Category: Covid-19 Vaccine

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DC leaders try to increase COVID-19 vaccination rates with east-of-the-river effort – WTOP

June 19, 2021

D.C. Mayor Muriel Bowser and infectious disease specialist Anthony Fauci participated in a Community Corps Day of Action in Southeast D.C. on Saturday to increase vaccination rates in certain wards.

WTOP/John Domen

WTOP/John Domen

WTOP/John Domen

WTOP/John Domen

WTOP/John Domen

WTOP/John Domen

Across the entire city, more than 70% of the adult population in the District has received at least one COVID-19 vaccination.

But while that may be the average over all eight wards, its not the average in every single one of the Districts eight wards.

To change that, D.C. Mayor Muriel Bowser and infectious disease specialist Anthony Fauci participated in another Community Corps Day of Action in Southeast D.C. on Saturday.

They visited with volunteers whove been knocking on doors and encouraging people to get jabbed with a vaccine shot at places like Anacostia High School, Ron Brown High School and other venues.

City residents 18 and up who get their first shot between now and July 17 will get a VISA gift card with $51. Residents who get that first shot on Saturday at places like Anacostia High will also be entered into drawings for free groceries, Metro passes and even cars and airline tickets.

Your chances of winning are very, very good, said Bowser, standing outside Kramer Middle School.

We know the devastating impact that COVID has had on African Americans, Bowser told the crowd. We know that 80% of the people that are still getting COVID are African American, and we know that 90% of the people who have died from COVID in our city are African American. This should not be the case.

When Fauci took his turn behind the mic, he said that that the 90% effectiveness of the COVID shots is better than most other vaccines available for various illnesses.

Getting vaccinated, you can stop the chain of transmission of the virus and thats exactly what we want to do, said Fauci. We want to be dead-ends for the virus. When the virus comes to us, sorry, stop signs, youre not getting infected and thats what vaccines do.

Before appearing at Kramer Middle School, they toured the clinic at Anacostia High, just a block away. There, they stopped and surprised people who had just gotten their first shots, as well as volunteers, as they got a briefing on what the situation was in this part of the city. That led to hugs, handshakes and pictures by those who were already inside.

Asking about the vaccination percentage in Ward 8, Fauci was told by a staffer at the clinic that only about 30% to 40% of the ward has been vaccinated, depending on which set of data you look at.

Youve got to to correct that, said Fauci, and youre doing it. Youre doing it.

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DC leaders try to increase COVID-19 vaccination rates with east-of-the-river effort - WTOP

COVID-19 Vaccine Intent Among Kansas Adults Pulse on Kansas, Issue 7 (June 18, 2021) Kansas Health Institute – Kansas Health Institute

June 19, 2021

READ IT HERE:

In April, while more Kansans reported being vaccinated for COVID-19 and fewer Kansans reported being undecided, the percentage of Kansans who said they definitely would not get a vaccine remained steady. This fact sheet analyzes data from the U.S. Census Bureau's Household Pulse Survey for April 14 to 26 and focuses on understanding the reasons why some Kansas adults would definitely not get a vaccine or remained undecided, including those who would probably or would probably not get a vaccine and those who responded by selecting a new "unsure" category on the survey.

Key Points include:

The Kansas Health Institute supports effective policymaking through nonpartisan research, education and engagement. KHI believes evidence-based information, objective analysis and civil dialogue enable policy leaders to be champions for a healthier Kansas. Established in 1995 with a multiyear grant from the Kansas Health Foundation, KHI is a nonprofit, nonpartisan educational organization based in Topeka.

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COVID-19 Vaccine Intent Among Kansas Adults Pulse on Kansas, Issue 7 (June 18, 2021) Kansas Health Institute - Kansas Health Institute

The complex situation for immunocompromised people and COVID-19 vaccines – National Geographic

June 19, 2021

When Margaret Collins, a 43-year-old geologist from Fort Worth, Texas, got her first dose of the Moderna vaccine January 6, she came home and cried.

I was finally getting the shot, she says. I saw it as a step back to the life that I loved.

A self-described extrovert, Collins became a hermit during the pandemic. She and her husband rarely stepped outside, and never without a mask. Her caution is warranted because she suffers from a generalized autoimmune disorder that includes hepatitis, psoriatic arthritis, vitiligo, and type 1 diabetes. Collins is also particularly vulnerable to COVID-19 because she received a donated pancreas and kidney in 2014 and takes three medications to suppress her immune system so her body doesnt reject those organs. Yet, vaccines work by harnessing the capability of a fully competent immune system.

Since the FDA authorized the first COVID-19 vaccine, people with compromised immune systems have lived in limbo, waiting to find out whether, or how much, vaccination might protect them. The vaccine clinical trials excluded nearly all immune-compromised people because including them might interfere with determining vaccine effectiveness for the general population. But thats left this group with little data on what vaccination means for them. Now studies are trickling in.

Were starting to learn some of the things we dont know, whereas before, it was a bunch of we dont know what we dont know, says Peter Martin, a hematologist and oncologist at Weill Cornell Medicine in New York City.

