Category: Covid-19 Vaccine

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Andrews Fire Station to hold drive-thru COVID-19 vaccine for second doses – NewsWest9.com

March 24, 2021

ANDREWS, Texas The Andrews Fire Station will be holding drive-thru COVID-19 vaccine clinics on March 24 and 25.

The events will only be for second doses of the vaccine. Hours of Operations will be from 9:00 a.m. to 4:00 p.m. on March 24 and 4:00 p.m. to 9:00 p.m. on March 25.

If you need your first dose of the vaccine, you can go back to the fire station on March 3 and 4.

You must bring your vaccination card to the clinic.

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Andrews Fire Station to hold drive-thru COVID-19 vaccine for second doses - NewsWest9.com

COVID-19 vaccine may be heading to your Kansas doctors office as soon as next week – KSN-TV

March 24, 2021

KANSAS CITY, Kan. (WDAF) The state of Kansas announced plans to shift the way its handing the COVID-19 vaccination plan. The change could make many people more comfortable with getting a vaccine.

Dr. Lee Norman, secretary of the Kansas Department of Health and Environment, explained what the shift means during a Facebook Live with doctors at the University of Kansas Health System Tuesday morning.

Hundreds of doctors offices, clinics, and other sites across the state of Kansas signed up to help vaccinate people. They havent given vaccines yet because there just hasnt been enough supply.

Dr. Norman said that will change starting this week.

We are going to do a lot of additional providers alerting this week, because we expect 100,000 additional Johnson and Johnson doses to be ordered this week and to come in next week, he said.

The state plans to include medical practices, primary care, and specialty offices across Kansas that previously sighed up to become vaccinators. As the offices receive doses of the vaccine, the locations will be added to the states vaccine finder website. The tool is also offered in Espaol.

Norman said the smaller doctors offices are going to be a key part of the vaccination process moving forward.

But its important to get vaccine in the hands of the primary care and specialty providers who know patients, they know the people really well and are going to be the ones to talk with them and hopefully defuse hesitations and fear, Norman said.

If you hope to get a vaccine from your doctors office, you may want to check your patient portal for an invitation to get a vaccine starting next week. Or you could call to see if they expect to become a vaccinator in the coming days or weeks.

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COVID-19 vaccine may be heading to your Kansas doctors office as soon as next week - KSN-TV

Nearly 1.7 Million COVID-19 Vaccine Doses Administered Propels Oklahoma’s Shift To Phase 4 – News On 6

March 24, 2021

The state health department said every Oklahoman will be eligible to receive COVID-19 vaccines starting Monday.

Many factors play into how the state chooses who is eligible for vaccines, but a big part of the equation is how rural health departments are doing.

Related Story: All Oklahomans Will Be Able To Get COVID-19 Vaccine Starting Monday

Oklahoma's move into phase four is a huge step towards getting all of Oklahoma's nearly four million people vaccinated.

Keith Reed, the deputy health commissioner of the Oklahoma State Department of Health wants to keep the ball rolling.

"It's remarkable to consider that we are approaching 1.7 million doses given to Oklahomans," he said.

"We wanted to maintain a steady demand. We want to make sure that there's always somebody available to get vaccinated. We're opening it up because we want to get as many people vaccinated as possible, Reed said.

Reed said one factor in the change was a slowed demand in rural counties, due in part to the number of people already vaccinated in earlier phases.

Kaitlan Thatcher with the Wagoner County Health Department said proximity to Tulsa and Broken Arrow has kept their vaccine demand consistent, but another phase is another step towards normalcy.

"Moving into phase four is just really going to benefit us," she said."I just think it's really going to help them get back to a normal way of life."

With the invitation extended to 16 and 17-year-olds, Thatcher and Reed both encourage younger Oklahomans to step up and get the vaccines as soon as possible.

"We are poised to finish strong, but we haven't crossed that finish line yet. If you haven't yet been vaccinated, please take action to do so now. Let's not give this virus the opportunity to resurge. Let's shut it down," Reed said.

Pfizer is the only vaccine approved for people 16 and older. Reed said if you're under 18, you must choose a vaccination site that carries it and get parent or guardian permission.

