Category: Covid-19 Vaccine

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S.Korea says 1 mln doses of J&J COVID-19 vaccines to arrive this week from U.S. – Reuters

May 31, 2021

A box of Johnson & Johnson's coronavirus disease (COVID-19) vaccines is seen at the Forem vaccination centre in Pamplona, Spain, April 22, 2021. REUTERS/Vincent West/File Photo

South Korea will get 1 million doses of Johnson & Johnson's coronavirus vaccine this week mainly to innoculate military personnel, after the United States almost doubled a pledge made earlier this month, Prime Minister Kim Boo-kyum said on Sunday.

South Korea has reported a lower death toll than many comparable developed countries from COVID-19, but the government has come under criticism for a comparatively slow rollout of vaccines. Less than 11 percent of its 52 million people have so far received a first dose.

U.S. President Joe Biden, at his first summit with President Moon Jae-in earlier this month, promised to supply 550,000 shots for South Korean troops. read more

Kim said thatoffer had now been increased to 1 million doses, and the shots will arrive this week. He thanked the Biden administration for its commitment to the alliance. The J&J vaccine requires a single dose, rather than the two-shot regimen of most other COVID-19 vaccines.

"We plan to administer the vaccines largely on military-related personnel, including reserve forces and the civil defence corps, after airlifting them directly from the United States using military planes," Kim told an intra-agency meeting.

Jeong Eun-kyeong, director of the Korea Disease Control and Prevention Agency (KDCA), said the 1 million doses would be used in June, including on some people on overseas business or diplomatic missions.

"The United States made a very exceptional decision even as there are many countries hoping for its vaccine support, which I think reflected special considerations for us in light of the value of the alliance," she told a separate briefing.

South Korea aims to reach herd immunity through vaccination by November, but its rollout has become uncertain amid global shortages and shipment delays.

The country has ordered 6 million doses of the J&J vaccine, which was given approval in April. Those shots are expected to arrive in the second half of the year half, Jeong said.

Inoculations using Moderna's (MRNA.O) vaccine will also begin in June, following the arrival of the first 55,000 doses of that shot, she added.

Our Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.

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S.Korea says 1 mln doses of J&J COVID-19 vaccines to arrive this week from U.S. - Reuters

Were kids given ice cream to take COVID-19 vaccine while parents held back? Totally false – OregonLive

May 31, 2021

The Associated Press checks out some of the most popular but completely untrue stories and visuals of the week. This one is bogus, even though it was shared widely on social media. Here are the facts:

CLAIM: Video shows parents in Toronto being blocked by police as children were given the COVID-19 vaccine in exchange for ice cream, without parental permission.

THE FACTS: Posts online are falsely claiming that a video showing protesters outside a vaccine pop-up clinic at Toronto City Hall were in fact parents trying to stop health professionals and police from vaccinating their children.

The city of Toronto and the University Health Network held a pop-up vaccination event on May 23 at City Hall, where 2,500 doses of vaccine were administered, along with free ice cream, to those 12 years of age and older, according to the University Health Network.

Canada became the first country to approve the Pfizer vaccine for 12- to 15-year-olds on May 5, a decision that was criticized by anti-vaccine advocates.

In videos online, protesters can be seen at Nathan Phillips Square outside City Hall speaking out against vaccinating children at the clinic.

This is our children and we will not back down, one woman could be heard yelling in the video at police.

Posts online shared the video to falsely claim it showed children being vaccinated against their parents wishes. A pop up vaccine clinic in Canada that is offering kids free ice cream in exchange for a vaccine, no parental permission required. Police are guarding the front to stop parents from intervening, one tweet said.

Another post claimed that the video showed parents being barred from a school campus where children were being vaccinated without parental consent.

Gillian Howard, a spokesperson for the University Health Network, said clinic staff did not see children being vaccinated without a family member present. Anyone receiving vaccination would have been taken through the consent process by clinical staff and if there was any indication that someone whatever their age didnt understand the consent process, they would not be vaccinated, she wrote in an email.

Only a handful of demonstrators took part in the protest. Howard said that police were present due to threats to the clinic.

