Category: Covid-19 Vaccine

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COVID-19 vaccines to be offered in Melville – KATC Lafayette News

July 28, 2021

COVID-19 vaccines will be offered to residents in Melville during an event on Wednesday, July 28.

The Louisiana Department of Health is sponsoring the free event, which will take place at the Melville Library.

No appointment is necessary.

Those getting a vaccine will be able to choose from two options: the Pfizer two-dose and the Johnson & Johnson one-dose.

It will be held from 10 a.m. - 6 p.m.

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COVID-19 vaccines to be offered in Melville - KATC Lafayette News

City of Wilmington and Downtown Visions Announce Free COVID-19 Vaccine at Downtown Farmer’s Market – WITN22

July 28, 2021

July 27, 2021

The Farmers Market is held at 10th and Market Streets each Wednesday from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m.

Mayor Mike Purzycki and Downtown Visions Executive Director Marty Hageman announced today that the popular Downtown Farmers Market, held weekly in the 1000 block of North Market Street adjacent to the newly renovated Rodney Square, will begin offering FREE COVID-19 vaccinations on select Wednesdays beginning this week, Wednesday, July 28, in partnership with the State of Delawares Division of Public Health.

The August dates that vaccines will be available, between 10 a.m. and 2 p.m. with no appointment necessary, are August 11, August 18, and August 25.

Public Health staff will administer both the Pfizer and Johnson & Johnson vaccines at the Farmers Market. Pfizer first and second doses will be available to anyone age 12 or older (though anyone under 18 years old must have a signed consent form from a parent or guardian), and Johnson & Johnsons single dose vaccine will be offered to anyone 18 years of age and older.

Mayor Purzycki today thanked Downtown Visions and the Delaware Division of Public Health for collaborating with the City to make the COVID-19 vaccine more available.

The virus is still a concern, said the Mayor, especially with the rise of the deadly Delta variant. I urge residents to get vaccinated as soon as possible. The City will offer COVID-19 vaccinations at as many events as possible throughout the summer. Mayor Purzycki also asked residents to continue to get tested for the virus and follow other common sense safety precautions.

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City of Wilmington and Downtown Visions Announce Free COVID-19 Vaccine at Downtown Farmer's Market - WITN22

Over 39000 San Marcos residents have received COVID-19 vaccine – San Marcos Daily Record

July 28, 2021

Over 39,000 San Marcos residents have received at least one COVID-19 vaccine dose as of Monday, according to the Texas Department of State Health Services.

The DSHS reports that 39,374 San Marcans living in zip codes 78666 and 78667 have received one vaccine dose, while 33,680 residents have been fully vaccinated against the coronavirus as of Monday.

Meanwhile, 106,700 Hays County residents have been fully vaccinated against COVID-19 as of Tuesday, approximately 55.44% of 195,999 eligible residents who are 12 years or older. Additionally, 125,389 county residents have received at least one COVID-19 vaccine dose 64% of the eligible population, according to the DSHS.

As of Tuesday, 94.82% of Hays County residents who are 65 years or older have received at least one COVID-19 vaccine, while 84.77% in the same age group are fully vaccinated.

The DSHS stated that 14,657,490 Texans have received at least one COVID-19 vaccine dose, and 12,572,118 have been fully vaccinated. According to the state, 59.67% of eligible Texans have been vaccinated as of Tuesday.

To make an appointment for a vaccine shot through Hays County, visit https://www.haysinformed.com. From there you can use the new online scheduler to find a time and location that works best for you. The DSHS has also created the Texas Public Health Vaccine Scheduler to sign up for a vaccine: https://getthevaccine.dshs.texas.gov/s/.

No appointment needed vaccine clinics are available Monday-Friday at Live Oak Community Clinic, 401 Broadway, in San Marcos between 8:30-11:30 a.m. and 1-4 p.m. Pfizer, Moderna and Johnson & Johnson vaccines are available at this clinic.

Every Thursday and Friday, a Pfizer vaccine clinic takes place at Communicare in Kyle at 2810 Dacy Lane from 8 a.m. until 4 p.m.

Pfizer vaccines will be available on Thursday, July 29 at three locations from 1-8 p.m. Redwood Baptist Church, 2050 Poplar St. in San Marcos; Scudder Primary School, 400 Green Acres Dr. in Wimberley; and Walnut Spring School at 113 Tiger Lane in Dripping Springs.