Its difficult to gauge the number of immune-compromised people in the U.S. One study estimates that 2.8 percent of people with private insurance take immune-suppressing drugsabout nine million Americans. But that doesnt include Medicare or Medicaid patients, who are more likely to have some conditions requiring immunosuppression, says study author Beth Wallace, a rheumatologist at University of Michigan Medicine. It also doesnt include people with immune-compromising conditions who arent taking immune-suppressing medications.

From the very beginning of the pandemic Collins worried how her body would respond to the vaccine. But when she later read a study of organ transplant recipients that found low antibody levels after the first mRNA vaccine dose, she panicked.

Even though she had been vaccinated and wore a mask, she thought How safe was I? It really scared me.

A follow-up study that found about half of transplant recipients responded to the vaccine offered her little comfort. Thats essentially the flip of a coin, Collins says. But a small study published Monday offers a flicker of hope.

After two doses of mRNA vaccine, 30 transplant recipients with no or low antibodies got a third shot, though not necessarily of the same vaccine they received first. The six people with low antibody levels subsequently developed higher levels, and a quarter of the others, who had never responded to the COVID-19 vaccine, developed antibody levels thought to be high enough to prevent COVID-19 after the third dose.

But this study has substantial limitations: Its very small and involves a grab bag of different vaccine combinations. Further, the Food and Drug Administration has not authorized a third dose, and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention currently advises against it. The authors concluded that their findings suggest the need for more studies to test third doses in people without fully functioning immune systems.

Immune-compromised people fall into two broad categories: Either they have an underlying condition that weakens their immune system, such as people with leukemia, uncontrolled HIV, or a rare genetic disease, or they have an underlying condition requiring immune-suppressing therapy, such as organ transplant recipients and people with rheumatic diseases (inflammatory, autoimmune conditions) or some cancers. A few conditions, such as chronic lymphocytic leukemia and lupus, fall into both categories.

Factors that might affect someones response to a vaccine include the medication theyre taking and what it does, how long theyve been taking it, their specific disease, and their history of infection. For organ transplant recipients, the time since their transplant may also matter.

Thats why its really important for people who have these immune-suppressed conditions to talk to an expert about their specific situation, because there is such a great amount of variability, says Aaron Richterman, an infectious disease fellow at the University of Pennsylvania Perelman School of Medicine, regarding how immune-compromised people can assess their infection risk after vaccination.

The wide range of conditions and drugs that weaken the immune system explain why the response to COVID-19 vaccines is so mixed. The evidence so far shows that transplant recipients, certain leukemia patients, and people taking a handful of specific medications have the poorest vaccine response. The drugs that appear linked with the poorest response include mycophenolate (prevents organ rejection), rituximab (treats some blood cancers and autoimmune diseases like rheumatoid arthritis), belatacept (prevents organ rejection), and methotrexate (treats a wide range of cancers and autoimmune diseases).

For example, the organ transplant study Collins read found only 54 percent of 658 organ transplantrecipients had any antibodies after two doses of the mRNA vaccine, particularly if they were taking a drug like mycophenolate. A similar study of 609 kidney transplant recipients found half had detectable antibodies after mRNA vaccination, but only 5 percent of those taking belatacept did. Transplant recipients produced even fewer antibodies in response to the one-dose Johnson & Johnson vaccine.

Studies in people with autoimmune disease have similarly shown that vaccine response typically depends on the specific drug theyre taking.

In a study of 404 people with rheumatic disease who had both doses of an mRNA vaccine, almost all had detectable antibodies, but those taking rituximab or mycophenolate had very low levels. Meanwhile, everyone taking anti-inflammation drugs called tumor necrosis factor (TNF) inhibitors to treat Crohn's disease or rheumatoid or psoriatic arthritis, had strong antibody responses.

Another study (preprint) of 133 people had similar findings: Antibody levels were 1/50 as high in people taking rituximab, a drug that intentionally depletes antibody-producing B cells, as in people with competent immune systems. Those taking certain chemotherapy drugs, rheumatoid arthritis drugs, or prednisonea steroid that treats inflammationalso had lower antibody levels.

People with certain types of leukemia or lymphomas, particularly non-Hodgkins lymphoma and chronic lymphocytic leukemia, also dont produce many antibodies after vaccination, though people with most other cancers fare better. Thats particularly concerning since some people with CLL dont know they have it, says study author Mounzer Agha, director of the Mario Lemieux Center for Blood Cancers at University of Pittsburgh Medical Center.

Those are just a sampling of the studies examining different immune-compromising conditions and medications, but all are small, providing only some insight into these specific conditions or therapies.

What matters is how much immunosuppression youre getting, what agents youre getting, and possibly how long youve been getting them, says Dorry Segev, a transplant surgeon and researcher at Johns Hopkins Medicine who wrote the organ transplant studies and several others above.

These studies also focus only on antibody response, which is just one component of the immune response.

We think antibody levels may correlate to clinical protection to a degree, Richterman says. But even in healthy people, he says, we dont know the minimum antibody levels necessary to assure protection. Since the significance of antibody levels is ambiguous, the FDA and CDC recommend against antibody testing because it is unclear how to interpret the findings.

Immunologic responses and effectiveness of a vaccine are two different things, says Emily Blumberg, director of Transplant Infectious Diseases at Penn Medicine in Philadelphia. We think vaccinating [transplant] patients may have a benefit above and beyond what you can measure with antibodies.