Under Ontarios Health Care Consent Act, there is no minimum age to provide consent for vaccination, according to Toronto Public Health spokesperson Dr. Vinita Dubey. Rather, it is up to the healthcare providers to ensure that they obtain informed consent prior to immunization.

This means the healthcare provider administering the vaccine has to deem the youth capable of understanding their decision, Dubey said. If the individual is incapable of consenting to receiving the vaccine, they would need consent from their substitute decision-maker, such as their parent or legal guardian.

Beatrice Dupuy

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Were kids given ice cream to take COVID-19 vaccine while parents held back? Totally false - OregonLive

My family is divided over COVID-19 vaccinations. Here’s how we cope – Lookout Santa Cruz

May 31, 2021

My younger sister and I have a lot in common.

We are both long-winded and gesture dramatically when we speak. Were patient listeners and inveterate advice-givers. We tilt toward skepticism, and cling stubbornly to our beliefs.

And that has brought us to a rare impasse, on the issue of COVID-19 vaccines.

I have been celebrating since February, when I got my first shot of the Moderna vaccine at a San Fernando Valley park. My sister Anita in Cleveland has spent the months since then worrying about me.

Ever since COVID-19 vaccines became a reality, shes been poring over articles and social media posts about hypothetical harms that most scientists debunk. That left her determined to shun the vaccine and afraid for me to get my next shot.

I love my sister the way she is, she emailed me three months ago. And I shudder to think of you having some long-term reaction to this vaccine that could have been avoided. While you are well, I say stay well!

She followed up with research on natural immune boosters, such as vitamin D. I added that to my health regimen, but refused to even consider skipping my final dose of the vaccine.

I appreciate the sentiment and respect your skepticism, I wrote back. But living here in Los Angeles, Im more likely to die of COVID than to wind up with some weird vaccine reaction.

At that point, I hadnt done the math to know if that was actually true. But my fear of needing a ventilator to breathe was stronger than whatever apprehension I felt about the vaccines.

For my sister, that ratio was reversed. She worried that the new COVID vaccines might turn out, in the long run, to be as dangerous as the disease.

Our email exchange launched a back-and-forth that lasted for months. It was fractious and frustrating at times, because we are tethered to separate echo chambers that amplify our individual views.

But our dialogue also led to heartfelt discussions that have confirmed our sisterly bond and educated me about the battle that health experts face, as they try to crack the code that will get shots into the arms of vaccine-hesitant folks.

Ive tried, and failed, to convince my sister with stories of lives lost to COVID-19 and the debilitating symptoms that persist for many whove weathered the disease.

Sandy Banks at her home in Los Angeles. (Dania Maxwell / Los Angeles Times)

Shes responded with examples that influence her thinking, including a post featuring a young Black doctor who says that people of African descent naturally have stronger immune systems, and suggests the novel vaccines might disrupt that.

It didnt help my pro-vaccination campaign when the Johnson & Johnson vaccine was temporarily pulled from the market in April after rare and dangerous blood clots were documented in a handful of people among the millions whod received the vaccines.

My sister and I drew different conclusions from the same set of facts.

To me, the government reaction was a reassuring example of transparency in action: Use of the vaccine was quickly suspended and the problem publicly dissected by medical experts, who deemed it statistically insignificant and allowed vaccinations to resume while studies continue.

But my sister saw the episode as a warning sign; a reflection of potential hazards yet to be detected because of the rush to bring the vaccines to market.

There are still so many unknown factors, she told me. And I could not argue with that.

It turns out that after a year of living with COVID-19 fears, my sister and I are both looking for the kind of certainty a promise of good health that neither science nor statistics can provide.

**

More than 60% of Los Angeles County residents over 16 have received at least one shot of a COVID-19 vaccine. And now that teenagers are able to get theirs, we are inching toward the 80% threshold that county Public Health Director Barbara Ferrer considers a measure of the herd immunity needed to stanch the spread of COVID-19.

In fact, Ferrer predicts that such immunity in Los Angeles could be only two months away if, that is, we can persuade another few million locals to get inoculated.