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Over 39000 San Marcos residents have received COVID-19 vaccine - San Marcos Daily Record

One Shot of the Sputnik V COVID-19 Vaccine Triggers Strong Antibody Responses – SciTechDaily

July 28, 2021

A single dose of the Sputnik V vaccine may elicit significant antibody responses against SARS-CoV-2, finds a study published on July 13, 2021, in the journal Cell Reports Medicine.

Due to limited vaccine supply and uneven vaccine distribution in many regions of the world, health authorities urgently need data on the immune response to vaccines to optimize vaccination strategies, says senior author Andrea Gamarnik (@GamarnikLab) of the Fundacin Instituto Leloir-CONICET in Buenos Aires, Argentina. The peer-reviewed data we present provide information for guiding public health decisions in light of the current global health emergency.

Past research has shown that two doses of Sputnik V results in 92% efficacy against coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19), which is caused by SARS-CoV-2. An important question is whether a single dose would achieve greater public health benefit than two doses by allowing protection of a larger population more quickly.

Evidence from other vaccines offers support for the one-shot approach. The AstraZeneca vaccine shows 76% efficacy after a single dose, and the Moderna and Pfizer vaccines may induce sufficient immunity in previously infected individuals after one dose, with no apparent benefit of an additional dose.

This graphical abstract shows antibody responses to Sputnik V vaccine in Argentina. On the top, schematic representation of the two-component adenovirus based vaccine (rAD26 and rAD5) Sputnik V. Bottom, IgG antibody levels measured by International Units and SARS CoV-2 Neutralizing Titers in vaccinated naive (seronegative, blue) and previously infected (seropositive, red) volunteers. There is a high seroconversion rate following the first dose in naive individuals. In previously infected participants, a single dose of Sputnik V elicits a fast and robust antibody response without apparent benefit from a second dose. Credit: Rossi and Ojeda et al./Cell Reports Medicine

In the Cell Reports Medicine study, Gamarnik and her colleagues compared the effects of one and two shots of Sputnik V on SARS-CoV-2-specific antibody responses in 289 healthcare workers in Argentina. Three weeks after the second dose, all volunteers with no prior infection generated virus-specific immunoglobulin G (IgG) antibodies the most common type of antibody found in blood.

But even within three weeks of receiving the first dose, 94% of these participants developed IgG antibodies against the virus, and 90% showed evidence of neutralizing antibodies, which interfere with the ability of viruses to infect cells.

Additional results showed that IgG and neutralizing antibody levels in previously infected participants were significantly higher after one dose than those in fully vaccinated volunteers with no history of infection. A second dose did not increase the production of neutralizing antibodies in previously infected volunteers.

This highlights the robust response to vaccination of previously infected individuals, suggesting that naturally acquired immunity might be enhanced sufficiently by a single dose, in agreement with recent studies using mRNA vaccines, Gamarnik says.

Further studies are needed to evaluate the duration of the immune response and to assess how antibody levels relate to vaccine protection against COVID-19. Evidence based on quantitative information will guide vaccine deployment strategies in the face of worldwide vaccine supply restriction, Gamarnik says.

Reference: Sputnik V Vaccine Elicits Seroconversion and Neutralizing Capacity to SARS CoV-2 after a Single Dose by Andres H. Rossi, Ph.D.; Diego S. Ojeda, Ph.D.; Augusto Varese, Ph.D.; Lautaro Sanchez, M.Sc.; Maria M. Gonzalez Lopez Ledesma, Ph.D.; Ignacio Mazzitelli, M.D.; Anabel Alvarez Juli, Ph.D.; Santiago Oviedo Rouco, Ph.D.; Horacio M. Pallars, M.Sc.; Guadalupe S. Costa Navarro, M.Sc.; Natali Rasetto, M.Sc.; Corina I. Garcia, Ph.D.; Shirley D. Wenker, Ph.D.; Lila Y. Ramis, M.D.; Magal G. Bialer, Ph.D.; Maria Jose de Leone, Ph.D.; C. Esteban Hernando, Ph.D.; Santiago Sosa, M.Sc.; Luciana Bianchimano, M.Sc.; Antonella Rios, M.Sc.; Maria Soledad Treffinger Cienfuegos, M.Sc.; Julio J. Caramelo, Ph.D.; Yesica Longueira, M.Sc.; Natalia Laufer, Ph.D.; Diego Alvarez, Ph.D.; Jorge Carradori, M.D.; Dariana Pedrozza, M.D.; Alejandra Rima, M.D.; Cecilia Echegoyen, M.D.; Regina Ercole, M.D.; Paula Gelpi, M.D.; Susana Marchetti, M.D.; Martn Zubieta, M.D.; Guillermo Docena, Ph.D.; Nicolas Kreplak, M.D.; Marcelo Yanovsky, Ph.D. and Jorge Geffne, 13 July 2021, Cell Reports Medicine.DOI: 10.1016/j.xcrm.2021.100359

This work was supported by the National Institutes of Health (NIAID) and by the National Ministry of Science Technology and Innovation of Argentina.