Thats partly because vaccines induce immunity in multiple ways. One way is stimulating B cells to make antibodies, which explains why medications that reduce B cellssuch as rituximab, methotrexate, mycophenolate, and steroidsresult in such poor responses. But vaccines can also stimulate killer T cells, which attack infected cells, and helper T cells, which aid B cells and killer T cells.

Our understanding of whats happening on the T cell side is pretty close to zero, Segev says. Studying T cell responses is difficult and costly, he adds, though his group and others are working on it.

Vaccines can also trigger the production of memory B cells, which remember how to make antibodies. If you get the virus and the memory cells are there, then you can have a better and faster antibody response the next time around, explains Ignacio Sanz, chief of rheumatology at Emory University School of Medicine. He believes that presence of memory B cells might partly explain why a third vaccine dose led to antibody production in transplant recipients without previous responses.

The only way to find out how effective the vaccines actually are in immune-compromised people is to wait fordata comparing infections between vaccinated and unvaccinated people in different immune-compromised groups, and that takes time.

Where does all this leave the millions of people who dont know if they are protected by the vaccine, especially with the CDCs advice that vaccinated people can stop masking?

For now, get vaccinated, act unvaccinated, Segev says. But thats a difficult message to communicate.

One of the unintended consequences of [that message] is fueling vaccine hesitancy in patients who say, Why should I bother if Im not going to have a response? Blumberg says.

A February study of more than 1,200 people with autoimmune disease found that more than half wanted to get vaccinated, and a third were uncertain, despite studies showing the vaccines are safe for those with inflammatory diseases.

Alfred Kim, a rheumatologist at the Washington University School of Medicine who conducted one of the studies on people with rheumatic disease, agrees it can be confusing to advise patients to get vaccinated without being able assure it protects them, but even partial protection is better than no protection, he says.

That introduces another problem: How safely can immune-compromised people go out in public even if vaccinated?

The CDC guidelines assume everybody is socially responsible, which unfortunately is not the case, Agha says.

Masks work, but masks work best if everybody is wearing them, Segev says. If you have a superspreader walking around Kroger spewing their Delta variant all over the store, and theyre standing next to an immunosuppressed transplant patient who tried their best to get vaccinated and is still wearing a mask, that [immunosuppressed] person is still at risk.

While immune-compromised patients have always been more susceptible to infections, even before the pandemic, the stakes are higher now.

With influenza, it was not such a great concern because patients do survive influenza even when they get quite ill, Mounzer says. With COVID, its a different story. Theres a real risk of dying from the disease.

In a post-masking world, that makes even brief trips to the grocery store more complicatedand perilousfor immune-compromised people.

As a society I think we have an obligation to come up with strategies to prevent those people from getting acutely sick so they can re-enter society like the rest of us are all ready to do, Martin, the hematologist, says. Theyre just as ready as anybody else, and its terrifying to be in their position.

Blumberg tells her patients to encourage friends, family members, and coworkers to get vaccinated. The better job we do with vaccinating everybody, the less COVID there will be to make them sick, she says.

Thats exactly what Collins, the vaccinated transplant recipient from Texas, is doing. But she has friends and family members who refuse to get vaccinated, and that frightens her, not only for herself but also for other immune-compromised family members and friends.

If we reach herd immunity, then I have less to worry about, Collins says. But she doesnt think the country will reach that milestone, which is scary for people like me.

If social responsibility does not motivate people to get vaccinated, theres also the specter of new variants. Evidence suggests that people whose immune systems dont respond properly to infection could provide an ideal environment for mutations, says John Moore, a microbiologist and immunologist at Weill Cornell Medicine in New York City. They have a lot of ongoing viral replication in their bodies for prolonged periods of time, Moore says. Virus replication in an antibody-low individual can drive the emergence of variants that are problematic on a societal basis, so this is not a trivial issue.

In other words, protecting the most vulnerable members of society is ultimately the best way to protect all of society.

These are the patients that are going to be a source of continued infection in the population, Blumberg says. If we dont protect these immuno-suppressed hosts, we will have a harder time getting rid of the virus.

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The complex situation for immunocompromised people and COVID-19 vaccines - National Geographic

Novavax Offers U.S. a Fourth Strong Covid-19 Vaccine – The New York Times

June 17, 2021

Novavax, a small American company buoyed by lavish support from the U.S. government, announced on Monday the results of a clinical trial of its Covid-19 vaccine in the United States and Mexico, finding that its two-shot inoculation provides potent protection against the coronavirus.

In the 29,960-person trial, the vaccine demonstrated an overall efficacy of 90.4 percent, on par with the vaccines made by Pfizer-BioNTech and Moderna, and higher than the one-shot vaccine from Johnson & Johnson. The Novavax vaccine showed an efficacy of 100 percent at preventing moderate or severe disease.

Despite these impressive results, the vaccines future in the United States is uncertain and it might be needed more in other countries. Novavax says it may not seek emergency authorization from the Food and Drug Administration until the end of September. And with a plentiful supply of three other authorized vaccines, its possible that the agency may tell Novavax to apply instead for a full license a process that could require several extra months.

The companys chief executive, Stanley Erck, acknowledged in an interview that Novavax would probably win its first authorization elsewhere. The company is also applying in Britain, the European Union, India and South Korea.