But the number of vaccines administered each day in Los Angeles has dropped by almost 50% from its high in April.

That requires us to address the resistance of multitudes of vaccine-hesitant people. And we cant do that unless were willing to listen and stop reflexively demonizing them.

Weve tended to lump the so-called anti-vaxxers into a few rigid categories: they are science-denying willful idiots, or addled conspiracy theorists, or selfish right-wingers protecting their freedom to spread disease.

But the truth is more complicated. Wading through the weeds with my sister has forced me to accept that and to recognize how hard it is to change minds when youre moving through uncharted territory.

Ferrer wasnt surprised when I told her about my standoff with my sister. In fact, she understands the reluctance of people to commit to vaccines that were introduced less than six months ago.

This is a new disease and these are new vaccines, with emergency use authorizations, she said. We have a lot of information on how safe and effective it is. But what hasnt been studied is what it can do five or 10 years from now.

So its totally reasonable for some people to say, This is brand new and its hard for me to really feel comfortable with it.

Her department closely monitors reported side effects, with daily reports from across the country and around the world. We have vast networks studying that, she said. They check every day for red flags, and we havent really found anything that might be cause for alarm.

They also spend lots of time trying to understand people like my sister not so that they can talk them into anything, but to share information in a way that might increase their confidence in the vaccines.

You cant start by saying Were right, and youre wrong; you have no legitimate reasons, she said. We start with, Tell me what youre scared of; what your worries are. And we try to give them opportunities to learn more.

But Ferrer has also had to accept the prospect that a significant percentage of residents may not agree to be vaccinated particularly if the number of COVID-19 infections continues to shrink.

Its harder now because we have way fewer cases, and [unvaccinated] people dont feel so afraid. They think they can wait, and not get it right now, she said.

**

My sister and I were on the same page, 2,300 miles apart, when COVID-19 first struck more than a year ago. Ohio and California shut down within a few days of each other in March 2020.

We both dutifully masked whenever we left home, suffered through the anxiety of crowded store aisles, and panicked if anyone breached six feet. What she missed most was visiting the library; what I missed was drinking with friends.

But she became less worried as Clevelands restrictions eased and no one she knew had contracted COVID-19 while I continued collecting virus horror stories and watching the death toll in Los Angeles climb.

Anita Banks at her home in Ohio. (Dania Maxwell / Los Angeles Times)

Still, Ive come to understand the mash-up of forces driving my sisters choice: her affinity for natural remedies, her experience in Cleveland, her distrust of government and the medical establishment and, perhaps most important, the support and influence of her cadre of like-minded friends.

In my world, everyone I know was excited by the prospect of a COVID-19 vaccine long before one existed. We considered it the ticket out of isolation and back to normal life.

I remember the flurry of messages that filled my inbox when vaccine sign-ups began, with tips from colleagues and friends on how to navigate the clumsy appointment system and which vaccination venues had the least odious wait times.

On my NextDoor feed, the usual litany of neighborhood complaints suddenly gave way to smiley-face emojis and VACCINATED!!! posts. And my friends proudly sported Im Vaccinated stickers, making it feel as much like a civic duty as voting.

But my sisters experience has been markedly different. Her social media feeds are crowded with conspiracy theories, reminders of the mercenary leanings of Big Pharma, and testimonials from people who say they were harmed by the vaccine.

And then there are the warning videos sent from friends, which flash no longer available when she tries to click on them. She cant help but wonder whether those missing links are the rantings of charlatans or the cry of sincere whistleblowers hoping to spare the public from extreme harm.

Last month my sisters social network landed her in unfamiliar territory: a crowded gymnasium in a rural Ohio town, filled with maskless white people cheering a Trump acolyte who railed against masks, abortions and open borders.

My sister and the friend who invited her were virtually the only Black people there. It felt very odd being the only people in the room wearing masks, she told me. After listening to a speaker disparaging their use, she took her mask off briefly before thinking better of it and putting it back on.