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One Shot of the Sputnik V COVID-19 Vaccine Triggers Strong Antibody Responses - SciTechDaily

COVID-19 vaccination events in Central Virginia this week – 8News

July 28, 2021

RICHMOND, Va. (WRIC) -- The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention recommends leaders in localities with "substantial" to "high" rates of transmission for COVID-19 to encourage citizens to wear masks in public, indoor settings. Several localities match this criterion in the Richmond area.

According to CDC data, Chesterfield, Amelia, Hanover, Louisa, Prince George and Dinwiddie counties all have a "substantial" transmission rate of the virus; Nottoway County has a "high" rate.

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COVID-19 vaccination events in Central Virginia this week - 8News

President of Mexico touts COVID-19 vaccination rates, says work ongoing to end border travel restrictions – WLNS

July 28, 2021

AMLO says vaccination rates in Mexican border cities now comparable to U.S. counterparts, warns that "keeping border closed" will harm commerce

by: Julian Resendiz

People in the range of 30 to 39 years old are seen after receiving their first dose of the AstraZeneca vaccine against Covid-19, at the Palacio de los Deportes in Mexico City, on July 13, 2021. (Photo by ALFREDO ESTRELLA/AFP via Getty Images)

EL PASO, Texas (Border Report) The president of Mexico says conditions are ripe for ending non-essential travel restrictions with the United States, given a recent, dramatic increase in vaccination rates south of the border.

We are looking to reopen the border, its to the benefit of both governments, President Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador said Tuesday at a news conference broadcast on YouTube. We are vaccinating (people); we have reached the same level of vaccination as California in Baja California and (elsewhere) along the border.

The U.S. and Mexico agreed to close their land borders to non-essential travel in March 2020 to slow the spread of COVID-19. The restrictions were recently extended through August 21.

Mexican officials on Tuesday displayed a map showing a partial vaccination rate of adults in Baja of 91%, with Sonora standing at 75%, Chihuahua at 81%, Nuevo Leon at 93% and Coahuila at 88%. No data was shown for Tamaulipas, which borders South Texas. Mexican health officials said the first doses of the Pfizer vaccine would be applied this week in the Tamaulipas border cities of Nuevo Laredo, Reynosa, Matamoros, Rio Bravo, Valle Hermoso and others.

We have good relations with the United States, there is cooperation, and we need each other, Lopez Obrador said. We cannot have the border closed for a long time because we have economic and commercial ties that are strategic to Mexico and the United States. [] It is a fact that keeping a closed border for a longer time will affect commerce, especially in California and Texas.

Lopez Obrador said Mexico has administered 61.8 million COVID-19 vaccines to date, is administering an average of 900,000 per day and is on pace to vaccinate all adults in Mexico by the end of October.

The Ministry of Defense distributes and supervises the application of the vaccine throughout the country, so the figures could not be independently verified. International news platforms put Mexicos COVID-19 overall partial vaccination rate at 33% and its full vaccination rate at 19%.

Health Undersecretary Hugo Lopez Gatell said the vaccines have reduced COVID-19 mortality rates in Mexico, from 22% in July of 2020 to less than 2% now. He said 48% of Mexicans have received at least one COVID-19 vaccine so far, some of them the one-shot Johnson & Johnson variety.

More than 2 million Mexicans living in cities that border the United States are now partially vaccinated, the Mexican officials said.

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President of Mexico touts COVID-19 vaccination rates, says work ongoing to end border travel restrictions - WLNS

As the pandemic wears on, some Americans could need Covid-19 booster shots – Vox.com

July 26, 2021

The Biden administration now believes that fully vaccinated people who are older or immunocompromised may need a booster shot.

Though all three vaccines authorized for use in the United States Pfizer/BioNTech, Moderna, and Johnson & Johnson are highly effective in preventing Covid-19 infections, recent data suggests that the efficacy of Pfizers two-dose vaccine can wane slightly four to six months after vaccination, according to the New York Times.

However, a booster shot could lift antibody levels even more substantially than the current two-dose regimen for the Pfizer and Moderna vaccines, and could be especially beneficial for people 65 and older and those who are immunocompromised.

