Category: Covid-19 Vaccine

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Greece and France join Italy in making Covid-19 shots mandatory for health workers, telling the unvaccinated they won’t get paid – CNN

July 14, 2021

The UK government, which is pushing ahead with its unlocking plan despite strong warnings from experts, has previously said it will mandate shots for care home staff from October.

Not all health care workers are happy with the move. In Italy, several court challenges launched by those who do not want to get vaccinated are being heard this week. In the UK, a petition against the plan to make vaccines compulsory has attracted more than 72,000 signatures.

French President Emmanuel Macron announced on Monday that health care workers, care home employees and those who work with vulnerable and frail patients in France will have to be vaccinated by September 15. Speaking on LCI television following Macron's announcement, health minister Olivier Vran added that unvaccinated health care workers will be banned from going to work and will not be paid after the September deadline.

Macron also hinted at the possibility of making the shot mandatory for everyone if the epidemic worsens. "Depending on the situation, no doubt we will have to ask ourselves the question of mandatory vaccination for all the French," he said. "I have made the choice of trust and I am appealing to all our non-vaccinated countrymen to go and get vaccinated as soon as possible," he added.

Meanwhile, Greek Prime Minister Kyriakos Mitsotakis announced on Monday that vaccinations will be mandatory for nursing home staff, effective immediately. Those who refuse will be suspended from work starting August 16, he said, adding that from September, vaccinations will be compulsory for all health care workers in both public and private sectors.

Mitsotakis said that, starting on Friday and until the end of August, only those who have had the vaccine will be able to visit indoor commercial areas like entertainment centers, bars, theaters and cinemas.

"The country will not shut down again because of the attitude of some," he said, adding that "it is not Greece that is in danger, but the unvaccinated Greeks."

Germany's Chancellor Angela Merkel said Tuesday that her government had decided not to make vaccines compulsory, adding that she believed many more people still wanted to get vaccinated. She said it was up to the authorities to make both information and vaccines more accessible.

She stressed that the country's Covid restrictions would not be lifted until more people have got their shots.

New restrictions across Europe

The moves by France and Greece come as both countries -- and indeed most of Europe -- see a steep increase in cases of the coronavirus caused by the Delta variant. The strain, first identified in India earlier this year, is more transmissible and has spread across the world in recent months.

There are also worries, based on statements from the Israeli government, that existing Covid-19 vaccines may be slightly less effective in preventing all infections caused by the Delta variant, compared to previous strains. The shots do appear to be highly effective in preventing hospitalizations and deaths.

The threat posed by the Delta variant has prompted several European governments to reintroduce restrictions in recent days.

The Netherlands reinstated curbs on nightclubs and restaurants on Friday after seeing a spike in cases. Dutch Prime Minister Mark Rutte apologized for easing the restrictions at the end of June, telling reporters on Monday that it had been an "error in judgment."

The Spanish regions of Valencia and Catalonia have introduced new restrictions on social gatherings and hospitality, while Portugal has reinstated a curfew in some high-risk areas and said it would start requiring tourists to show a negative test or a vaccination certificate in order to stay in hotels.

Even as most of Europe steps on the emergency brake, the UK government remains adamant that it will drop nearly all remaining coronavirus restrictions in England next week.

Prime Minister Boris Jonson confirmed on Monday that the easing will happen despite a steep increase in Covid cases; he admitted this would lead to "more hospitalizations and more deaths from Covid."

He justified the move by pointing to the country's high vaccination rate and added that it was better to open the economy now, when schools are closed for summer holiday and the weather is good.

"If we were now to delay this fourth step [in the reopening process] -- for instance to September or later -- then we would be reopening as the weather gets colder and as the virus acquires a greater natural advantage and when schools are back," he said at a news conference on Monday.

The decision to push ahead comes despite stark warnings from experts and medical professionals. The British Medical Association (BMA), the doctors' trade union, called the government's plan "irresponsible and perilous."

"Scrapping the remaining restrictions next week -- when a significant proportion of the population will not have been fully vaccinated -- will give this deadly virus an opportunity to re-tighten its grip; pushing infection rates up, increasing hospitalizations and people ill with long-Covid, risking new vaccine-resistant variants developing, and putting more lives at unnecessary risk," Dr. Chaand Nagpaul, the BMA's council chair, said in a statement.

The UK has fully vaccinated roughly half of its population, with two thirds of adults now fully vaccinated and 87% having had at least one shot.

CNN's Sarah Dean, Vasco Cotovio, Mick Krever, Sharon Braithwaite, Rob Iddiols and Chris Liakos in London, Nadine Schmidt in Berlin and Barbara Wojazer in Paris contributed to this report.

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Greece and France join Italy in making Covid-19 shots mandatory for health workers, telling the unvaccinated they won't get paid - CNN

Where to get a free COVID-19 vaccine, test in Sumter, Clarendon, Lee counties: July 14-18 – Sumter Item

July 14, 2021

FROM STAFF REPORTS

All South Carolinians aged 12 and older are eligible to receive the COVID-19 vaccine and can schedule appointments. Currently, Pfizer is the only vaccine available to those aged 12-17. All three vaccines - Pfizer, Moderna and Janssen/J&J - are available to those aged 18 and older.

Visit scdhec.gov/vaxlocator to see the locations accepting vaccination appointments. To register for a DHEC-sponsored clinic, call the vaccine line at 1-866-365-8110 or visit https://cvas.dhec.sc.gov.

Vaccine clinics open for appointments:

Sumter County

- Wednesday-Friday, July 14, 15, 16 - Tandem Health, 370 S. Pike West, Sumter, SC 29150. Make an appointment at https://www.tandemhealthsc.org/covid-19-vaccine/ or call (803) 774-4500.

- Wednesday, July 14 - Sumter County Health Department, 105 N. Magnolia St., Sumter, SC 29150. Open 10 a.m.-2 p.m. Walk-ins welcome. Call 1-866-365-8110 or visit https://cvas.dhec.sc.gov if you prefer to register in advance.