Shed come to hear the keynote speaker, a physician her friend had long admired for her stance on the value of natural health care and threats posed by medical interventions. That doctor has been traveling the country, urging people to avoid the COVID-19 vaccines.

My sister felt comfortable when a Black doctor led a prayer to open the event. But he was followed by white right-wing politicians, who called themselves patriots.

I started looking around for the exits then, she said, chuckling at the memory. I was like, Which way do I go to get out of here!

But once the program began, we felt welcome, she said. The doctors message aligned with my sisters mind-set, and the people were very nice.

**

I imagine some version of our philosophical disconnect is going on in families and communities across the country, especially as the pool of people eligible for vaccines expands.

Our experience illustrates how deep, untidy and idiosyncratic vaccine resistance may be.

And thats created a conundrum for government and health officials, who are trying to keep COVID-19 in check by vaccinating as many people as possible as soon as possible in an era when Just trust science! isnt good enough.

In Long Beach, theyre trying to counter amorphous resistance by giving newly vaccinated people free tickets to the Aquarium of the Pacific and a chance to win a Nintendo Switch gaming console a ploy intended to persuade unvaccinated young men to roll up their sleeves. In Los Angeles, those getting vaccinated have a chance to win Lakers season tickets.

In Cleveland, dropping your resistance to the vaccine can make you a millionaire. The state of Ohio is using federal coronavirus relief funds to pay for five weekly lotteries that will each net one newly vaccinated winner a million-dollar prize.

And California announced on Thursday a grab bag of incentives, including grocery gift cards to those who complete their inoculations, and the chance for 10 vaccinated residents to win $1.5 million apiece.

Ferrer thinks the offerings might attract some people who have been procrastinating, but its not going to move the needle with those who are really resistant.

My sister is one of those who wont be incentivized. I could not trade my convictions on how to stay healthy for a million dollars, she insists.

Its not that shes a hard-core anti-vaxxer. I know I probably had [vaccines] as a child that allowed me to grow to where I am today and to be healthy, she acknowledges. She is the only one of my three siblings who has not been vaccinated against COVID-19.

Sandy Banks, left, and her sister Anita as children with their mother. (Dania Maxwell / Los Angeles Times)

But to her, these vaccines feel rushed into being. And she wont be pressured into taking the needle before shes completed her research even though many of us might consider her sources questionable.

Shes tuned to a steady stream of videos of doctors and nurses of every race who believe the vaccines have not been tested enough. They talk about alarming potential long-term effects, she said, and it sounds like there may be some plausibility.

In that, I see her process as being not so different from mine: were both gravitating toward analyses that confirm our existing beliefs. Psychologists call that confirmation bias; its a coping mechanism by anxious brains, desperate to turn ambiguity into truth.

Ive come to realize that an atmosphere this intense can magnify the influence of what you read, hear or see. I had to acknowledge that when, a few weeks ago, I suddenly began to imagine that every new ache or pain I felt might be a side effect from the shot I got months ago.

If I could be primed so easily by our conversations to blame my maladies on a vaccine I trust, imagine how strong my sisters mind-set must be, after months of wading through all manner of warnings about COVID-19 vaccines.

So weve finally reached a truce: she wont send me scary videos demonizing the vaccines, and I wont try to debunk what I consider crazy stuff.

I understand that her choice is not something for Big Sister to fix. And Im heartened that despite how pushy Ive been, she is still willing to listen to me.

I do not want to send any info you do not want to receive, but please send me any you think may be of interest, she wrote.

Good to know you have researched this subject; I hope your conclusions are more right than mine! because many are receiving the vaccine, including others I care deeply about.

This story originally appeared in Los Angeles Times.

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My family is divided over COVID-19 vaccinations. Here's how we cope - Lookout Santa Cruz

Notre Dame Of Maryland University To Require COVID-19 Vaccine For Students Returning To Campus – CBS Baltimore

May 31, 2021

BALTIMORE (WJZ) Notre Dame of Maryland announced that they will require students returning to campus to receive the COVID-19 vaccine.