People who are immunocompromised may receive significantly less immune protection than the general population after two vaccine doses, increasing the upside of a potential third shot.

According to a Centers for Disease Control and Prevention advisory committee, which met earlier this week to discuss the potential need for booster shots, about 2.7 percent of the US population is currently immunocompromised in some way, whether due to ongoing medical treatment like chemotherapy, their status as organ transplant recipients, or another reason.

Immunocompromised people are also more likely to become severely ill from Covid-19, and they have a markedly higher chance of experiencing breakthrough infections despite being vaccinated a concern magnified by a delta variant-fueled resurgence of Covid-19 cases in the US.

As things stand, data from Pfizer indicates that its vaccine the first to be authorized in the US, and still the most common among US vaccine recipients declines from 95 percent to 84 percent effectiveness against symptomatic infection after four to six months, according to the Times Sharon LaFraniere.

Data from Israel, where Covid cases are once again rising, suggest that an even sharper decline in effectiveness against symptomatic infections is possible but even then, the vaccine remains more than 90 percent effective in preventing severe disease, and the small sample size means there is still uncertainty about Israels findings.

The goal of this vaccine is not to prevent mild or low, moderate infectious disease, Dr. Paul Offit, a member of the Food and Drug Administrations outside advisory committee, told the Times. The goal is to prevent hospitalization to death. Right now this vaccine has held up to that.

A booster shot administered at the six-month mark could increase antibody levels as much as tenfold, according to data released earlier this year by both Pfizer and Moderna, underscoring its potential value to older and immunocompromised people.

Israel is already offering a third Pfizer shot for immunocompromised residents though millions of Palestinians in the West Bank and the Gaza Strip have yet to be vaccinated and Pfizer has previously suggested that a booster shot could be needed in the US.

Though the US currently has tens of millions of surplus Covid-19 vaccine doses on hand, making a third Pfizer or Moderna shot available to millions of immunocompromised or elderly Americans likely wont be a quick process.

Currently, all three Covid-19 vaccines in use in the US are being administered under an emergency use authorization, or EUA, issued by the FDA, which sets specific regimens for each vaccine: two doses several weeks apart for both Pfizer and Moderna, and a single dose for Johnson & Johnson.

Changing that, according to the Washington Post, would require either full FDA approval for the vaccine or an amendment to the EUA. And until that happens, the CDCs Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices cant go forward with recommending a third shot for vulnerable populations in the US.

According to the New York Times, doctors would have vastly more leeway to prescribe a booster for their patients once the vaccine is fully approved by the FDA.

However, there are some potential workarounds to get third shots in arms more quickly. According to Dr. Amanda Cohn, chief medical officer for the CDCs immunization and respiratory diseases center, the US is actively looking into ways ... to potentially provide access earlier than any potential change in regulatory decisions including through a study, or through an investigational new drug format.

As the Washington Post reported after the advisory board meeting earlier this week, that strategy could open up access to a third shot under the FDAs compassionate use program, which would require enrolling individuals in a clinical study where additional doses can be given.

President Joe Biden also struck an encouraging tone on the prospects for the FDAs full vaccine approval in coming months, at a recent town hall in Cincinnati, Ohio.

Theyre [the FDA] not promising me any specific date, but my expectation, talking to the group of scientists we put together... plus others in the field, is that sometime, maybe in the beginning of the school year, at the end of August, beginning September, October, theyll get a final approval, Biden told CNNs Don Lemon on Wednesday.

Full FDA approval requires a massive amount of data, including at least six months of vaccine efficacy data, and it usually takes about 10 months for the agency to review license applications and reach a decision.

When we were reviewing applications back when they were on paper, there was so much, it would not fit on the freight elevator, Norman Baylor, the former head of the FDAs Office of Vaccines Research and Review, told CNN. Thats how big the application is.

However, the Pfizer/BioNTech vaccine has already been granted a priority review, which shortens the potential timeline to six months, and multiple officials have said approval will likely come even sooner, potentially clearing the way for booster shots for older and immunocompromised people.

Moderna is currently in the process of completing our rolling submission to the FDA, according to a Moderna spokesperson, and approval for the Moderna vaccine will almost certainly take longer. The company told CNN this week that it has no specific timeline in place yet.

Full FDA approval could also have a number of other benefits, in addition to opening up the possibility of booster shots for vulnerable groups. As NBCs Shannon Pettypiece explained on Tuesday, the official regulatory signoff would remove a significant legal and public relations barrier for businesses and government agencies that want to require vaccinations for their employees and customers, and could also boost vaccine confidence.