- Thursday, July 15 - Dollar General, 152 W. Willow Grove Road, Lynchburg, SC 29080. Open 9 a.m.-1 p.m., closed noon-12:45 p.m. Walk-ins welcome. First come, first served.

- Friday, July 16 - Ebenezer Community Center, 4580 Queen Chapel Road, Dalzell, SC 29040. Open 10 a.m.-2 p.m. Walk-ins welcome. Call 1-866-365-8110 or visit https://cvas.dhec.sc.gov if you prefer to register in advance.

- Friday, July 16 - Springhill Community Center, 137 Shiver Pond Road, Rembert, SC 29128. Open 9 a.m.-3 p.m., closed noon-12:45 p.m. Walk-ins welcome. First come, first served.

Lee County

- Wednesday, July 14 - Bethlehem United Methodist Church, 115 W. Church St., Bishopville, SC 29010. Open 9 a.m.-3 p.m., closed noon-12:45 p.m. Walk-ins welcome. First come, first served.

- Thursday, July 15 - Lee County Health Department, 810 Brown St., Bishopville, SC 29010. Open 10 a.m.-2 p.m. Walk-ins welcome. Call 1-866-365-8110 or visit https://cvas.dhec.sc.gov if you prefer to register in advance.

TESTING INFORMATION

Free community testing sites for COVID-19 scheduled for this week:

Sumter County

- Central Carolina Technical College, 506 N. Guignard Drive, Sumter, SC 29150

When: 9 a.m.-5 p.m. daily

Sponsored by Tour Health

Go to http://www.tourhealth.com to schedule an appointment.

County health departments open for testing on weekdays

DHEC-sponsored COVID-19 testing will be open on weekdays at the following locations from 9 a.m. to 3:30 p.m.

- Sumter County Health Department, 105 N. Magnolia St.

- Clarendon County Health Department, 110 E. Boyce St., Manning, SC 29102

- Lee County Health Department, 810 Brown St., Bishopville, SC 29010

Preregistration encouraged; visit https://scdhec.gov/gettested.

Editor's note: This is not an exclusive list and was provided in part by DHEC. Local pharmacies and your physician may also offer both COVID-19 tests and vaccines. For a complete list, call DHEC's vaccine hotline at 1-866-365-8110 or go to https://vaxlocator.dhec.sc.gov/ for an interactive map.

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Where to get a free COVID-19 vaccine, test in Sumter, Clarendon, Lee counties: July 14-18 - Sumter Item

COVID-19 vaccination clinics announced | News | journalpatriot.com – Wilkes Journal Patriot

July 14, 2021

The Wilkes Health Department announced a schedule of community COVID-19 vaccination clinics.

Meanwhile, 32% (22,201 people) of Wilkes residents are now fully vaccinated and 35% (24,180 people) have received at least one dose of the vaccine. These percentages have been the same for several weeks.

Statewide, 56% of adults are fully vaccinated.

The following COVID-19 community vaccination clinics are open and free to the public regardless of insurance status.

July 15, Wilkes Early College, 9 a.m. to noon;

July 15, Skyview Center, North Wilkesboro 9-11 a.m. and 4:30-6:30 p.m.

Aug. 2, Wilkes Central High School- 9 a.m. to noon;

Aug. 2, West Wilkes High School- 1-4 p.m.;

Aug. 3, North Wilkes High School, 9 a.m. to noon;

Aug. 3, East Wilkes High School, 1-4 p.m.;

Aug. 5, Wilkes Early College, 9 a.m. to noon;

Aug. 12, St. Paul Episcopal Church, 11:30 a.m. to 1:30 p.m.;

Aug. 21, Rivers Edge Park, Wilkesboro-TBD

Sept. 16-19 at Wilkes Community College during MerleFest

Oct. 2 in downtown North Wilkesboro during the Brushy Mountain Apple Festival. 8 a.m. to 5 p.m.

People interesting in hosting a community vaccine clinic can call 336-651-7450 and ask for Debbie Nicholson or Brandon Call. People who are home bound and wish to be vaccinated can call 336-651-7450 and ask to speak to Debbie Nicholson to arrange this.

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COVID-19 vaccination clinics announced | News | journalpatriot.com - Wilkes Journal Patriot

COVID-19 Vaccines and Kids Under 12: What to Know Healthline – Healthline

July 14, 2021

Despite some progress, the pandemic is still underway. Now, vaccine research is starting to extend its reach beyond teens and adults and on to younger children.

Although some may see children as little adults, children have different reactions to medications and vaccinations, so conducting clinical trials specific to that population is important to fully understand its benefits and potential side effects.

Currently, vaccine manufacturers Pfizer and Moderna are conducting trials in healthy children between the ages of 6 months and 11 years old. These developers have enrolled thousands of children across the United States, Poland, Finland, and Spain.

Understandably, no one wants their family member to get COVID-19. But while the vaccines seem to be the pathway out of the pandemic and to protect against the disease, many parents have questions about vaccines for their loved ones under 12.

We talked to experts about some big questions parents may have about young children and COVID-19 vaccines.

Despite decreasing cases of COVID-19, some children and many adults are still getting extremely sick, and some are even dying.

Although theres not a definitive answer yet, the CDC Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices looked at the risks and benefits of vaccinating children under 12 just recently, according to Dr. C. Buddy Creech, director of the Vanderbilt Vaccine Research Program, and professor of Pediatric Infectious Disease at Vanderbilt University Medical Center.

We certainly see disease in young children, and we have had more COVID-19-related deaths in pediatrics than we do with influenza; as a result, the risk/benefit analysis is in favor of having vaccines available for children under 12 years of age, potentially focusing first on those with underlying health issues, said Creech.

Although we currently dont know exactly when were going to see the vaccines available for those under age 12, there have been some projections for the upcoming school year.

Dr. Alok Patel, a pediatrician at Stanford Childrens Health said hes optimistic a vaccine will be given emergency use authorization for children under age 12 by this fall.