We are looking forward to the University resuming more normal operations this fall. Our plans are grounded on continuing effective public health strategies, said Sr. Sharon Slear, Provost. While the pandemic in the U.S. seems to be on a downward trajectory, NDMU continues to closely monitor and adhere to CDC, State, and local health and safety guidance. As the pandemic evolves, NDMU will continue to respond accordingly.

University officials said that all students coming or returning to campus will have to be vaccinated against COVID beginning this upcoming fall semester. Unvaccinated students will be required to submit a COVID-19 pre-arrival test and participate in random surveillance testing.

Officials said exceptions will be granted for medical or religious reasons. The university is encouraging all staff and faculty to get vaccinated, however, it is not required as of now.

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Notre Dame Of Maryland University To Require COVID-19 Vaccine For Students Returning To Campus - CBS Baltimore

Bay Area health officials back CDC guidance on getting COVID-19 vaccine at same time as other shots – Mountain View Voice

May 31, 2021

A tray full of Pfizer-BioNTech vaccines at Cesar Chavez Ravenswood Middle School on the first day of vaccination for children over the age of 12 in East Palo Alto on May 15, 2021. Recent federal guidance says people can safely get vaccines for other illnesses at the same time they get a COVID-19 vaccine. Photo by Daniela Beltran B.

Health officers in nine Bay Area counties and the city of Berkeley announced Friday that they support recent federal guidance approving people to get vaccines for other illnesses at the same time they get a COVID-19 vaccine.

The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention had previously recommended that people wait at least 14 days after getting the COVID-19 vaccine to get vaccinated against other preventable illnesses.

With more and more real-world evidence of the vaccines' safety and efficacy, the CDC updated that guidance on May 14.

The Association of Bay Area Health Officials -- which includes officials from the counties of Alameda, Contra Costa, Marin, Napa, San Francisco, San Mateo, Santa Clara, Santa Cruz and Solano and the city of Berkeley -- said Friday that it will support that guidance going forward.

"We know a lot of people have delayed getting care and regular immunizations during the pandemic. This new guidance will make it easier for people to catch up on any immunizations they're due for when they get a COVID-19 vaccine at their provider's office," Contra Costa County Health Officer Dr. Chris Farnitano said.

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Bay Area health officials back CDC guidance on getting COVID-19 vaccine at same time as other shots - Mountain View Voice

COVID-19 vaccinations overwhelming for Kalamazoo family related to the immortal Henrietta Lacks – MLive.com

May 31, 2021

KALAMAZOO, MI When Kalamazoo resident Bessie Lacks and her grandson Jermaine Jackson received their COVID-19 vaccines earlier this spring, both were overwhelmed with emotion.

Not just because they were being vaccinated or because they were receiving the Pfizer vaccine which was developed in Kalamazoo County but because of an even closer connection. The Pfizer vaccine never would have been developed as it is without the use of cells taken from Lacks sister-in-law in 1951, before Henrietta Lacks died of cervical cancer at Johns Hopkins Hospital in Baltimore, Maryland.

Her family was left in the dark for 25 years that Henriettas cells, the first discovered immortal cell line, were being used daily in scientific research and they never saw a cent until more than 60 years later.

Even so, there was a sense of pride that washed over Bessie Lacks when she received her shots.

Personally, I just thank God her cells are still being used and that they are doing so much. Its really wonderful, Lacks said. I was telling everybody, the vaccine was, in part, because of my sister-in-law I just hope everyone can respect what it is and know that part of that family is still around.

Henrietta Lacks died in 1951 of cervical cancer at Johns Hopkins Hospital in Baltimore, Maryland. Her cells, taken without her or her family's knowledge prior to have her death, have lived on for 70 years and counting, helping lead from one scientific discovery to the next. (Photo provided by the Lacks Family)

Lacks, who was married to the brother of Henrietta Lacks husband, said she has great appreciation for all of the work the researchers have done over the years, using the HeLa cells to first develop the polio vaccine, develop AIDS and chemotherapy treatments and develop drugs from everything from Parkinsons disease to sexually transmitted diseases, and much more.

Like other members of the Lacks family, there is a degree of resentment in how things were handled as Henriettas cells were taken without permission and the family was left in the dark until the mid-1970s, when doctors asked for blood samples to aid in ongoing research.