Thus far, the US has largely held back from imposing vaccine mandates, though other countries, such as France, have embraced them to positive effect.

As the Biden administration consensus coalesces behind the need for a booster shot for vulnerable groups, the delta variant of Covid-19 is gaining ground quickly in the US, fueling a sharp rise in new cases.

On Saturday, the US reported a rolling seven-day average of nearly 50,000 cases per day the highest level since early May, according to CNNs Ryan Struyk, and almost 39,000 more cases than the same seven-day average in late June.

Additionally, at a Thursday White House briefing on the pandemic, CDC director Dr. Rochelle Walensky warned that the delta variant now represents more than 83 percent of the virus circulating in the United States.

Compared to the virus we had circulating initially in the United States at the start of the pandemic, the delta variant is more aggressive and much more transmissible than previously circulating strains, Walensky said. It is one of the most infectious respiratory viruses we know of and that I have seen in my 20-year career.

As Voxs Umair Irfan explained in late June, when delta accounted for just 20 percent of new Covid cases in the US, the CDC has identified delta as one of five variants of concern. Not only does it spread far faster than the original strain of Covid, but its better at evading vaccine protections, and, as Irfan reports, theres some evidence that it can cause more severe outcomes from Covid-19 compared to the original versions of the virus.

Despite those breakthrough cases, however, the delta surge is overwhelmingly proving to be a pandemic of the unvaccinated, as Walensky put it earlier this month. In the US, more than 99 percent of recent deaths and about 97 percent of recent hospitalizations from Covid-19 have been among unvaccinated individuals.

As a result, this latest virus outbreak has been especially bad in parts of the US with low vaccine uptake, such as rural Missouri.

As The Atlantics Ed Yong reported from Missouri earlier this month, ICUs are also filling with younger patients, in their 20s, 30s, and 40s, including many with no underlying health problems.

According to Yong,

Almost every COVID-19 patient in Springfields hospitals is unvaccinated, and the dozen or so exceptions are all either elderly or immunocompromised people. The vaccines are working as intended, but the number of people who have refused to get their shots is crushing morale. Vaccines were meant to be the end of the pandemic. If people dont get them, the actual end will look more like Springfields present: a succession of COVID-19 waves that will break unevenly across the country until everyone has either been vaccinated or infected.

A swath of southern states, including Louisiana and Florida, are currently reporting more cases per 100,000 people than anywhere else in the US, with Florida alone contributing more than one-fifth of all new cases in the US.

Folks [are] supposed to have common sense, Alabama Gov. Kay Ivey, a Republican, said this week. But its time to start blaming the unvaccinated folks, not the regular folks. Its the unvaccinated folks that are letting us down.

Currently, only 34 percent of Alabamans are fully vaccinated the worst vaccination rate of the any state in the US, along with Mississippi.

As of Saturday, about 57 percent of the vaccine-eligible population in the US more than 162 million people have been fully vaccinated, according to data from the CDC. Another 15 million or so more have received at least one dose of the vaccine.

That level of widespread vaccination is unequivocally good news, but with US Covid cases on the rise and the delta variant running rampant, it invariably also means some of the new Covid cases in the US are breakthrough infections fully vaccinated people nonetheless testing positive for Covid-19.

As Voxs Umair Irfan explains,

The CDC definition of a breakthrough infection is a laboratory-confirmed infection more than 14 days after the final dose of a Covid-19 vaccine, as it can take a while for the full protection of a vaccine to spool up. This definition includes everything from infections that produce no symptoms at all to cases that result in death. People often think about infection and disease as being the same thing, and that is not the case, said Brianne Barker, a virologist at Drew University.

Its only when a virus starts causing symptoms that an infected person is said to have disease, so not all SARS-CoV-2 infections cause Covid-19. But as weve seen throughout the pandemic, people can carry and transmit the virus without falling ill themselves, creating a major route for the spread of Covid-19. Thats why tracking breakthrough cases is so important.

The good news about breakthrough infections, though, is that if youre vaccinated and get sick with Covid-19, youre far less likely to get severely ill than you would without a vaccine. With a vaccine, the chance of hospitalization and death are both reduced compared to unvaccinated individuals, according to Dr. Anthony Fauci, the United States top infectious disease expert.