Pfizer is planning on submitting data for emergency use authorization of its COVID-19 vaccine for 5 through 11-year-old children in September or October assuming the safety and efficacy profile is like older groups, we can expect an [authorized] vaccine shortly thereafter. For younger children, my educated guess is it may be later toward the end of 2021 or early 2022, Patel said.

The timing of this vaccine for younger children is especially important as children will start to go back to school, and we now know that many people who are contracting the virus are those that are unvaccinated.

While its true that young children are less likely to become severely ill from COVID-19, theres still a chance.

Healthcare workers across the country have seen children of all ages get sick, be admitted, end up in the ICU, and some in rare circumstances die from the disease and its complications.

In some cases, children have developed multisystem inflammatory syndrome or MIS-C weeks or months after initially developing COVID-19, causing long-term health issues.

Were still learning about the spectrum of COVID in kids. The risk is also increased for any children with underlying comorbidities such as asthma, diabetes, or any type of immunosuppression, Patel told Healthline.

Many experts agree that its possible to open schools to kids for in-person learning before all school-aged children are fully vaccinated. However, its important to take precautions as much as possible to reduce transmission from one child to another.

Practices such as mask wearing, distancing, and ventilation can all assist in lowering risk.

Patel reminds everyone that herd immunity can indirectly protect young children and others who are not yet vaccinated, and parents should consider the case rate and vaccination rate in their own communities when making [a] decision for how to best protect their children against COVID-19.

Dr. Teresa Murray Amato, chair of emergency medicine at Long Island Jewish Hospital encourages parents to: Speak to their pediatricians regarding the appropriateness of their child receiving the vaccine, as vaccinating children could lead to less spread of the virus to more vulnerable populations.

Ensuring that information is from a reliable source is important in making decisions about vaccinating your child.

Having an open dialogue about the risks, benefits, and questions with a physician can assure you of the vaccines safety for your child and what it may mean for your family.

Many parents are eagerly waiting for the vaccines authorization, but some still have their concerns about the vaccines.

I think the biggest concern right now is whether the side effect profile in children will be similar to that of adults, Creech said. If so, parents will have a lot of confidence that this is a safe and effective vaccine.

Vaccine researchers are doing all they can to understand the most significant side effects associated with the vaccines continuously via previous studies with adults and with new findings in the studies that evaluate children.

We always make safety our first priority, in the spirit of first, do no harm. Parents and children can have confidence in that, said Creech.

It is our job as healthcare providers, scientists, and vaccinologists to listen carefully to concerns and try our best to provide solid, helpful information, Creech said.

He pointed out that having an open dialogue is important in the medical decision-making process. Understanding concerns, providing data, and addressing questions that are based on false information can help not only care for patients but dispel false information.

I think at this stage of the pandemic, it is clear to us in medicine that vaccinations for COVID-19 are highly safe and effective. That does not mean that rare side effects cannot happen, but it does mean that those rare side effects should be understood in context since the risk of complications after disease remains much, much higher than the 1 in a million rare events we sometimes see after vaccination, Creech explained.

The COVID-19 vaccines have a remarkable safety profile. Theres no reason to believe that young children will react any differently than older children.

In clinical trials, children aged 12 to 17 tolerated the vaccine very well, without any severe adverse side effects reported. Even still, younger children deserve their own separate trial; younger immune systems may react differently to the vaccine, said Patel.

He pointed out that the data will be thoroughly reviewed by the CDC, Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices, and FDA prior to the vaccines being administered to children under age 12.

There are some serious side effects, including myocarditis, reported in young adults and teens who have been vaccinated. But experts point out the risk from developing COVID-19 is far higher.

Parents should remember both myocarditis and pericarditis following COVID-19 vaccine administration are extremely rare events, Patel told Healthline.

The CDC reviewed the potential link between myocarditis and COVID-19 and found in 12- to 39-year-olds, heart inflammation occurred at a rate of 12.6 cases per million second doses given. The rate after the first dose was 4.4 cases per million doses administered.

Patel reminds parents of two key points regarding myocarditis or inflammation of the heart: The cases of heart inflammation tend to be mild and self-resolving, and that taking your chances with COVID is worse than with the vaccine, as the virus itself can cause heart inflammation alongside MIS-C, organ damage, and worse.

Also, given how rare the cases of myocarditis/pericarditis are and the known risks from the actual virus, its not surprising the American Heart Association, American Academy of Pediatrics, CDC, and other medical groups still recommend teens get the vaccine, Patel said.

Originally posted here:

COVID-19 Vaccines and Kids Under 12: What to Know Healthline - Healthline

City of Columbia, Prisma Health offering COVID-19 vaccines at the Drew Wellness Center Friday – Abccolumbia.com

July 14, 2021

The City of Columbia is partnering with Prisma Health for a free COVID-19 vaccine clinic Friday.Courtesy: City of Columbia

COLUMBIA, SC (WOLO) Weve told you about the City of Columbias effort to get more South Carolinians vaccinated by offering free flights with American Airlines. If want your chance to win, one of those free vaccination events is coming up this week.

Prisma Health will have a vaccination clinic at the Drew Wellness Center on 2101 Walker Soloman Way on Friday from 1-4 p.m. The Pfizer vaccine will be available to everyone ages 12 and older.

Anyone who gets vaccinated at this site will be entered to win two free round trip tickets from American Airlines. The winner will be randomly selected by a drawing at a date to be announced in August.

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City of Columbia, Prisma Health offering COVID-19 vaccines at the Drew Wellness Center Friday - Abccolumbia.com

AI and the COVID-19 Vaccine: Moderna’s Dave Johnson – MIT Sloan – MIT Sloan

July 14, 2021

Topics Artificial Intelligence and Business Strategy

The Artificial Intelligence and Business Strategy initiative explores the growing use of artificial intelligence in the business landscape. The exploration looks specifically at how AI is affecting the development and execution of strategy in organizations.