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Nearly 1.7 Million COVID-19 Vaccine Doses Administered Propels Oklahoma's Shift To Phase 4 - News On 6

Statement of the WHO Global Advisory Committee on Vaccine Safety (GACVS) COVID-19 subcommittee on safety signals related to the AstraZeneca COVID-19…

March 24, 2021

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Statement of the WHO Global Advisory Committee on Vaccine Safety (GACVS) COVID-19 subcommittee on safety signals related to the AstraZeneca COVID-19...

Legends Center now open as COVID-19 vaccination and testing site – ActionNewsJax.com

March 24, 2021

JACKSONVILLE, Fla. Those eligible to receive the COVID-19 vaccine now have another location to get it.

The Legends Center, located at 5130 Soutel Drive in Jacksonville, that has been operating as a COVID-19 testing site, is now operating as a vaccination site, too, the City of Jacksonville announced Wednesday.

The site is offering the Pfizer vaccine at this time. City officials said an appointment is NOT necessary.

[QUICK LINKS: How to make a COVID-19 vaccine appointment in the Jacksonville area]

The site is open daily from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m.

See criteria to receive a vaccine at this site below:

Rapid testing for COVID-19 at the site is free and no symptoms are required.

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Legends Center now open as COVID-19 vaccination and testing site - ActionNewsJax.com

COVID-19 Vaccination Has Been Conjuring Up Emotions And Memories – NPR

March 22, 2021

The emotions around receiving the COVID-19 vaccine have been overwhelming for some and resonate with earlier experiences. Allen J. Schaben/Los Angeles Times via Getty Images hide caption

The emotions around receiving the COVID-19 vaccine have been overwhelming for some and resonate with earlier experiences.

After a year of fear, stress and isolation, the COVID-19 vaccine often produces more than a little pinch of sensation in your arm.

The experience also stirs strong emotions. Some feel relief. Others gratitude. Many are overcome and start crying.

Some people say the freedom squelched by the pandemic is beginning to return. That feeling of liberty is familiar to those who have survived previous epidemics.

On a spring afternoon in 1954, 1-year-old Gloria Anderson played with a group of toddlers in Billings, Mont. Two days later her mother learned that one of the other children had contracted polio. Within days Anderson started feeling sick first a bit of nausea, then fever. Her mom gasped when she put Anderson in a high chair and saw that she could only move her right leg.

"I was kicking one leg," Anderson says. "And my mom stuck the pin in my left leg, and I didn't move it."

They rushed her to the hospital where she quarantined for three weeks. Even her mother couldn't visit. The left side of her body was paralyzed, and the prognosis was tragic she would never walk again.

But Anderson was one of the lucky ones. Her immobility was temporary, and six months later she took her first steps.

In rare cases, you can contract polio twice. So when the polio vaccine arrived in 1955, Anderson's mother raced her two daughters to the doctor's office.

"It was a sugar cube," Anderson says. "And we all took it. And my mom was radiant!"

Radiant because her girls were safe. But the disease scarred Anderson both physically and emotionally for life. The left side of her body never fully recovered, and she's had to endure numerous medical procedures over the years. Now in her 60s, Anderson started falling a lot and eventually had to get fitted for a leg brace. It's a daily reminder of her illness as a small child.

Because a virus almost killed her and still affects her life today, Anderson took the coronavirus seriously from the start. She and her husband religiously sheltered in place, and if they had to leave their home they wore masks. They desperately missed their grandchildren.

"There's heartache," Anderson says. "These are hard times. But we do it for one another."

Gloria Anderson receives her second COVID-19 vaccination. David Anderson /Gloria Anderson hide caption

Gloria Anderson receives her second COVID-19 vaccination.

Like her mother six decades ago, Anderson was beaming after recently receiving her second vaccine shot.

Viral trauma

Leo Herrera also felt a familiar sense of relief when a nurse inserted a second dose of the COVID-19 vaccine into his arm. The past 12 months marked the second time the 39-year-old watched a virus rip through his community. COVID-19 has disproportionately hit both Latinos and LGBTQ people.

"I'm a gay man," says the San Francisco resident. "I have a lot of viral trauma from the HIV pandemic. I'm also a first-generation Mexican immigrant who grew up undocumented. So there's a lot of overlap between the two pandemics."

Back in 2012, Herrera was dating an HIV-positive man. That same year PrEP, a daily pill that prevents the user from contracting the virus, hit the market. But, just like the vaccine rollout today, access tilted toward affluent communities with good insurance.

"It took years for PrEP to be distributed widely to folks of color and folks without health care," Herrera says.

