barbie doll in her likeness.

Gilbert, a 59-year-old professor at Oxford University and co-developer of the Oxford/AstraZeneca vaccine, is one of six women in the COVID-19 fight who have new Barbies modeled after them.

Toy maker Mattel Inc (MAT.O) is recognizing them with a line of Barbie "role model" dolls.

Gilbert's Barbie shares her long auburn hair and oversized black glasses, and she wears a sensible navy blue pantsuit and white blouse.

"It's a very strange concept having a Barbie doll created in my likeness," Gilbert said in an interview for Mattel.

"I hope it will be part of making it more normal for girls to think about careers in science."

Among the honorees are emergency room nurse Amy O'Sullivan who treated the first COVID-19 patient at the Wycoff Hospital in Brooklyn, New York, and Audrey Cruz, frontline doctor in Las Vegas who fought discrimination, according to Mattel.

Other dolls include Chika Stacy Oriuwa, a Canadian psychiatry resident at the University of Toronto who battled systemic racism in healthcare, and Brazilian biomedical researcher Jaqueline Goes de Jesus, who led sequencing of the genome of a COVID-19 variant in Brazil, the company said.

Lastly a doll honors Kirby White, an Australian doctor who pioneered a surgical gown that can be washed and reused by frontline workers during the pandemic.

Gilbert chose nonprofit organization WISE (Women in Science & Engineering), dedicated to inspiring girls to consider a career in STEM, to receive a financial donation from the toy maker.

Reporting by Lisa Giles-Keddie; Editing by Cynthia Osterman

Our Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.

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Barbie debuts doll in likeness of British COVID-19 vaccine developer - Reuters UK

Where do major US religions stand on the COVID-19 vaccination? – East Idaho News

August 2, 2021

Aaron Dickey, 91, receives a COVID-19 vaccine while his wife, Marion, 83, left, looks on in Spanish Fork on March 25. Marion Dickey said she looked to President Russell M. Nelson of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints when deciding whether to get the vaccination. | Spenser Heaps, Deseret News

SALT LAKE CITY A recent report from the Public Religion Research Institute says 53% of Americans agree with the statement: Because getting vaccinated against COVID-19 helps protect everyone, it is a way to live out the religious principle of loving my neighbors.

Some religious leaders have cited their faith as a reason to promote vaccination, like doctrinal mandates to love others or to stay as healthy as possible. Others have cited their faith as a reason to allow others to make the medical decisions themselves without getting involved. Some have even cited their faith as a reason to discourage vaccination.

So what exactly are official religious beliefs surrounding immunization? Which religions and faith traditions are doctrinally opposed to vaccination? And do these beliefs also apply to the COVID-19 vaccine?

Prominent religious leaders like the pope, the dalai lama, the archbishop of Canterbury, the presiding bishop of the Episcopal Church, the leadership of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, and many others have been vaccinated, often documenting it publicly.

What does The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints say?

In Utah, many religious leaders across all faiths have made efforts to promote the vaccine by hosting vaccine clinics or addressing the issue over the pulpit.

The most prominent church in Utah, the Church of Jesus Christ, has repeatedly encouraged its members to get vaccinated, even updating its official policy handbook to encourage vaccinations.

Latter-day Saint church leadership has been vaccinated, and President Russell M. Nelson called the vaccine a literal godsend.

Though ultimately, the official policy says the decision is up to the members, with divine guidance. And the Public Religion Research Institute report showed that 17% of Latter-day Saints say they will not get vaccinated.

Among the religious groups least receptive to the vaccines, white evangelical Protestants stand out as the most likely to say they will refuse to get vaccinated (26%), with an additional 28% who are hesitant, the report published in April states. About 1 in 5 other Protestants of color (20%), Black Protestants (19%), and Mormons (17%) say they will not get vaccinated, and another one-third of each are hesitant (35%, 32% and 33%, respectively).

No churches officially oppose vaccinations in general, and very few openly discourage them. The two most common religions referenced in legal vaccination exemptions for schools are the Dutch Reformed Church and the Church of Christ, Scientist.

Dutch Reformed Church

Though it is not an official church stance, many members opt out of vaccination because they believe that vaccines can interfere with their relationship with God by making them less dependent. The church has not made a specific statement about the COVID-19 vaccine.

The Church of Christ, Scientist

The church does not have an official policy about vaccination, and it relies on members to make decisions for themselves following the golden rule. However, founder Mary Baker Eddy did recommend members follow what the law requires. Federal or state laws do not require COVID-19 vaccinations. Christian scientists believe in faith healing through prayer, meaning that they believe prayer has the ability to cure diseases and illnesses. Many members choose to turn down vaccinations in order to rely solely on prayer and faith for treatment.