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We tend not to be a company of half measures, notes Dave Johnson, chief data and artificial intelligence officer at Moderna, so when we decide were going to do something, were going to do it. This characterization certainly seems to fit the Cambridge, Massachusetts-based biotech company that made a name for itself in 2020 upon releasing one of the first COVID-19 vaccines approved by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration for emergency use to combat the coronavirus.

Dave Johnson is chief data and artificial intelligence officer at Moderna, where he is responsible for all enterprise data capabilities, including data engineering, data integration, data science, and software engineering. Johnson earned a doctorate in information physics and has more than 15 years of experience in software engineering and data science. He has spent more than a decade working exclusively in enterprise pharma and biotech companies.

In this bonus episode of the Me, Myself, and AI podcast, our hosts learn how Moderna used artificial intelligence to speed up development of the vaccine and how the technology has helped to automate other key systems and processes to build efficiencies across the organization. Dave also describes Modernas digital-first culture and offers insights around collaboration that can be applied across industries.

If youre enjoying the Me, Myself, and AI podcast, continue the conversation with us on LinkedIn. Join the AI for Leaders group today.

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Sam Ransbotham: What role did artificial intelligence have in helping combat the coronavirus pandemic? Find out today when we talk with an innovative company that used artificial intelligence to help solve the critical problem society faced in the last year.

Welcome to Me, Myself, and AI, a podcast on artificial intelligence in business. Each episode, we introduce you to someone innovating with AI. Im Sam Ransbotham, professor of information systems at Boston College. Im also the guest editor for the AI and Business Strategy Big Idea program at MIT Sloan Management Review.

Shervin Khodabandeh: And Im Shervin Khodabandeh, senior partner with BCG, and I colead BCGs AI practice in North America. Together, MIT SMR and BCG have been researching AI for five years, interviewing hundreds of practitioners and surveying thousands of companies on what it takes to build and to deploy and scale AI capabilities across the organization and really transform the way organizations operate.

Sam Ransbotham: Today were talking with Dave Johnson, chief data and artificial intelligence officer at Moderna. Dave, thanks for joining us. Welcome.

Dave Johnson: Thanks, guys, for having me.

Sam Ransbotham: Can you describe your current role at Moderna?

Dave Johnson: Im chief data and AI officer at Moderna. In my role, Im responsible for all of our enterprise data functions, from data engineering to data science integration. I also manage the software engineering team building unique custom applications to curate and create new data sets [and] also to then take those AI models that are created and build them into processes. So its kind of end-to-end everything to actually deploy an AI model to build, deploy, and put an AI model into production.

Sam Ransbotham: How did you end up in that role? I know you have physics in your background. I didnt hear any physics in what you just said.

Dave Johnson: Its a good point. So I have my Ph.D. in whats called information physics, which is a field closely related to data science, actually. Its about the foundations of Bayesian statistics and information theory a lot of what is involved in data science. My particular research was in applying that to a framework that derives quantum mechanics from the rules of information theory. So that part, youre right, is not particularly relevant to my day-to-day job. But the information theory part and the Bayesian stats [are] completely on target for what I do. In addition to that, I spent many years doing independent consulting in a software engineering data science capacity. And when I finished my Ph.D., I realized academia wasnt really for me; I wanted to do applications, and I ended up with a consulting firm doing work for large pharmaceutical companies.

So I spent a number of years doing that, and it turned out to be a real great marriage of my skill sets: understanding of science, understanding of data, understanding of software engineering. And so I did one project in particular for a number of years in research at a pharmaceutical company around capturing data in a structured, useful way in the preclinical space in order to feed into advanced data and advanced models so, very much what Im doing today. And about seven years ago, I moved over to Moderna. At the time, we were a preclinical stage company, and the big challenge we had was producing enough small-scale mRNA to run our experiments. And what were really trying to do is accelerate the pace of research so that we can get as many drugs in the clinic as quickly as possible. One of the big bottlenecks was having this mRNA for the scientist to run tests in. So, what we did is we put in place a ton of robotic automation, put in place a lot of digital systems and process automation and AI algorithms as well. And [we] went from maybe about 30 mRNAs manually produced in a given month to a capacity of about a thousand in a month period without significantly more resources and much better consistency in quality and so on. So then, I just kind of from there grew with the company and grew into this role that we have now, where Im applying those same ideas to the broader enterprise.

Shervin Khodabandeh: Thats great, Dave. And can you comment a bit on the spectrum of use cases that AI is being applied to here and is really making a difference?

Dave Johnson: For us, what weve seen a lot of is in the research space particularly. In Moderna, thats been because thats where we digitized early. We see that putting in digital systems and processes to actually capture homogeneous, good data that can feed into that is obviously a really important first step, but it also lays the foundation of processes that are then amenable to these greater degrees of automation. So thats where were seeing a lot of that value, is in this preclinical production we have kind of high throughput, we have lots of data, were able to start automating those steps and judgments that were previously done by humans. One example is our mRNA sequence design. Were coding for some protein, which is an amino acid sequence, but theres a huge degeneracy of potential nucleotide sequences that could code for that, and so starting from an amino acid sequence, you have to figure out whats the ideal way to get there. And so what we have [are] algorithms that can do that translation in an optimal way.

And then we have algorithms that can take one and then optimize it even further to make it better for production or to avoid things that we know are bad for this mRNA in production or for expression. We can integrate those into these live systems that we have, so that scientists just press a button and the work is done for them. And they dont know whats going on behind the scenes, but then poof! out comes this better sequence for them. And then weve seen it with quality-control steps as well.

Were also doing some work right now with our clinical partners in the clinical operation space in terms of optimal trial planning. Were doing some work right now around our call center planning. Now that were rolling our vaccine out across the whole world, more and more phone calls are coming in, and as we look to launching in new countries, we have to start planning our resources for that. Were looking at machine learning models to help predict the forecast of these calls so that we can then staff up appropriately. So we do see it across a variety of different areas.

Sam Ransbotham: You mentioned pressing the button scientists press the button, and some trials happen. What do these scientists think? I mean, youve suddenly taken away something that used to be something that they did, and youre having AI do it. Whats the reaction? Are they thrilled? Are they despondent? Somewhere in between?