And just like today, a lot of media focused on unknowns. Would the pill lead to toxicity? Bone density issues? Maybe kidney problems?

In the end, Herrera took a leap of faith. The mental health benefits outweighed the potential physical risks.

"The first time I had sex without a condom with an HIV-positive person was a freedom and a loss of shame and anxiety that was phenomenal," he says.

Jonathan Salinas can relate. Even though the 23-year-old San Francisco resident didn't endure the AIDS crisis, the virus haunts his generation, as well.

"When I was growing up as a gay man I was told that HIV should always be in the periphery or around the conversations of sex," he says. So, when he learned about PrEP during a visit to Planned Parenthood he was thrilled to start taking the daily pill.

"As soon as I got on PrEP, that anxiety, that weight off of my shoulders, it lifted almost immediately because I felt empowered," he says.

Salinas was filled with a similar sense of relief when he received his COVID-19 vaccine. He hasn't visited his relatives for months out of fear he'd bring the virus home.

"I just felt so much hope," he says about getting the vaccine.

A beat too long

While driving to get his second COVID-19 shot, Leo Herrera stopped for gas. When he walked inside the station to pay, he passed a group of people not wearing masks.

"And I thought, 'Oh, man. I cannot wait for this to be the last time that I have to focus on what everybody else is doing to take care of me. I can finally take that power back, ' " he says, grinning.

He's looking forward to the time when most people are vaccinated. When he finds himself at a wedding reception or a bar, and without thinking he can open his arms to hug a stranger. "And the hug is going to go on for a beat too long," he says. "And you're going to hold on to that stranger, and you're both going to realize what that hug means."

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COVID-19 Vaccination Has Been Conjuring Up Emotions And Memories - NPR

All Utahns 16 and up now eligible to receive COVID-19 vaccine – fox13now.com

March 22, 2021

SALT LAKE CITY All Utah residents 16 and up are now eligible to receive a COVID-19 vaccine as the state opens appointments to practically anyone starting Monday.

LINKS: Here's how to register for a COVID-19 vaccination in Utah

Beginning at 9 a.m., residents in the new eligibility group can make appointments, although none will be available until after April 4. Demand for vaccinations has been so high in Utah, appointments are booked solid through April 3.

Utah County got a jump on the rest of the state, opening appointments to those 16 and up last week. Even with the high demand, officials believe they are ready for the increased amount of people looking to be vaccinated.

"We feel quite confident about this and about the process that we've been preparing for," said Utah County Health Department spokesperson Aislynn Tolman-Hill. "We've been making improvements, really every day since we opened up vaccination in December."

WATCH: Utah races to get vaccines in arms ahead of COVID-19 'endgame'

There are now three mass vaccination centers in Utah County.

Utah is still set to drop its statewide mask mandate on April 10 as health metrics continue to improve. However, many businesses say they will continue to require customers to wear masks, and masks will still be required in schools and at gatherings with more than 50 people.

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All Utahns 16 and up now eligible to receive COVID-19 vaccine - fox13now.com

AstraZenecas Covid-19 Vaccine Is Safe, 79% Effective in Late-Stage U.S. Trials – The Wall Street Journal

March 22, 2021

AstraZeneca PLCs Covid-19 vaccine was shown to be safe and 79% effective in preventing symptomatic disease in widely anticipated U.S. clinical trials, providing a vote of confidence for the shot and a pathway for its authorization in the U.S.

The interim trial data showed the vaccine, developed in partnership with the University of Oxford, was 80% effective in participants aged 65 and over, a group previous AstraZeneca trials lacked in large numbers. The shot was also found to be 100% effective in preventing serious illness and hospitalization across ages and ethnicities.

The company said it would continue to analyze the data and plans to request emergency authorization in the U.S. by mid-April.

If authorized by the Food and Drug Administration, the vaccine could be available in May, joining three other authorized shots in Americas accelerating vaccine drive. AstraZeneca said it will have 30 million doses available immediately in the U.S., and another 20 million doses soon after.

The shot is already widely used elsewhere. The U.S. trials provide the largest-scale clinical tests yet of the vaccine amid widespread scrutiny of its efficacy and reports of serious blood-clotting issues in a very small number of people in Europe who received the shot. The U.S. trials identified no increased risk of serious blood clotting.

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AstraZenecas Covid-19 Vaccine Is Safe, 79% Effective in Late-Stage U.S. Trials - The Wall Street Journal

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