Other faith healing denominations include Faith Tabernacle, Church of the First Born, Faith Assembly and End Time Ministries.

There are some doctrinal issues in other religions, depending on the vaccine in question. Here are some of the common religious reasons people turn down vaccines.

Islam

Beliefs about vaccination vary among Islamic sects and individuals.

The main religious concern is if the vaccine contains porcine ingredients, like pork gelatin, which is a common ingredient among vaccines. Consumption of pork is considered haram, or forbidden under Islamic law. Most Islamic leaders and councils agree that vaccination does not qualify as ingesting pork and are halal, or permissible.

The COVID-19 vaccine does not include any porcine or animal products, but widespread misinformation has made many Muslims wary about getting vaccinated.

In the early months of the pandemic, vaccine rates among Muslims were some of the lowest in the nation, but many imams and other religious and community leaders have launched outreach programs through mosques and cultural organizations to promote vaccination. Some have made rules that unvaccinated people may not be allowed to enter mosques.

One imam from the Islamic Center of Virginia in Richmond told WebMD that Muslim doctrine supports vaccination. We have a religious duty and obligation to be vaccinated as long as competent science and medical authorities approve the vaccine, Imam Ammar Amonette said.

Judaism

In Judaism, vaccination is not just encouraged; its required by Jewish law as part of a mandate for members to take care of their bodies. However, there are some concerns that some vaccines that contain animal gelatin products are not kosher, meaning that they dont follow the requirements for Jewish law related to food. However, many prominent Jewish religious leaders have said that vaccine injections do not count as ingesting the animal products.

There has also been a large amount of misinformation spread that the COVID-19 vaccines are not kosher, but the vaccines dont contain animal products. Jewish doctors and religious leaders have done much to combat this misinformation. Israel even launched a largely successful campaign to correct false claims that specifically targeted ultra-Orthodox Jews and encouraged vaccination.

Hinduism

In Hinduism, practitioners believe that divinity is in all things, including plants and animals. Cows are considered particularly sacred. Some vaccines contain bovine gelatin, which may concern some Hindus. However, many Hindu leaders have stated that the overall benefit of keeping people healthy and safe takes precedence.

Jehovahs Witnesses

Prior to 1952, Jehovahs Witness leadership instructed practitioners not to receive vaccinations because one leader believed vaccines used animal blood cells. The faith does not permit blood transfusions or donations, but since it was made clear that vaccines did not involve blood contact, Witnesses have been permitted to be vaccinated.

Many vaccines use fetal cell lines that are grown in a lab, but those cell lines descend from cells taken from two fetuses from elective abortions in the 1970s and 1980s. Those original cells have been multiplied in labs for decades, meaning that they are far removed from the original fetal tissue. Fetal cell lines dont contain any tissue from the original aborted fetuses. However, many people who are religiously opposed to abortion are hesitant to use cells that are in any way connected to abortion. This is a particularly common belief within Christian sects.

Neither Pfizer nor Moderna used fetal cell lines in the development of their COVID-19 vaccines, and none of the COVID-19 vaccines use fetal cell lines from recent abortions.

Catholicism

Some members of the Catholic Church turn down vaccines that contain cell lines derived from aborted fetal tissue based on the belief that life begins at conception and that they would be morally complicit in the abortions. However, the Catholic Church has officially stated that clinically safe and effective vaccines can be used in good conscience because the use of such vaccines does not constitute formal cooperation with the abortion and, in fact, becoming vaccinated can be seen as protecting personal health and pursuing the common good.

The Vaticans doctrinal office, the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith, released a statement explaining that the Pfizer and Moderna medicine were not developed from the cell lines in question, though they may have been tested on them. They classified these vaccines as ethically sound. AstraZeneca and Johnson & Johnson were developed from those cell lines, but the Catholic Church states that receiving those vaccines is still morally acceptable and that recipients are doing good by preventing disease and saving lives, including those of unborn babies who might not make it to term if the mothers get COVID-19.

Pope Francis has received the COVID-19 vaccine and has stated that everyone is morally obligated to get the vaccine.

It is the moral choice because it is about your life but also the lives of others, he told an Italian news program in January.

Amish

Amish communities have been hit particularly hard by diseases because of some hesitancy to be vaccinated. Most Amish people object to vaccination because of political or personal reasons rather than religious reasons. They dont have any official religious beliefs against vaccination; however, a core tenet of their faith is accepting Gods will. That means that if someone falls ill and dies, it was Gods will that they do so. If they are saved, that was also Gods will.

COVID-19 in particular has drastically affected Amish communities; and because of low vaccination rates, the variants have taken and continue to take a severe toll on the Amish people.

Fundamentalists

Many fundamentalist religions, such as the Fundamentalist Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints, have unofficial fatalist beliefs similar to the Amish what happens is Gods will, whether thats life or death. Because of these beliefs, members of fundamentalist faiths tend not to get vaccinated.