Dave Johnson: Id say closer to the thrilled side. Usually how it works were a company that believes in giving people a lot of responsibility, and people work really hard. And what that leads to is people doing a lot of work. And so what often happens is, folks will come to us and say, Look, Im doing this activity over and over. I would really love some help to automate this process. And so, in that case, theyre thrilled. They dont want to be looking at some screen of data over and over and over again. They want to be doing something insightful and creative. And so thats where we really partner with them and take off that component of what they do.

Shervin Khodabandeh: Dave, I want to build on that, because I think youre putting your finger on something quite interesting. In addition to the financial impact that many get from AI, productivity, efficiency, and all of that you talked about some of those, Dave there is an impact in overall organizational culture and teams being more collaborative, higher morale, happier, more confident, etc. Are those some of the things that you guys are seeing as well?

Dave Johnson: For sure. I think one of the sure signs of that is we get a lot of repeat customers. If we do some particular algorithm for somebody, that person comes back with the next one or their team comes back time and time again. We dont think about AI in the context of replacing humans. We always think about it in terms of this human-machine collaboration, because theyre good at different things. Humans are really good at creativity and flexibility and insight, whereas machines are really good at precision and giving the exact same result every single time and doing it at scale and speed. What we find [to be] the most successful projects are where we kind of put the two together have the machine do the parts of the job that its good at [and] let the humans take over for the rest of that.

Sam Ransbotham: With this freedom, what have people done? Youve opened up this time. What kind of new

Shervin Khodabandeh: I got two shots of that, what people have done with that freedom.

Sam Ransbotham: Yeah, actually, theres at least one product thats in the market now, isnt there? I think Ive heard something on the news.

Dave Johnson: Theres one, yeah. You know, I always like to joke that work is like a gas that always expands to fill the container. So if you take something off somebodys plate, theres all this mountain of work that they didnt even realize just wasnt being done. And so people are always relieved to then go on and find the next mountain to climb and the next thing to do.

Sam Ransbotham: But what are these kinds of things? How are people choosing how to expand to fill that space?

Dave Johnson: Well, if you think of the examples like the preclinical quality-control steps that weve automated the reality is, [with] one operator stretched over a huge amount of work, its really hard for them to really do really in-depth inspection of these samples. And so by taking off a bulk of that work 80%, 90%, for the algorithm to do that what theyre able to do is just do a better, more thorough job of inspecting the samples that are left. It also means were not hiring a whole bunch of other people just to go look at screens of data. So its a bit of an immediate gain for the people who are there and then kind of this longer-term gain on our head count plans.

Some folks talk about AI in the pharma space being like, I just want an algorithm that can predict, from the structure of a small molecule, the efficacy in humans, like thats the entire drug discovery process. Thats just not going to happen; thats completely unrealistic. So we just think about the fact that there are countless processes, its a very complicated process to bring something to market, and there are just numerous opportunities along the way. Even within a specific use case, youre rarely using one AI algorithm. Its often, For this part of the problem, I need to use this algorithm, and for this, I need to use another.

Shervin Khodabandeh: Dave, I want to ask you something about the talent base and people. You commented that Moderna is the kind of company that likes to give people a lot of freedom [a] highly motivated, smart, ambitious team working to do the best it can. How do you bring and cultivate that talent, and what are you finding to be some of the lessons learned in terms of how to build a high-performing team?

Dave Johnson: Its a good question. I dont know that if we look across the company as a whole there is one particular place where we hire people. We get people from biotechs, [from] five people to pharmas of 100,000 people and everywhere in between, [from] inside the industry and outside the industry. I think for us, its always about finding the right person for the job, regardless of where they come from and their background. I think the important thing for us is to make sure that we set expectations appropriately as we bring them in, and we say, Look, this is a digital company. Were really bold. Were really ambitious. We have really high quality standards. And if we set those expectations really high, it does start to self-select a lot of the people who want to come through that process.

Sam Ransbotham: I want to flip over and talk You mentioned some of the infrastructure, I would call it, that you put in place that suddenly the world benefited from a few months ago. How did people know to get those things set up in the first place? You mentioned being able to scale from, I think, 30 to a thousand different How did you know that was the direction, or that was the vision to get those things set up?

Dave Johnson: Thats a great point. The whole COVID vaccine development, were immensely proud of the work that weve done there, and were immensely proud of the superhuman effort that our people went through to bring it to market so quickly. But a lot of it was built on just what you said: this infrastructure that we had put in place where we didnt build algorithms specifically for COVID; we just put them through the same pipeline of activity that weve been doing. We just turned it as fast as we could. When we think about everything we do at Moderna, we think about this platform capability. We were never going to make one drug; that was never the plan. The plan was always to make a whole platform around mRNA because, since its an information-based product, all you do is change the information encoded in the molecule, and you have a completely different drug. We knew that if you can get one in the market, you can get any number of them to the market. And so all the decisions we made around how we designed the company and how we designed the digital infrastructure was all around this platform notion that were not going to build this for one thing were going to build a solution that services this whole platform. And so thats exactly why we built this early preclinical staff where we can just crank through quite a few of these. Thats why we built these algorithms to automate activities. Anytime we see something where we know that scale and making it parallel is going to improve things, we put in place this process.

Sam Ransbotham: The proof is certainly in the pudding. One thing that Im kind of finding fascinating is how normal this all is. I guess Im just surprised at how much that seems to be part of your Can I use the word DNA here?

Dave Johnson: Its totally fine.

Sam Ransbotham: RNA.

Shervin Khodabandeh: mRNA. Its part of their mRna.

Dave Johnson: Yeah, no, its true. We were founded as a digital biotech and a lot of companies say things and put taglines on stuff, but we really meant it. And we have pushed on this for many years, and weve built out this for many years.

Shervin Khodabandeh: Its the platform you built, and now its running.