If you look at the number of deaths, about 99.2 percent of them are unvaccinated. About 0.8 percent are vaccinated, Fauci told NBCs Chuck Todd on Meet the Press earlier this month. No vaccine is perfect. But when you talk about the avoidability of hospitalization and death ... its really sad and tragic that most all of these are avoidable and preventable.

Currently, the country is administering about 537,000 doses per day on average, down from more than a million per day on average at the start of July and that dropoff could fuel a brutal, self-reinforcing cycle.

Specifically, according to Irfan, with vaccination rates slowing, reports of people becoming infected after their immunizations could feed vaccine hesitancy, which in turn can fuel more breakthrough cases.

In reality, however, getting vaccinated actually heads off the risk of further breakthrough infections by making it harder for the virus to spread. And by the same token, getting more people vaccinated will also go a long way toward protecting older and immunocompromised people who have already been vaccinated but may now need a booster shot.

Each day, hundreds of thousands of Americans are choosing to protect themselves, their kids, and their neighbors by getting their first shot, White House Covid czar Jeff Zients said this week. These Americans are stepping up and doing their part. Each shot matters. Each additional person fully vaccinated is a step closer to putting this pandemic behind us.

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As the pandemic wears on, some Americans could need Covid-19 booster shots - Vox.com

With COVID-19 mutations on the rise, Fort Bragg soldiers discuss hesitancy of receiving vaccine – The Fayetteville Observer

July 26, 2021

With a mutated variant of COVID-19 gaining traction in the area, Fort Bragg officials are looking atthe reasons why some soldiersare hesitant to get the vaccine.

Fort Bragg health officials spoke on the 18thAirborne Corps podcast Tuesday to dispel misinformation about the vaccine and discussed what the delta variant of the virus means. Some soldiers spoke on Thursdays podcast about why there was hesitancy.

More: COVID-19 cases in Cumberland County rise more than 90% in a week

Among the four Fort Bragg soldiers interviewed, one has recovered from being diagnosed with COVID-19, and another has not received the vaccine.

According to vaccination numbers released on the Department of Defenses website Wednesday, at least 511,940 regular Army,Reserve andNational Guard soldiershave received one or both doses of the vaccine.

There are a little more than 1.01 million soldiers in the regular Army, National Guard and Reserve combined, according to budget documents released by the Army this year.

The Armys own vaccine numbersdifferfrom the DODs, with the branch reporting in May that 636,848 soldiers received either the first or both doses of the vaccine.

At least 70% of regular Army soldiers have at least received the first dose of the vaccine, said Lt. Gen. Ron Place, director of the Defense Health Agency, on June 29.

Locally at Fort Bragg, the vaccination rate for soldiers is at about 60%, a spokesman for the 18thAirborne Corps said.

During Thursdays podcast,Col. Joe Buccino, a spokesman for the 18thAirborne Corps, said he spoke off-mic with 40 soldiers about the vaccine.

With the COVID vaccine, every soldier has a choice, Buccino said. That choice is a deeply personal one, and it is to be respected.

Buccino said he thinks the fourFort Bragg soldierswho agreed to be interviewed represent the broad views across the military and Fort Bragg.

Capt. Javon Starnes told Buccino he was one of the soldiers who hesitated on receiving the vaccine in early January, because at the time he questioned if its rollout was being rushed.

I wanted to do everything to the best of my ability to basically take care of my family things of that nature when it comes to finances, my health and just the betterment of our community, said Starnes, who is a married father of three.

Starnes said that he received a phone call in January asking if he wanted to volunteer for the vaccine, and atfirsthe said no, but later during the conversation, he changed his mind because he questioned if hed be putting his family at risk if he contracted thevirus.

He said coincidentally before he was able to receive the vaccine, he and his wife each contracted it.

He said despite taking precautions, they took off their masks when eating with friends and soon learned the friends were diagnosed with COVID-19.

Starnes said his three children did not test positive for the virus, but he experienced chills and most of the symptoms except for the loss of smell and taste.

More: COVID vaccine open for military beneficiaries 16 and older at Fort Bragg

His wife had all the symptoms including loss of smell and taste, he said.

He said he and his wife havethough theyve recovered from the virus since they were diagnosed in January, but his wifes senses still have not fullyrecovered.

We know we dont want to catch COVID again, Starnes said. So,we made the decision together to get the vaccination.

He said he now encouragesthose who havent received a vaccination to consider itbecause he thinks the side effects of COVID outweigh any potential side effects of the vaccine.

Sgt. Colton Joinerhas opted to not receive the vaccine at this timebecause he thinks unknown risks of itoutweigh his chances of contracting COVID-19.