I think the good news is that the data are so compelling that it gives everybody an incentive to pay attention to our filings, Mr. Erck said.

By the time Novavax gets the green light from the U.S. government, it may be too late to contribute to the countrys first wave of vaccinations. But many vaccine experts expect that, with waning immunity and emerging variants, the country will need booster shots at some point. And the protein-based technology used in the Novavax vaccine may do a particularly good job at amplifying protection, even if people have previously been vaccinated with a different formulation.

They may be really the right ones for boosters, said Dr. Luciana Borio, who was the acting chief scientist at the F.D.A. from 2015 to 2017.

Last year, the Trump administrations Operation Warp Speed program awarded Novavax a $1.6 billion contract for 100 million future doses. The company won this tremendous support despite never having brought a vaccine to market in over three decades.

In January, Novavax announced that its 15,000-person trial in Britain found that the vaccine had an efficacy of 96 percent against the original coronavirus. Against Alpha, a virus variant first identified in Britain, the efficacy fell slightly to 86 percent. In South Africa, where Novavax ran a smaller trial on 2,900 people and the Beta variant was dominant, the company found an efficacy of just 49 percent.

But the South Africa trial was complicated by the fact that a number of the volunteers had H.I.V., which is known to hamper vaccines. In addition, the study was so small that it was difficult to estimate how much protection the vaccine provided H.I.V.-negative volunteers.

With the support of Operation Warp Speed, Novavax drew up plans for an even larger late-stage trial in the United States and Mexico. But difficulties with manufacturing delayed its launch until December.

By then, the United States had authorized the Pfizer-BioNTech and Moderna vaccines. In February, with the Novavax trial still underway, the government authorized Johnson & Johnsons.

As it waited for trial results, Novavax partnered with other companies to start making massive quantities of its vaccine. In India, it joined forces with the Serum Institute, and in South Korea, SK Biosciences. Novavax reached an agreement with Gavi, the Vaccine Alliance, to supply 1.1 billion doses to middle- and low-income countries.

But the companys difficulties with scaling continued, and it needed more time to develop special tests used to confirm the quality of its product.

June 17, 2021, 10:30 a.m. ET

The new results were based on 77 trial volunteers who came down with Covid-19. The volunteers who received placebo shots were far more likely than the vaccinated ones to get sick, a statistical difference that translated to an efficacy of 90.4 percent.

Its a strong result, said Natalie Dean, a biostatistician at the University of Florida. It puts them up in that high tier.

The vaccine showed the same efficacy in a group of high-risk volunteers people who were over the age of 65, had medical risk factors or had jobs that exposed them to the virus.

Novavax sequenced the genomes of 54 of the 77 viral samples, and found that half were Alpha, the variant that became dominant in the United States this spring.

The vaccines side effects were relatively mild. Some volunteers reported fatigue, headaches and other minor symptoms. This vaccine seems easier on the arms, said John Moore, a virologist at Weill Cornell Medicine who was a volunteer in the Novavax trial.

Novavax will apply for authorization in the United States after it finishes developing a quality control test, according to its chief executive. You have to test them every way from Sunday to show that under any conditions you get the same answer, Mr. Erck said. And that takes time.

Mr. Erck said that the company plans on making 100 million doses per month by the end of the third quarter, and 150 million doses per month by the end of the fourth quarter.

With each passing week, the United States is building a bigger supply of authorized vaccines from other companies, raising the question of whether the nation needs to give any more emergency use authorizations, or EUAs.

The law says that once you have sufficient doses, theres no need for additional E.U.A.s, Dr. Borio said.

One sign that the F.D.A. is changing its approach to Covid-19 vaccines came last week. An American company called Ocugen had been seeking emergency authorization for Covaxin, a Covid-19 vaccine now in use in India. But on Thursday, the company announced that the F.D.A. had recommended they instead take the standard path to a full approval, known as a biologics license application, which takes many additional months.

But because Novavax has been consulting with the F.D.A. since last year about its trials, Mr. Erck said the company might be able to continue with its plans for seeking emergency use authorization.

So far, theyve indicated that if youre in the process for an E.U.A, you can continue for an E.U.A., Mr. Erck said. Anybody could tell you that could change, but I dont know how to predict that.

Dr. Paul Offit, a professor at the University of Pennsylvania and a member of the F.D.A.s vaccine advisory panel, said that Novavaxs highly effective vaccine would be most welcome. The more the merrier, he said. I think theres room for many more vaccines, because were going to be dealing with this virus for years, if not decades.

Novavax is preparing for that future by investigating how its vaccine could work as a booster. A new version of the vaccine contains the proteins from the Beta variant first identified in South Africa.

Researchers gave Beta boosters to baboons that had been vaccinated with the original version of the Novavax vaccine in experiments a year ago. The researchers found that the baboons immunity against Covid-19 shot up after this booster, protecting them against Beta, Alpha and the original version of the coronavirus.

When you boost, you see a very high recall response, said Matthew Frieman, a virologist at the University of Maryland School of Medicine and a co-author of the new study. The study has not yet been published in a scientific journal.

Dr. Frieman said the new study offered encouraging evidence that Novavax vaccines might work well as boosters. It also suggested that people getting vaccines for the first time might do well to get a blend of the original and Beta versions to widen their protection against new variants, he said.