Dave Johnson: Its the platform approach we take to our data science and AI projects as well. I hear a lot of struggles from folks around, Great, I built a model and a Jupiter notebook. Now what do I do with it? As they resolve this data cleansing and data curation to even get it to be in a useful state, then they dont know where to go from it to deploy it. And we took the same platform approach to our data science activities. We spent a lot of time on the data curation, data ingestion, to make sure the data is good to be used right away. And then we put a lot of tooling and infrastructure in place to get those models into production and integrated. So this platform mentality is just so ingrained into how we think.

Sam Ransbotham: Take us back to early in the COVID race for a vaccine. What was it like being part of that team and a part of that process? I mean, what were the emotions like when the algorithms or when the people find something that seems to work or that seems promising? Does that lead to a massive appetite for more artificial intelligence and more algorithms? Tell us a little bit about that story.

Dave Johnson: I think if you look at how people felt in general at the time, it was a real sense of honor and pride. We felt very uniquely positioned. Wed spent a decade getting to this point and putting all of this infrastructure in place and putting things in the clinic before this to get to this moment. And so we just really felt truly honored to be in that position. And for those of us on the digital side who have kind of contributed to this and built it, this is why we did it. This is why were here: to help bring as many patients [these vaccines] as quickly and safely as possible [throughout] the world. But there was always the question of, Would this thing work in the real world? And thats where the proof came in the clinical data, and we were all anxiously waiting like everybody else to see that readout.

Shervin Khodabandeh: Was AI always front and center at Moderna, or has it become more critical as a pillar of growth and innovation over time?

Dave Johnson: I think its always been there, though we probably didnt call it that in the early days; its become obviously much more of a hot marketing term than it used to be. But the notion of algorithms taking over decision-making and data science capability was absolutely always there. We were very thoughtful about how we built this digital landscape, such that were collecting structured data across all these steps, knowing full well that what we want to do is then turn those into algorithms to do things. So it was very purposeful for that. But I do think its also come into a greater focus because weve seen the power of it very recently, obviously. Weve seen how this digital infrastructure and how these algorithms can really help push things forward. And so its gotten that kind of a renewed focus and importance in the company.

We tend not to be a company of half measures, so when we decide were going to do something, were going to do it. Its been a very strong message from our senior leadership, about This is the future of the company injecting digital and AI into everything we do. Under no uncertain terms, this is happening. To the point that, as we think about the fact that were growing really fast as a company we just doubled; were probably going to double again were bringing in a lot of new folks from outside the company, to grow, who are not necessarily familiar with this digital culture that weve had. And so, what were working on right now is actually developing what were calling an AI academy, which we intend to be a very thorough, in-depth training for our company, from people who would use and interact with AI models on a daily basis to senior leaders who would be responsible [for] a portfolio of potential projects in their areas. And that just shows the level of serious commitment we have about this. We were built on this concept of having a smaller company thats very agile and can move fast. We see digital as a key enabler for that and AI as a key enabler for that. So the hope is that helps us to compete in ways that other companies cant. And that is certainly the intention here.

Sam Ransbotham: Dave, thanks so much for talking with us today. We really enjoyed I mean, you mentioned Moderna hires smart people, and we know that from a sample size of one thats clearly true. Thanks for taking the time to talk with us today.

Shervin Khodabandeh: Thank you so much.

Dave Johnson: Absolutely, guys. I really appreciate it.

Shervin Khodabandeh: Sam, that was an awesome conversation with Dave. What do you think?

Sam Ransbotham: Impressive. Im glad hes around. Im glad Moderna is around.

Shervin Khodabandeh: Thats right.

Sam Ransbotham: This is real.

Shervin Khodabandeh: Hes not paying lip service to buzzwords and this, that, and the other. Hes just, Yeah, we started this way. Thats why were doing it. We would not have existed without digital and AI and data and analytics. Of course its real. Thats where we are. He said Moderna is a digital company. Thats what he said.

Sam Ransbotham: Its just part of their process. Some of the questions, it didnt even occur to him that it was artificial intelligence; thats just the way they do things. I wonder if thats the new industry after industry, are we going to see the Moderna-type approaches come into industries and just be dominant? The vestiges of historical Oh, weve been around for 100 years are almost a liability versus a plus.

Shervin Khodabandeh: I think this contrast, Sam, that you were trying to get at, which is, How come its so easy for you guys, and what about the pre/post and the transformation? Hes like, Well, we actually started this way. We said we wanted to be a small company.

Sam Ransbotham: They started post.

Shervin Khodabandeh: Yeah, We started post. We wanted to be agile, we wanted to be small, we wanted to do a lot more with everything that we had, and so that had to be platform-centric, data-centric, AI-centric, and thats how we built [the company]. So AI is everywhere. Why are you surprised, Sam, that AI is everywhere? Of course, its everywhere. We do it for planning and the trials and sequencing and Its quite energizing and intriguing how its just a very different mindset toward AI.

Sam Ransbotham: Right. And I know that we dont want to make everything AI. Theres a lot thats going on there thats not artificial intelligence, so I dont want to paint it as entirely [AI], but that certainly was a big chunk of the speed story here, and its pretty fascinating.

Allison Ryder: Thanks for joining us for this bonus episode of Me, Myself, and AI. Well be back in the fall with new episodes for Season 3. In the meantime, stay in touch with us on LinkedIn. Weve created a group called AI for Leaders specifically for audience members like you. You can catch up on back episodes of the show, meet show creators and hosts, tell us what you want to hear about in Season 3, and discuss key issues about AI implementation with other like-minded people. Find the group at https://mitsmr.com/AIforLeaders, which will redirect you to LinkedIn, where you can request to join. Well put that link in the show notes as well, and we hope to see you there.

Sam Ransbotham (@ransbotham) is a professor in the information systems department at the Carroll School of Management at Boston College, as well as guest editor for MIT Sloan Management Reviews Artificial Intelligence and Business Strategy Big Ideas initiative. Shervin Khodabandeh is a senior partner and managing director at BCG and the coleader of BCG GAMMA (BCGs AI practice) in North America. He can be contacted at shervin@bcg.com.