Now there could be some long-term effects if I get it, and Icompletelyunderstand that, but there could also be some long-term effects 10 years down the road from the vaccine, Joiner said.

Lt. Col. Owen Price, Fort Braggs Force Health protection officer, said Joiner has valid points.

However as more data about the virus comes in, initial thoughts about it only affecting older populations are eroding, Price said.

Data is now showing 25% of people regardless of age or health status are experiencinglong-termhealth effects from the virussuch as loss of senses,fatigueor mental fog,he said.

Price told Joiner that the delta variant of the virus has a double infection rate compared to the COVID-19 strain in the December time frame, when the virus was at its worse.

He said most of the vaccinated populations seem to be OK, but the variant is sweeping through parts of the country with large unvaccinated populations.

The delta variant, Price said, has almost eliminated the alpha variant as the virus replicates and makes copies and the delta variant has become stronger and faster and has a better survival chance.

According to the World Health Organization, the longer the coronavirus spreads among unvaccinated people, the more opportunity it has to mutate into off-shoots like the delta variant.

Price said he cant guarantee there wont be long-term effects from the COVID-19 vaccine, but said short-term effects appear low.

The ingredients in the vaccinea lipid, mRNA protein, salt, water and a stabilizer are not known to have long-term effects on their own, Price said.

Meanwhile, he said COVID-19 has causedmyocarditis, which is a viral infection that weakens the heart.

Price estimated about 90% of COVID-19 patient hospitalizations are those who are unvaccinated.

Fort Bragg has only had one COVID-19 hospitalization of a patient who was vaccinated, but that person had underlying health conditions, he said.

Joiner said the delta variant of the virus might change his view on getting vaccinated sooner if sees the infection rate skyrocketing.

I'm not opposed to the vaccine, he said. I would honestly say maybe two years from now, maybe a year from now or maybe six months from now I would be more open to get it if I see a steady sample of people who have gotten it.

He said its the unknowns andattemptingto make a decision after the past year of COVID-19 has made some weary.

This is a crazy experience, and then for people to have to come out and make these big decisions when theyre still processing things that have happened months ago is a lot, Joiner said.

Joiner said he thinks theres a large group of people who are in favor of the vaccine and a large group opposed to it but said he would like to hear from an honest middle man.

He agreed with Buccino in questioning the risk of thedelta variants impact to schools, gyms and dining facilities that have since reopened at Fort Bragg, if a large swath of people continue to remain unvaccinated and still want to wait.

As much as I want time to make the decision,there isa point to where are you aren't necessarily affordedthat (time) …? Joiner said.Its such apainful decision to sit here and have to debate with myself should I do this or should I not do this.

The two other soldiers Buccino spoke to on the podcast Staff Sgt. Thomas Tran andPfc. Phylicia Jones have each been vaccinated.

Tran said he didnt have a particular reason for why he hesitated to get the vaccine but decided to do so because his wife travels out of country for work.

Jones said though shes heard pros and cons about the vaccine, she personally has not noticed any issues after she received it.

We have to sometimes take a leap of faith even though it scares us and its fearful in order for us to finally reach the goal that we want overall, she said.

During Tuesdays podcast, Price was joined by two other Fort Bragg medical professionals Dr. Sammy Choi, chief of research for Womack Army Medical Center, and Lt. Col.Teresa Pearce, director of Fort Bragg Public Health.

Choi said that according to CDC data, the U.S. went from atwo-weekperiod in early June of seeing 10% of COVID-19 cases with the delta variant, to it increasing to 30%two weeks later and increasing to 58% of the cases for the weekly period ending July 3.

If a spike protein from the virus attaches to a host and mutates, he said it has a nearlythreefoldchance of infecting a child.

Choihadadvice for soldiers who are skeptical about receiving the vaccine becauseit's still in an emergency useauthorizationphase, asmanufacturersawaitlicensingapproval for the Federal Drug Administration.

Do it for humanity, he said. "It may affect the unit. If a soldier getsit andanother soldier gets it, and youre mission-critical it can affect everything."

Choi said he thinks there is plenty of data about the vaccines efficacy, andasks if thosewantinga level of researchscrutinyand research evidence from the COVID-19 vaccine are asking for the same level of data of other vaccines.

Hesaidit seems as if some people want an assurance that there wont be a side effect, but if that were the same assurance for other vaccines, the humanpapillomavirusvaccine to prevent cervical cancer or vaccines against chickenpox,measlesand otherdiseaseswouldnt exist.