Novavax may be used as a booster in the U.S., but it certainly will be the first vaccine a lot of people are going to see around the world, he said.

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Novavax Offers U.S. a Fourth Strong Covid-19 Vaccine - The New York Times

President Joe Biden has a goal of 70% COVID-19 vaccination by July 4. Will Kansas be able to meet it? – The Topeka Capital-Journal

June 17, 2021

The state's top health official said Wednesday his agency was "well-prepared" to pick up the slack on COVID-19 vaccinations now that Kansas' pandemic emergency declaration expired.

But Health Secretary Lee Norman told reporters on a conference call thatthe state's prospects for hitting President Joe Biden's goal of a70% vaccinationrate by July 4 appear to be dimming, although he underscored the state would be redoubling its efforts as the summer progresses and schools return to class in the fall.

As of Wednesday,Kansas Department of Health and Environment data showed 43.4% of the state's residents had received at least one vaccine dose,as demand for jabs has slowed considerably in recent weeks.

The first two weeks of April saw more than 227,000 individuals get at least their first vaccine dose, according to data from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. The first two weeks of June saw only 79,413 doses administered, by comparison.

"I think we're doing pretty well but, to be honest with you, I think we'll struggle to get to the 70% mark by July 4," Norman said.

More: The state's COVID-19 emergency declaration has ended. Our podcast tells you what you need to know.

The Kelly administration and its Democratic allies in the Legislature have argued the move by Republicans to end theemergency declaration will make the vaccination task more difficult, with Kansas National Guard members no longer able to transfer or administer doses.

There are about 20 guard-supported events previously scheduled before the end of July, with KDHE and local agencies now set to pick up the slack.

The Kansas Department of Emergency Management has also been responsible for mobile clinics, a tool used with increasing frequency as the state moves away from mass vaccination events to a more nimble, targeted approach.

Republicans argue staffing levels in the state should have no problem supporting vaccination efforts without the emergency order in place.

"The remaining goal to make vaccines available to all Kansans who want them is one that our state can achieve without emergency measures and executive orders," House Speaker Ron Ryckman, R-Olathe,said in a statement Tuesday.

Previously: Kansas lawmakers agree to extend COVID-19 emergency but end eviction, foreclosure ban

But Norman said some issues would remain, particularly amid a record surge of personnel leavinglocal health departments. It is likely the state will rely more on contract nurses to administer vaccine doses, although demand remains high for those workers nationally.

And he added the need remains for an adequate number of school nurses when kids head back to class in the fall, with the guard no longer able to support vaccinations in that setting.

But the main challenge, Norman added, was logistics, with the guard unable to help move vaccine doses, test specimens and other items across the state. Kansas is aiming to stand up a courier service to handle some of these elements in the coming weeks to handle some of those items.

"A health agency typically doesn't run warehouses and doesn't tend to have trucks and truck drivers and those kinds of things that are required for distribution," he said. "It is a logistical matter. But I think we're in good step. ... Short of an acceleration in the number of cases, I think we're in good step to be able to do this."

One bit of good news for the state is a move from the Food and Drug Administration to extend the shelf life for millions of Johnson & Johnson vaccine doses.

A KDHE spokesperson last week said the state had roughly 56,000 J&J doses in inventory, which were previously set toexpire in the "next couple of weeks."

Dennis Kriesel, executive director of the Kansas Association of Local Health Departments, noted state officials had become more comfortable with doses potentially expiring or spoiling once they are sent to counties as long as it means some individuals are getting vaccinated.

"Early on in the pandemic, there was a lot of concern about wasting a single dose because demand was so high. ... The approach is different now," Kriesel said.

Previously, when the state sent doses to counties, it was in larger packages, with a hesitancy to send smaller numbers of doses. Now, officials say the state will break down those containers of Moderna and Pfizer shots, with the potential to ship individual vials of vaccine.

This is especially important for more remote counties, which often lack the capabilities to store the Pfizer vaccine even though it is the only shot currently authorized for children 12 and older.

"If you're living in Overland Park and see drive-through (clinics) where you can get vaccines, maybe the perception is 'Oh they're out there, they're everywhere," said Kristie Clark, a family physician in Jetmore."But for rural communities, it can be very hard."

And the state is making a more concerted effort to get doses to doctor's offices, with officials long believing physicians are best positioned to make the case for residents to get vaccinated.

Both the Kansas Association of Family Physicians and the Kansas Association of Pediatricians, are set to receive state-funded grants to help doctors jump through administrative hoops to get vaccine doses in their offices.

More: Food System Analysis approved by Shawnee County commissioners to address food access issues

Physicians note they encounter vaccine hesitant individuals all the time but often find they are able to win them over with persistence.

"We've got to get people in the offices and have the shots there," said Allen Greiner, medical officer for theKansas City, Kansas, Wyandotte County Unified Government Health Department.

As the push for vaccinations continue, Norman and Gov. Laura Kelly say they are keeping close tabs on Missouri.A recent spike ofcases in the Show-Me-State has seen some counties become full-blown hotspots, particularly in areas frequented by tourists.

Officials acknowledge the potential for spread to Kansas but hope the state's progress on vaccinations will make a dent on any risk to the state.

"I watch the numbers very closely to see where Kansas is and what, if anything, might be coming to get us again," Kelly told reporters Wednesday.