Me, Myself, and AI is a collaborative podcast from MIT Sloan Management Review and Boston Consulting Group and is hosted by Sam Ransbotham and Shervin Khodabandeh. Our engineer is David Lishansky, and the coordinating producers are Allison Ryder and Sophie Rdinger.

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AI and the COVID-19 Vaccine: Moderna's Dave Johnson - MIT Sloan - MIT Sloan

Rob Schneiders Tweets About Covid-19 Vaccines Got These Responses – Forbes

July 11, 2021

Actor and comedian Rob Schneider's tweets and re-tweets about Covid-19 vaccines and precautions got ... [+] a bunch of responses and his name trending on Twitter. (Photo by Frazer Harrison/Getty Images)

Actor and comedian Rob Schneider was trending on Twitter on Saturday. And its not because hes coming out with a new movie sequel named Deuce Bigalow: Male Gigolo Endgame or Deuce Bigalow: Pitched Tent Perfect.

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Theres no indication that such sequels are in the works. Instead, his name seemed to be trending because he sent a series of tweets and re-tweets about the Covid-19 vaccines and other Covid-19 precautions that then got quite a lot of responses. For example, here was one of the exchanges:

Hold on a Second. Did he actually refer to the Second Amendment, the right of the people to keep and bear Arms one when telling people not to get the Covid-19 vaccines?

Its one thing to decide not to get the Covid-19 vaccine. No one is really forcing anyone to get vaccinated. Instead, there are efforts to clear up any misconceptions about the vaccine. This includes helping people really understand the facts behind the good protection offered by the vaccine and its safety record. It also involves dispelling myths such as unfounded claims that the Covid-19 vaccines are designed to alter your genes and claims that Covid-19 vaccination is a human experiment rather than an effort to stop the ongoing Covid-19 coronavirus pandemic.

At the end of the day, if you still dont want to get the Covid-19 vaccine, thats your choice. Just remember though that every choice has its consequences. You wont be able to do everything that you may want to do. Its similar to how deciding not wearing shoes and a shirt may prevent you from getting service at a business, or a job, or a date. Or maybe the shirtless may get you a date, depending on what you have up there.

Its another thing to tell other people to not get the Covid-19 vaccine during the Covid-19 coronavirus pandemic. Such vaccination is a population intervention and not just an individual one. Getting more people vaccinated will decrease the risk of infection for everyone, both vaccinated and unvaccinated people.

Its totally something else to invoke the Second Amendment. Was Schneider actually suggesting that others should use the Second Amendment against Covid-19 vaccination:

Or was he somehow confusing the right to bear arms with the right to have bare arms?

Schneider didnt stop there. He sent out a number of different tweets and re-tweets that all railed against Covid-19 precautions in ways that werent exactly consistent with scientific evidence. For example, this tweet seemed to equate face mask use with child abuse:

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As another example, he re-tweeted a tweet that said the vaccine is only to prevent the infection in the person getting the vaccine, which is just not scientifically accurate. The greater the percentage of the population that is vaccinated, the lower the risk of infection for everyone, including those who are not vaccinated. This is the established principle of herd immunity.

Of course, his tweets alone didnt get his name to trend. That would have required him to send out at least a thousand tweets in one day. Instead, his tweets garnered a bunch of tweet responses and re-tweets such as:

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And this:

But not everyone may have known who Schneider is:

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After all, the Deuce Bigelow movies, his stint as the copy guy on Saturday Night Live, his role on The Hot Chick movie, and all the Adam Sandler vehicles that he acted in came before 2010:

Some offered their perspective on who Schneider is such as:

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Again Schneider is entitled to make his own choices about whether to get the Covid-19 vaccines. The key is to remember that every choice has its consequences. Everyone cant do whatever they want in life. For example, not everyone is allowed to act in Adam Sandler movies. As another example, you cant just pee anywhere you want to pee.

However, it needs to be clear that Covid-19 vaccines have gone through extensive testing and scrutiny, certainly much more than many dietary supplements and food items that are currently on the market, for example. The Covid-19 coronavirus pandemic is real. Its killed over four million people around the world and over 600,000 in the U.S. Its caused a lot of suffering. Currently, the only real ways to stop the spread of the virus are some combination of vaccination, social distancing measures, and face mask use.

Again, getting more people vaccinated will decrease the risk of infection for everyone, both vaccinated and unvaccinated people. Delaying vaccination will just allow the Covid-19 coronaviruses to keep infecting people and keep making copies of themselves, which in turn can lead to more variants emerging:

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In 2008, Schneider acted in an Adam Sandler movie entitled You Don't Mess with the Zohan. Similarly, you dont want to mess with the Covid-19 coronavirus. It would be better to get vaccination coverage high enough to really interrupt transmission so that society can truly return to normal.

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Rob Schneiders Tweets About Covid-19 Vaccines Got These Responses - Forbes

Israel offers third shot of Pfizer COVID-19 vaccine to adults at risk – Reuters

July 11, 2021

JERUSALEM, July 11 (Reuters) - Israel said on Sunday it will begin offering a third dose of Pfizer Inc's (PFE.N) vaccine to adults with weak immune systems but it was still weighing whether to make the booster available to the general public.

The rapid spread of the Delta variant has sent vaccination rates in Israel back up as new infections have risen over the past month from single digits to around 450 a day, and the country has moved to fast-track its next Pfizer shipment.

Health Minister Nitzan Horowitz said that effective immediately, adults with impaired immune systems who had received two doses of the Pfizer vaccine could get a booster shot, with a decision pending on wider distribution.

Pfizer and partner BioNTech SE , the main suppliers in a swift Israeli vaccination rollout that began in December, said on Thursday they will ask U.S. and European regulators within weeks to authorize booster shots.

The two companies cited an increased risk of infection after six months in seeking permission for a third shot.

Drawing criticism from some scientists and officials, the companies did not share the data showing that risk, but said it would soon be made public. They also cited recent Israeli data. read more

"We are examining this issue and we still do not have a final answer," Horowitz, speaking on Kan public radio, said about a booster for the general population in Israel.