Incorporating faith into vaccination

Buddhism and Sikhism do not have any doctrine opposing vaccination and are generally encouraging practitioners to get it.

Some religions have even found a way to incorporate their beliefs into the vaccination, combining prayer or religious ceremonies, like Christian Scientists using faith healing to recover from the potential side effects or traditional healers in the Navajo Nation who use a prayer object in a protection ceremony before being vaccinated.

The conclusion of the report on the COVID-19 vaccine and religion was that 1 in 4 Americans who are hesitant to get the vaccine report that faith-based encouraging of vaccination would make them more likely to get vaccinated.

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Where do major US religions stand on the COVID-19 vaccination? - East Idaho News

More than 816,000 Covid-19 vaccine doses were administered Saturday in the US as pace of vaccination rises – CNN

August 2, 2021

CNN

The rate of Covid-19 vaccinations in the United States continues to rise, a positive sign amid skyrocketing cases and hospitalizations after weeks of lagging inoculations.

The US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention reported that 816,203 doses were administered Saturday, the fifth straight day the agency recorded more than 700,000 shots in arms. That brings the total number of doses administered to 346,456,669, according to CDC numbers released Sunday.

The 7-day average of administered doses is now 662,529 per day, the highest average since July 7.

Per CDC data released Sunday, 168.4 million people are fully vaccinated, or 49.6% of the US population. Among vaccine-eligible Americans meaning those who are 12 and older 58.1% are fully vaccinated.

Dr. Francis Collins, director of the National Institutes of Health, hopes the recent surge in cases driven by the Delta variant is changing the minds of the vaccine hesitant, he told CNNs Jake Tapper Sunday. Collins noted that in the last two weeks, vaccination rates have increased 56% nationally.

This may be a tipping point for those who have been hesitant to say, OK, its time, Collins said. I hope thats whats happening. Thats what desperately needs to happen if were going to get this Delta variant put back in its place.

Overall, the 7-day average of people becoming fully vaccinated each day is at 247,385 people per day.

Additionally, Saturday was the third day in a row that the 7-day average of people getting their first shots topped 400,000. The last time that metric was over 400,000 was the July Fourth weekend.

Still, this metric is lower than its peak on April 14, when the 7-day average of newly vaccinated people hit nearly 2 million.

Twenty states have now fully vaccinated more than half of their residents, including Colorado, Connecticut, Hawaii, Maine, Maryland, Massachusetts, Minnesota, New Hampshire, New Jersey, New Mexico, New York, Oregon, Rhode Island, Vermont, Virginia and Washington state, as well as Washington, DC.

On the other hand, the states with the lowest percentage of their population vaccinated are Alabama and Mississippi, which have 34% and 35% of their residents vaccinated, respectively.

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More than 816,000 Covid-19 vaccine doses were administered Saturday in the US as pace of vaccination rises - CNN

Coloradans describe what pushed them to get the COVID-19 vaccine now – The Denver Channel

August 2, 2021

AURORA, Colo. - The Gardens on Havana shopping center in Aurora is typically filled with shoppers, but on Sunday morning a mobile vaccination site was the reason behind the forming of a line.

Zola Alfred was one of the many who was eligible to get a COVID-19 vaccine months ago. At the time she wasn't comfortable getting it right away, which is why she waited.

"I have been waiting to see how things are, you know, how things are going and progressing," she said "I definitely wanted to wait and give it at least a year to see what statistics said and all that other kind of stuff. So, I've been watching the news and reading a lot to just keep up with it."

While her initial plan was to hold off on getting the shot, her children and the opportunity to get a gift card pushed her to get the vaccine now.

"I decided, if they're going to let us back in the building at my kids school, since I am on the PTCL board, I wanted to be able to have access to get inside of the building, just in case that was one of the requirements. So I was like, 'let me just go ahead and get my vaccine'. Plus, they're given $100 incentive in the state of Colorado, so why not?" she said.

School was also one of the reason Demetrius Pullman brought his 16 and 17-year-old teens, Talia and Dre to get vaccinated.

"To keep us safe. We all need to get this," he said.

Just like Zola, his initial plan was to hold off on getting vaccinated. A doctor changed his mind just a couple of weeks ago after telling him it was the best way to keep one of his immunocompromised children safe.

"When we took my daughter to the doctor, they recommended that we get it because of her. Yeah, so there's more of it just to protect my kids, you know," he said.

Both of his kids and Zola walked away not only with the first dose of a vaccine, but also a $100 Walmart gift card.

"This is for me, my vaccine, my card, spending it on myself," said Zola.

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Coloradans describe what pushed them to get the COVID-19 vaccine now - The Denver Channel

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