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President Joe Biden has a goal of 70% COVID-19 vaccination by July 4. Will Kansas be able to meet it? - The Topeka Capital-Journal

Should Employers Mandate Covid-19 Vaccination? Heres One Reason Why Companies Are Struggling With This Question – Forbes

June 17, 2021

A new survey by Willis Towers Watson released this week indicates that nearly 72% of U.S. employers do not plan on requiring Covid-19 vaccination prior to re-entering the workspace. This is a fascinating finding, especially as the trajectory of vaccination numbers in the U.S. has been on a steady decline.

Although case counts in the U.S. have also been declining since the mass rollout of vaccines began for the general public, many experts fear that not enough people are getting vaccinated quickly enough, given the rising presence of variants and viral mutations worldwide.

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To add to the list of things to consider, many companies are planning to reopen in the coming months and are grappling with a challenging decisioncan and should offices require employees to be vaccinated against Covid-19? And if so/not, what does this potentially entail?

NEW YORK, NEW YORK - APRIL 03: A sign at a gas station alerts customers that a business in Queens, ... [+] which had one of the highest infection rates of coronavirus in the nation, is closed. (Photo by Spencer Platt/Getty Images)

Given just how unprecedented this pandemic has been, Covid-19 brought with it many gray areas across different aspects and has completely upheaveled all sense of what normal is. One of the most critical issues that experts are confronting is the question of liability when it comes to requiring vaccinations in the workplace. Scholars on both sides of the aisle were equally perplexed when the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission (EEOC) stated in a guidance updated as of May 2021 that The federal EEO laws do not prevent an employer from requiring all employees physically entering the workplace to be vaccinated for COVID-19, subject to the reasonable accommodation provisions of Title VII and the ADA and other EEO considerations discussed below. The EEOC does add that In some circumstances, Title VII and the ADA require an employer to provide reasonable accommodations for employees who, because of a disability or a sincerely held religious belief, practice, or observance, do not get vaccinated for COVID-19, unless providing an accommodation would pose an undue hardship on the operation of the employers business.

Albeit this official recommendation by the EEOC, it is noteworthy to recognize that just because there is a government sanctioned guidance or law, it does not mean that the law will not be broken or challenged. In fact, one can likely expect that over the course of the next decade, there will be hundreds if not thousands of court cases regarding Covid-19 and all of its related issues, many of which will undoubtedly involve workplace issues.

The confusion for companies is straightforward: how will employees react if they do mandate vaccines? Will employees be unhappy, regardless of what the EEOC says? And if companies decide not to mandate vaccines and leave the choice completely upto employees, what does this entail? What happens if there is a massive breakout of infection at a workplace? Can companies be held responsible for not doing more to protect employees in the office?

HUNT VALLEY, MARYLAND - MARCH 21: A Maryland Cleaning and Abatement Services employee performs a ... [+] preventative fogging and damp wipe treatment at an office building on March 21, 2020 in Hunt Valley, Maryland. The outbreak of the COVID-19 pandemic has sparked more proactive measures at businesses to combat the spread of the coronavirus. (Photo by Rob Carr/Getty Images)

The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) has provided relatively robust guidance for businesses and employers regarding preventing the spread of Covid-19 in the workplace, including specific recommendations on how to Prevent and Reduce Transmission Among Employees, testing in the office, and maintaining Healthy Business Operations.

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But all of this takes significant time, effort, coordination, and money. Workplaces are not only feeling pressure to keep up with the recovering economy and booming demand for services, but now they must invest a significant amount of resources in a new Covid-19-era workplace. Employee safety campaigns and training sessions will have fully renovated meaning to them. Workplace sanitation will require physical investment to ensure social distancing, proper ventilation, and adequate cleanliness, among other things. There will also have to be significant investment for testing employees, providing for flexible work schedules, and preparing for contingencies incase of infection breakouts or other public health scenarios. And if this is what it takes to protect employees, then companies should undoubtedly make these initiatives a top priority. But how will employers know how much is enough? What standard should companies use to prepare, given that this entire situation is unprecedented?

Although there are perhaps no specific right or wrong answers to these issues, it is critical to note that these are the somewhat paradoxical questions that companies (and schools, institutions, and likely every other organization worldwide) are facing, especially at a time where the economic and job market is already relatively fragile. Indeed, the conundrum emerges in balancing the safety of employees while also giving them autonomy over their own healthcare and lifestyle choices. Certainly, this enigma will likely be the source of a significant amount of debate and litigation in the coming months and years, as both workers and organizations struggle to navigate relatively uncharted seas.

The content of this article is not implied to be and should not be relied on or substituted for professional medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment by any means, and is not written or intended as such. This content is for information and news purposes only. Consult with a trained medical professional for medical advice.

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Should Employers Mandate Covid-19 Vaccination? Heres One Reason Why Companies Are Struggling With This Question - Forbes

The Department Of Public Safety Must Build Trust Around The COVID-19 Vaccine – Honolulu Civil Beat

June 17, 2021

Protecting the health and safety of those in the custody of the state is the responsibility that the state assumes when it imprisons someone. It has been proven that the health of imprisoned persons impacts the health and well-being of the entire community, and effective health care in jails and prisons has been proven to generate health benefits in the community.