It would be the turn of the century before Henrietta Lacks family began to understand the full scope of the importance of Henriettas cells, and another 10 years before they saw any form of compensation. That is when author Rebecca Skloot set up the Henrietta Lacks Foundation to help individuals who made important contributions to scientific research without personally benefitting from those contributions.

Skloot, who worked closely with Bessie Lacks niece Deborah Lacks, while authoring the best-selling The Immortal Life of Henrietta Lacks, helped put a face and the story behind the Black woman who, for nearly 60 years, almost no one knew a thing about. That book later became a movie, with a character based on Skloot and Oprah Winfrey playing Deborah Lacks.

But it was the book, upon its release, that turned a world of what felt like nothing more than science fiction into reality for Jackson, who is an assistant librarian with Kalamazoo Public Libraries as well as a Kalamazoo Public Schools board member.

Reality not science-fiction

I was told all my life, and of course it sounded like a fictional story, but our grandmother was always telling us about her sister-in-law and what her cells contributed to the world, said Jackson, 45. Of course, because it wasnt mainstream media it wasnt gospel, we thought it was a fictional story.

But when the book came out and his grandmother called him at work and asked him to put the book on reserve, he picked it up and began reading.

I was completely flabbergasted, Jackson said. To see that this woman who died in 1951 of cervical cancer and had her cells taken from her without her consent, and her cell line created a medical breakthrough that hadnt been seen in the history of medical science.

Jackson, inspired by the reality of his own family history, conversed with his cousins to learn more. He ultimately designed a four-themed exhibit for the Barnabee Art Gallery in the Kalamazoo Public Libraries Alma Powell Branch, located in Kalamazoos Douglas neighborhood.

The exhibit highlights the family history of Henrietta Lacks, the scientific wonders her cells are tied to and the controversy that surrounds the taking of her cells. It also features artwork from more than a half-dozen artists depicting the legacy of Henrietta Lacks.

A new arrival to the exhibit of Henrietta Lacks by Artist Jamari Taylor of Grand Rapids, Michigan. (Photo of artwork provided by Jermaine Jackson)

The exhibits purpose is to both educate and to humanize the great aunt he never met, Jackson said.

Jackson, who initially intended the exhibit to be a one-time thing in 2017, later developed it into a virtual presentation that has been shown to middle and high school students over the past year. As the pandemic winds to a close, he hopes to hit the road with it, taking it to college campuses, schools, churches, community organizations and museums across the country.

While it is a joy, Jackson said, knowing his great aunt lives on through medical science and to know that anyone who is a cancer survivor or received AIDS treatment or the Coronavirus vaccine has been touched by her the injustices felt by the family and many Black people, he said, are very real.

Trust in the Black community

Even donating organs is a scary thing, still, for a lot of Black people, he said. Many of us think there is a greater possibility if we sign on as organ donors, that they may just let us die in order to use that organ to save another life. Theres still trust issues. There have been for years.

Dr. (Martin Luther) King said, Of all the forms of inequality, injustice in health care is the most shocking and inhumane. So, when we see rallying and picketing and protests over policing issues in this country, thats stuff everybody is conscious of with the videos and the media, but medical injustices are unseen.

For Bessie Lacks, the biggest injustice was that she felt there should have been some compensation for the family members who didnt even know Henrietta Lacks cells were being sold and distributed to laboratories across the world.

They were just a normal family with something tragic that happened, and their dad he had to raise the kids on his own, she said. They grew up poor. He did the best he could, but he had to work and hed pay somebody else to watch the kids. They couldnt afford their own medical care.

Yet their mothers cells were providing care for people across the world.

There wasnt anything anyone could do because thats just the way it was, Bessie Lacks said. Ive got the sense to know that was the kind of setup that we had in America at that time. We didnt have the laws and the amendments that we have now to make things different.

If something like that happened now you could do something about it, but Im sure there isnt even a doctor or nurse still alive that had nothing to do with that.