"In any case we are administering as of now a third shot to people suffering from immunodeficiency."

About half of the 46 patients presently hospitalised in Israel in severe condition are vaccinated, and the majority are from risk groups, according to the health authorities. About 5.7 million out of Israel 9.3 population has received at leas one dose.

Israel was not going to rush into any decision on booster shots for the general public, Sharon Alroy-Preis, head of public health at the Health Ministry said.

"It's rather complex. We're presently seeing outbreaks largely among children and their parents who weren't necessarily vaccinated in January and February and we need to identify the (statistical) biases," Alroy-Preis told Kan.

It was still unclear, Alroy-Preis added, whether the vaccine was simply less effective against the Delta variant and if illness rates among those vaccinated in January and February were higher than for those who were inoculated later.

SUPPLY GAP

Horowitz said that separately, the health ministry would plug a Pfizer supply gap for ongoing two-dose inoculations of the general adult population by using Moderna Inc (MRNA.O) vaccines already in stock.

Prime Minister Naftali Bennett said in broadcast remarks to his cabinet on Sunday that he has agreed with Pfizer to bring forward the next delivery of doses to Aug 1. The shipment had been widely expected to arrive in September.

There was no immediate response from Pfizer to a request for comment.

Editing by Jeffrey Heller and Raissa Kasolowsky

Our Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.

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Israel offers third shot of Pfizer COVID-19 vaccine to adults at risk - Reuters

Nearly 200,000 Coloradans have skipped their 2nd COVID-19 vaccine dose – Greeley Tribune

July 11, 2021

More than 193,000 Coloradans have missed getting their second COVID-19 vaccination shot within the recommended timeframe, leaving them significantly more vulnerable to the delta variant of the coronavirus than if they had gotten the booster.

That number is small compared to the almost 3 million people who are fully immunized in the state. With more than 3.2 million Coloradans having received one dose of a COVID-19 vaccine, 6% remain only partially protected, according to the state health department.

But Colorados faring better than the country as a whole. Nationally, almost 11% of people who got their first vaccine dose missed getting the second within the recommended timeframe, The Washington Post reported.

These two-dose vaccines are designed to work best when people get both doses, said Beth Carlton, an assistant professor of environmental and occupational health at the Colorado School of Public Health.

The Pfizer and Moderna vaccines require two shots to be given, ideally within three or four weeks of each other, respectively. The second dose for both vaccines may be given up to 42 days, or 6 weeks, after the first. The Johnson & Johnson vaccine requires just one dose.

Researchers have limited data on the effectiveness of the vaccines if the second dose is given later than 6 weeks after the first, according to the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

Its possible that some of the 193,493 people whove been recorded as not getting their second dose within that time period received their booster from a vaccine provider, such as Veterans Affairs, that doesnt report to Colorados immunization database or did so out of state, according to a spokesperson with the Department of Public Health and Environment.

Its unclear why people didnt get their second dose, but it is on vaccine providers to make the logistics of getting the shots accessible, Carlton said.Typically, COVID-19 vaccine providers schedule appointments for a second shot when a person gets their first, according to the state health department.

The agency said it is reaching out to people who are overdue for their second dose, including via phone calls, texts and emails.

Colorado has seen a slowdown in the pace of COVID-19 vaccines in recent months and the states incentive lottery did not spur a significant increase in people getting the shots. During the past two weeks, the state has administered fewer than 100,000 doses per week a level not seen since the shots first became available in December.

As demand has fallen, public health officials have shut down the states mass-vaccination sites, including at Ball Arena in Denver.

Getting Coloradans fully vaccinated is even more critical now that the more contagious and potentially more severe delta variant has become the dominant strain of the virus spreading in the state.

Its estimated by the states COVID-19 modeling team that 90% of new infections in Colorado involve the delta variant and only 52% of the states total population has immunity based on vaccinations and infections.

Generally, one dose of the Pfizer or Moderna vaccines is about 50% effective against symptomatic infection from the coronavirus. But with the delta variant, the efficacy drops to about 35%. By comparison, the efficacy of the vaccines increases to about 90% after the second dose, Carlton said.

Those people who have a single dose are vulnerable to getting symptomatic infection, she said, adding, The vaccines are highly effective against hospitalization for delta or alpha (variants).

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Nearly 200,000 Coloradans have skipped their 2nd COVID-19 vaccine dose - Greeley Tribune

Orioles, Department Of Health Extend COVID-19 Vaccine Promotion To Score Free Tickets – CBS Baltimore

July 11, 2021

BALTIMORE (WJZ) If youre looking to catch an Orioles game anytime soon and you still want to get your Covid shot, the team has you covered.

The Maryland Department of Health and the Baltimore Orioles are extending their vaccination promotion through the end of the season now. That means until September 30, you can receive a voucher for two free tickets to an Os home game, so long as you get vaccinated at Camden Yards.

We are focused on helping all Marylanders step up to the plate and get vaccinated, and we are grateful to theOriolesfor their continued support, said MDH Secretary Dennis R. Schrader. By providing both COVID-19 testing and vaccinations in more community-based settingsespecially as more contagious variantsofthe virus emerge and circulatewere meeting Marylanders where they are to help put an end to this pandemic.

TheOriolesare proud to support the MarylandDepartmentofHealthin making COVID-19 testing and vaccinations more accessible, said Greg Bader,OriolesSenior Vice President, Administration & Experience. As oneofthe premier family and entertainment destinations in the region, Oriole Park is the perfect venue to support this initiative and shared goalofhelping all Marylanders get vaccinated.

An hour before each home game through the first two and a half hours, or the end of the eighth inning, you can get your shot at a rapid COVID test in the lower concourse right across from Section 26.

The vaccine is the one-shot Johnson and Johnson vaccine, and fans must be 18-years or older to get the shot.

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Orioles, Department Of Health Extend COVID-19 Vaccine Promotion To Score Free Tickets - CBS Baltimore

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