This is a phenomenon referred to as community dividend.

As we are now 15 months into this pandemic and its many mutations, the way that Hawaii addresses congregate settings is crucial for the health of everyone in every community. The growing outbreak at the Hilo jail just made that painfully clear.

Staff enter and exit jails and prisons multiple times a day. This increases the likelihood of transmission and places people with nowhere else to go in great jeopardy while increasing the states (taxpayers) liability.

Vaccinating people who live in congregate settings is common sense and sound public health policy that protects our communities in Hawaii from COVID-19 and its many mutations. Congregate environments where people are living and breathing on top of each other are petri dishes for infection.

The growing outbreak of this airborne virus at the Hilo jail is disturbing not only for the people who live and work there, but for the community whose homes are right across the street.

We have been told by many people inside and their families that jails and prisons appear to be making it up as they go along. The messaging is therefore confusing and inconsistent.

We have learned that the lack of trust in taking the vaccine is not just from the people who are imprisoned but from staff as well. Some have said that the department has shown that it cares little about them, so why should they believe that the department suddenly cares about them now?

A good way to build trust is for the department to show that they care about their staff and the people entrusted to their care. There are things that can be done to start the trust-building process while stemming the spread of the virus:

Other jurisdictions have found ways to encourage their imprisoned persons to take the vaccine. North Dakota provides educational information about vaccines, including holding town hall discussions where medical experts answer questions. The agency believes that full transparency is the key to winning people over.

Ohios incarcerated are given information about the vaccine in one-on-one meetings with health care providers before they decide whether to get the vaccination.

In fact, four jurisdictions (Massachusetts, Oregon, Rhode Island and Virginia) have a 70% vaccination rate and recently Illinois reported vaccinating 69% of its incarcerated people.

In Hawaii, we learned that the Department of Public Safety doesnt keep track of vaccinations and therefore cannot report the percentage of imprisoned people who are vaccinated.

When a person gets vaccinated in the community, they receive a card listing the dates of their first and second shots as well as the vaccine received. Since this seems to be standard public health protocol, one would assume the department does know who has gotten vaccinated. We have since learned that imprisoned people who get vaccinated do get a card, however, the facility puts it directly into the persons file.

Transparency and clear messaging is crucial, especially during a public health crisis that affects the entire community.

For the health and safety of all, lets remember that prison health is public health.

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The Department Of Public Safety Must Build Trust Around The COVID-19 Vaccine - Honolulu Civil Beat

About 25% of Erie County’s teens have received at least one dose of COVID-19 vaccine – GoErie.com

June 17, 2021

Fairview 14-year-old receives COVID-19 vaccine

Tara Hokaj, a 14-year-old Fairview Township girl, talks about why she wanted to be one of the first people her age to get the COVID-19 vaccine.

David Bruce, Erie Times-News

Editor's Note: The Erie County Department of Health originally said a case of the Delta COVID-19 variant, discovered in India, hadbeen detected in the county. That is not correct and this story has been updated.

Erie County health officials are encouraged by the number of children and teenagers who are receiving the COVID-19 vaccine.

About 25% of county residents between the ages of 10 and 19 have received at least one dose of COVID-19 vaccine, said Charlotte Berringer, R.N., director of community health services for the Erie County Department of Health.

Marjorie Cua, M.D.: What parents need to know about kids, COVID-19 and vaccines

That number is impressive considering that 10- and 11-year-olds are not currently eligible for the vaccine and 12- to 15-year-olds have only been allowed to be vaccinated since mid-May.

"I'm pleased with the number of young people getting vaccinated, but it needs to continue," Berringer said.

One reason Berringer wants to see vaccination rates climb is that more variants of COVID-19 havebeen detected in the county.

A case with the Gamma variant, originally found in Brazil, was detected May 26, while a case of the Beta variant, originally found in South Africa, was detected June 1, Berringer said.

The variants are often more transmissible than the original COVID-19 strain.

"Another concern is that our hospitalization rates have not decreased significantly in recent weeks," Berringer said. "There is still virus in the community and people are getting sick enough to be hospitalized."

The county's 14-day moving average of daily COVID-19 hospitalizations was 14.8 on Tuesday, about the same number it was in early April. The actual daily number has declined in recent days, including just six hospitalized county residents on Tuesday.

One way to reduce new cases and hospitalizations is to properly isolate yourself if you test positive for COVID-19 and quarantine yourself if you are determined to be a close contact of a positive case, Berringer said.

"These public health policies have not changed," Berringer said. "If you test positive for COVID, you need to isolate for 10 days from the date of your first symptom. If you are determined to be a close contact, you must quarantine for 10 days and wear a face mask for days 11 to 14."

Contact David Bruce at dbruce@timesnews.com. Follow him on Twitter @ETNBruce.

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About 25% of Erie County's teens have received at least one dose of COVID-19 vaccine - GoErie.com

No sign that the COVID-19 vaccines’ spike protein is toxic or ‘cytotoxic’ – PolitiFact

June 17, 2021

The headline on a YouTube video and a person who speaks in it make a troubling claim about the way the COVID-19 vaccines work.

"Spike protein is very dangerous, it's cytotoxic," they say, referring to the molecule that triggers the bodys immune system to produce antibodies against COVID-19 infection.