Now that the years have passed and understanding has grown, Lacks said, some family members have begun to feel different and Henriettas grandchildren and great-grandchildren have a sense of pride knowing what their grandmothers cells have contributed.

For Bessie Lacks, her own cancer treatments and her COVID vaccine have some extra significance.

I know it did it a lot, she said. But it wasnt me; it was my sister-in-law. We were just married to two brothers.

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COVID-19 vaccinations overwhelming for Kalamazoo family related to the immortal Henrietta Lacks - MLive.com

State parks offering COVID-19 vaccinations – WOWK 13 News

May 31, 2021

CHARLESTON, WV (WOWK) In efforts to get as many people as possible vaccinated for COVID-19, people can now get the shot while taking a leisurely camping trip.

Some might not think Chief Logan State Park would be the ideal place to get vaccinated, but Governor Jim Justice asked community leaders work together to get the job done.

As the numbers continue to come down, were really trying to get out to the people and meet them where they are and make it really convenient for them if they have not gotten vaccinated to date, Kristin Dial, who works at Coalfield Health Center said.

If someone is confined and they cant get out, we offer to go out and give the vaccine and return date. We go back and give them the second vaccine, Cindy Adams, Paramedic Supervisor at the Ambulance Service in Logan County said.

Many people are still looking for ways to have fun and still social distance.

Camping is really trending up and its really popular. Everyone seems to be buying a camper these days and we have a really nice campground, Michael Ward, Park Superintendent of Chief Logan State Park said.

This is the Logan County medical staffs second day giving out vaccinations. Although the weather has been a hindrance, they expect more people to come for vaccinations Monday.

Its unlimited. We have supply so we have back supply so anyone that shows up can get a vaccine this weekend, weve done more than 13,000 in Logan County to date, Dial said.

Staff will be giving out vaccinations tomorrow outside the museum inside Chief Logan State Park from 9 a.m to noon.

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State parks offering COVID-19 vaccinations - WOWK 13 News

How Effective Is the Johnson & Johnson COVID-19 Vaccine? – Healthline

May 29, 2021

The Johnson & Johnson (J&J) vaccine is a single-dose vaccine that can help prevent COVID-19. Its the third COVID-19 vaccine authorized by the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) for emergency use in the United States.

Large-scale clinical trials in several locations across the globe found that a single dose of the J&J vaccine was effective at preventing COVID-19. They found that the vaccine can also protect against several viral variants.

Below, well break down everything we know so far about the efficacy of the J&J COVID-19 vaccine. Continue reading to learn more.

The efficacy of the J&J vaccine was tested in a clinical trial involving more than 40,000 people. The FDA reviewed this data, along with manufacturing information provided by Johnson & Johnson, when deciding to grant emergency use authorization.

The results from this clinical trial found that the J&J vaccine could protect against mild to moderate and severe to critical cases of COVID-19.

Lets take a closer look.

In most people, COVID-19 is a mild or moderate illness. Many individuals can recover from mild to moderate COVID-19 at home.

J&J vaccines efficacy for mild to moderate COVID-19 14 days after vaccination was:

The World Health Organization (WHO) estimates that 20 percent of people with COVID-19 experience a severe to critical illness that often requires hospitalization.

J&J vaccine efficacy for severe to critical COVID-19 14 days after vaccination was:

Additionally, individuals receiving the J&J vaccine were less likely to be hospitalized than those who didnt receive the vaccine. In fact, the J&J vaccine was 93 percent effective at preventing hospitalization for COVID-19 14 days after vaccination and 100 percent effective 28 days after.

How long the J&J and Moderna vaccines will protect against COVID-19 is currently unknown. Research suggests that the Pfizer vaccine will offer protection for 6 months, but studies are ongoing.

Earlier clinical trials of the J&J vaccine found that a single dose of the vaccine produced a strong immune response in most people. Measurements taken 71 days later found that levels of antibodies remained stable or had increased.

Overall, more research is needed to determine how long the J&J vaccine will protect against COVID-19. Its possible, but not certain, that a booster may be needed in the future.