In dispelling some of the concernsand misinformation that some soldiers have heard about the vaccine, Choi said it will not make male soldiers sterile.

However, he said the chance forerectiledysfunction is five times greater for those who contract COVID-19.

There is no evidencethatany of the vaccines lead toerectiledysfunction, sterilityorinfertilityin man or woman, he said.

Price said data has indicated that the vaccine has not caused problems for women pregnant during receiving the vaccine or getting pregnant afterreceivingit.

Related to claims that the vaccine might change DNA, Price said the messenger RNA of the vaccine never enters thenucleuscell of wheregeneticDNA material is housed.

There's no interaction between the messenger RNA and your DNA and so theres simply no way that its going to change your genetic makeup, he said.

Related to concerns about the vaccine and faith, Choi saidhe questions what is it about the COVID-19 vaccine that prevents them from taking it according to theirstatement of faith or theology.

He also questioned why some have singled out the COVID-19 vaccine as being opposing to their faith, while other vaccines are not.

For those who say they arent going to get the vaccine because they havent contracted COVID-19, Pearce used alightingstrikeanalogy.

"I dont know anybody and I myself have not been struck bylightning, but it doesnt mean that because of that I go and run around in lightning storms and carry polesaround, she said.

All three medical professionals agreed that they think prevention is still key for fighting the virus.

We're really kind of at a tipping point, andwe're onemutation away from kind of rolling back down the hill,andI know everybody is COVID-spent, Price said. Everybodys over it, but we have to get to a point where theres no safe haven for the virus togo, andwere only going to do that throughvaccination.

Staff writer Rachael Riley can be reached at rriley@fayobserver.com or 910-486-3528.

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With COVID-19 mutations on the rise, Fort Bragg soldiers discuss hesitancy of receiving vaccine - The Fayetteville Observer

Hospitalized Covid-19 patients are asking for the vaccine — when it’s too late, two health care workers say – CNN

July 26, 2021

"When they come into the (hospital) system, they say, 'Can I get vaccinated?' And at that point, you can't," Alix Zacharski, an intensive care clinical nurse manager at Miami's Jackson Health System, told CNN's "Newsroom" Thursday.

"We have to let the virus run its course, and then hopefully" the vaccine can be given, she said.

Not all of these patients live to get the chance, an Alabama doctor says.

Dr. Brytney Cobia of Grandview Medical Center wrote this about young people recently arriving at her hospital seriously ill with Covid-19:

"A few days later when I call time of death, I hug their family members and I tell them the best way to honor their loved one is to go get vaccinated and encourage everyone they know to do the same," Cobia wrote.

The US averaged more than 39,900 new cases a day over a week ending Wednesday -- more than three times 2021's lowest average (about 13,000 daily, set on June 22), according to Johns Hopkins University data.

Hospitalizations also are rising. More than 27,700 Covid-19 patients were in US hospitals on Monday -- nearly double the number from June 27, when a 2021 low of 15,982 was counted, the US Department of Health and Human Services says.

These rises have come as the proportion of Delta variant cases has increased.

Zacharski urged eligible unvaccinated people to get inoculated.

"We really want to make sure everybody understands: We need your help, to help you," Zacharski said.

CNN's Theresa Waldrop contributed to this report.

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Hospitalized Covid-19 patients are asking for the vaccine -- when it's too late, two health care workers say - CNN

Vaccination clinic offering all three COVID-19 vaccines comes to Virginia Beach – wtkr.com

July 26, 2021

VIRGINIA BEACH, Va. The City of Virginia Beach is offering residents another chance to receive the COVID-19 vaccine.

The Virginia Beach Department of Emergency Medical Services in partnership with the Virginia Beach Department of Public Health will host a free COVID-19 community vaccination clinic in the Senior Resource Center, located at 912 Princess Anne Road.

The clinic will take place on Thursday, July 29 from 9 to 11 a.m. The Pfizer, Moderna, and Johnson & Johnson vaccines will be available.

Individuals 12 years of age and older are eligible to be vaccinated, however, minors 12-17 years old must be accompanied by a parent or legal guardian.

Pre-registration is encouraged, however, walk-ins will be welcomed. Everyone must wear a face mask.

For those receiving the Pfizer or Moderna vaccine, a follow-up clinic for the second dose is scheduled on Thursday, August 26 from 9 to 11 a.m.

To register for first-dose appointments on July 29, click here. To register for the second dose click here.

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Vaccination clinic offering all three COVID-19 vaccines comes to Virginia Beach - wtkr.com

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