Its one of a number of widely shared social media posts alleging that the vaccines are toxic or "cytotoxic," which means toxic to cells.

The YouTube post, which was shared on Facebook, was flagged as part of Facebooks efforts to combat false news and misinformation on its News Feed. (Read more about our partnership with Facebook.)

Experts say there is no evidence that the spike proteins produced by the Moderna and Pfizer vaccines, or the spike protein created by genetic material in the Johnson & Johnson vaccine, are toxic.

The video

The 15-minute video, posted June 13, shows three people speaking on a podcast.

Bret Weinstein, who is identified in the video as an evolutionary biologist, is the one who says the spike protein in the vaccines "is very dangerous, its cytotoxic."

Dr. Robert Malone, identified in the video as the inventor of mRNA vaccine technology, said he sent "manuscripts" months ago to the U.S. Food and Drug Administration claiming the spike protein posed a health risk. "And their determination was that they didnt think that that was sufficient documentation of the risk that the spike was biologically active," he said.

The third person in the video is identified as "serial entrepreneur" Steve Kirsch, who said he is an engineer. He cited a claim by Canadian viral immunologist Byram Bridle that the vaccine doesnt stay in the shoulder, where its injected, but "goes throughout your entire body, it goes to your brain to your heart."

Bridles claim False

We rated False Bridles claim that the COVID-19 vaccines spike protein means people are being inoculated "with a toxin."

Experts told PolitiFact there is no evidence to back his allegation that the spike protein produces a toxin that could cause serious health problems.

COVID-19 vaccines work by triggering the human bodys natural immune response, without introducing a form of the COVID-19 virus itself.

The actual COVID-19 virus uses the spike protein to bind to cells, causing infection. But the mRNA vaccines, from Moderna and Pfizer-BioNTech, contain neither the virus nor the spike protein just the genetic instructions for the body to make the spike protein associated with the coronavirus.

Once the cell receives these instructions, it creates the protein and displays it on its surface. The immune system then spots the unknown protein and makes antibodies to protect against the virus.

The Johnson & Johnson vaccine contains a modified adenovirus not the COVID-19 virus with a gene that induces cells to produce the spike protein, said vaccine expert Dr. Walter Orenstein at Emory University. As with the mRNA vaccines, this leads the immune system to recognize the spike protein as foreign and make an immune response against it, he said.

The federal Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, which calls the spike protein harmless, explains: "Our immune systems recognize that the protein doesnt belong there and begin building an immune response and making antibodies, like what happens in natural infection against COVID-19. At the end of the process, our bodies have learned how to protect against future infection."

An FDA spokesperson told PolitiFact: "There is no scientific data to indicate that the spike protein in mRNA vaccines is toxic or that it lingers at any toxic level in the body after vaccination."

Expert views

Responding to the claim made in the video, Emorys Orenstein and vaccine expert Dr. Paul Offit of the Childrens Hospital of Philadelphia said they are not aware of any major dangers from the spike protein.

"Where is the evidence?" said Offit. "No one is saying that vaccines are risk free. The minute theres any reasonable signal that things are occurring in a vaccinated group and not in an unvaccinated group, then the FDA takes a closer look."

Offit noted as an example the federal response following reports of a small but higher-than-expected number of cases of heart inflammation called myocarditis and pericarditis developing in mostly young people after they received doses of mRNA-based COVID-19 vaccines.

The CDC announced June 10 that it will convene an emergency meeting on June 18 to discuss a possible link between the condition and the vaccines.

Our ruling

The headline of a widely circulated YouTube post, and a person speaking in the video, say the COVID-19 vaccines spike protein "is very dangerous, it's cytotoxic."

U.S. public health authorities and vaccine experts say there is no evidence that the spike protein is toxic or cytotoxic.

We rate the post False.

CORRECTION, June 16, 5:02 p.m.:An earlier version of this fact-check incorrectly described how Johnson & Johnson's vaccine works. The rating is unchanged.

Link:

No sign that the COVID-19 vaccines' spike protein is toxic or 'cytotoxic' - PolitiFact

Nearly 900 New Yorkers who got COVID-19 vaccine in Times Square received expired doses – CBS News

June 17, 2021

Almost 900 people were injected with expired Pfizer COVID-19 vaccine doses at a vaccination site in New York's Times Square last week, CBS New Yorkreports. The New York State Health Department is recommending that they schedule another Pfizer shot.

Eight-hundred-ninety-nine people got the injections at the former NFL Experience building between June 5 and 10.

ATC Vaccination Services, the company that administered the shots, told CBS New York in a statement, "We apologize for the inconvenience and want people first and foremost to know that we have been advised that there is no danger from the vaccine they received."

An email from the state health department said the doses were in a freezer too long and added that there's no guarantee of the expired vaccine's effectiveness.

Gabrielle Napolitano Swift, mother of 15-year-old recipient Dante Swift, pointed out that "it's not like it was one day that they messed up. It was five days."

New York Governor Andrew Cuomo relaxed the statewide COVID-linked restrictions Tuesday, calling it "a momentous day."

The move was a result of more than 70% of adults in the state getting at least one dose of the vaccine.

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Nearly 900 New Yorkers who got COVID-19 vaccine in Times Square received expired doses - CBS News

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