You may be wondering how the efficacy of the J&J vaccine stacks up against the other two COVID-19 vaccines authorized for use in the United States. These are the mRNA vaccines produced by Pfizer and Moderna.

Data from clinical trials of the Pfizer vaccine found an efficacy of 95 percent 7 days after the second dose. Clinical trial data of the Moderna vaccine reported an efficacy of 94.1 percent 14 days after the second dose.

These numbers may seem much higher than those of the J&J vaccine. However, its important to note that its not possible to make direct comparisons between the three COVID-19 vaccines. This is because the clinical trials:

The FDA notes that the only way to directly compare the efficacy of the three vaccines is to conduct a head-to-head clinical trial. This has not yet been done.

The CDC currently doesnt recommend the use of one vaccine over another.

Preliminary data from the J&J vaccine clinical trial indicates that the J&J vaccine can protect against asymptomatic COVID-19. Asymptomatic means that a person doesnt have symptoms but may still be able to spread the SARS-CoV-2 virus to others.

In the J&J vaccine clinical trial, 2,650 trial participants were tested using a COVID-19 antigen test 71 days after vaccination. This test identified 18 asymptomatic SARS-CoV-2 infections in the vaccinated group and 50 in the unvaccinated group.

Based on this data, researchers estimated that the efficacy of the J&J vaccine for preventing asymptomatic COVID-19 was at least 66 percent. This is comparable to the vaccines overall efficacy for preventing mild to moderate COVID-19.

The Pfizer and Moderna vaccines can also prevent asymptomatic COVID-19. Current research indicates that the vaccines can significantly reduce the rate of asymptomatic COVID-19.

Its completely normal for viruses to mutate. When this occurs, new variants can emerge.

So far, several different variants of the novel coronavirus have been identified. Some of these have caused concern amongst public health officials. This is because the variants may be more contagious or escape the immune response.

The J&J vaccine clinical trial can give us some indication of how effective the vaccine is against these variants. This is because the trial was carried out at a time when viral variants were very common in some locations.

At the time of the trial, 95 percent of sequenced COVID-19 cases in South Africa were caused by the B.1.351 variant. The efficacy of the J&J vaccine at this location was 52 percent for mild to moderate COVID-19 and 73.1 percent for severe to critical COVID-19.

Similarly, in Brazil, 69 percent of the sequenced COVID-19 cases were caused by the P.2 lineage. The efficacy of the J&J vaccine in Brazil was 66.2 percent for mild to moderate COVID-19 and 81.9 percent for severe to critical COVID-19.

Compared with the two mRNA vaccines, the clinical trial of the J&J vaccine included more people of racial or ethnic backgrounds that may be at a higher risk of COVID-19. This is important, as it helps give researchers a better idea of the vaccines efficacy across many different racial and ethnic groups.

The table summarizes the demographics of the three vaccine trials.

People who experienced a severe or immediate allergic reaction to any of the ingredients in the J&J vaccine should not receive the J&J vaccine. The information sheet for recipients and caregivers includes a list of the ingredients.

The CDC notes that female adults under the age of 50 should be aware of the risk of TTS following J&J vaccination. If TTS is a concern, the other COVID-19 vaccines arent associated with this very rare side effect.

The J&J vaccine is the third COVID-19 vaccine authorized by the FDA for emergency use in the United States. It consists of a single dose thats been found to be both safe and effective at preventing COVID-19.

Clinical trials found that the J&J vaccine can prevent many types of COVID-19. Its overall efficacy was 66.3 percent for mild to moderate COVID-19 and 76.3 percent for severe to critical COVID-19. Additionally, it provides 100 percent protection from hospitalization for COVID-19 28 days after vaccination.

The J&J vaccine can also protect against asymptomatic COVID-19, as well as some viral variants. Its currently unknown how long the vaccine protection will last. A booster shot may be needed in the future.

The efficacy of the three authorized COVID-19 vaccines cant be compared directly, as the trials took place at different locations and at different times in the pandemic. Currently, no one vaccine is recommended over the others.

See more here:

How Effective Is the Johnson & Johnson COVID-19 Vaccine? - Healthline

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