Category: Covid-19 Vaccine

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The challenge of measuring equity in COVID-19 vaccinations – Brookings Institution

March 20, 2021

Getting the United States vaccinated is Job One for the federal government and the states. Because African Americans and Hispanic Americans are disproportionately likely to experience hospitalization or death if they contract COVID-19, it is urgent to achieve equity in vaccinations as well. In every state reporting statistics by race, a lower percentage of African Americans have been vaccinated than of the general population. If this pattern persists, many hospitalizations and deaths will occur that could have been prevented, and the rate of infections will remain too high to permit the country to get back to normal. Each state should monitor its progress in subgroups as well as aggregates and use the resources it will receive from the recently enacted $1.9 trillion relief bill to reach near-universal vaccinations as soon as possible.

Measuring progress toward equity turns out to be surprisingly complicated. Let me illustrate, using my home state of Maryland as an example.

Nationally, about 22% of Americans are younger than 18, but African American and Hispanic populations are younger than whites: 27% of African Americans and 33% of Hispanics are under 18, compared to 20% for whites. Applying these shares to Maryland, we come up with about 2.4 million Whites, 1.3 million African Americans, and 430 thousand Hispanics who have reached the age of eligibility for vaccination.

But adjusting for age is only one of the complications on the road to determining equity. Heres why: along with every other state, Maryland established a priority list of categories of individuals who would receive the earliest vaccinations, including individuals over age 75. But individuals 75 and older are not a microcosm of the total population. Because Black life expectancy is well below the national average, the elderly form a smaller share of the Black Population. (The same is true of Latinos, but for a different reason: because the U.S. Latino population is heavily tilted toward children and young adults, individuals 75 and over form a smaller share of their totaleven though Latino life expectancy is well above the national average, and above the White average as well.)

If states had begun by inoculating only the elderly, racial and ethnic disparities would have been the inevitable if unintended result. In Maryland, for example, the share of African Americans 75 and up is 8 percentage points below their share of the overall population. Indeed, in each of the 37 states reporting vaccination statistics by race and ethnicity, the Black share of the 75-and-over population is lower than in the general population.

But the states established other priority categories as wellespecially health care workersand these tilt in the other direction. In about three-quarters of the states reporting by race, the Black share of health care workers exceeds their share of the general population, and the number of health care workers is roughly the same as of those 75 and over. In Maryland, the share of African Americans in the health care workforce is 9 points higher than in the states population, fully counterbalancing their under-representation among the elderly. (The same is true for many other states.)

We can conclude that if Blacks are not receiving a proportionate share of vaccinations in Maryland, their representation in the priority categories for early vaccinations is not the reason why. And as the following table shows, they are not receiving a proportionate share.

Table 1: Vaccinations in Maryland by race

(Source: Census Bureau and authors calculations)

Within-state statistics confirm these findings. Of Marylands 22 counties and other jurisdictions, the four with the highest Black population shareBaltimore City, Charles County, Prince Georges County, and Somerset Countyhave the lowest shares of their populations vaccinated.

This picture may well change in the coming months. More vaccines are becoming available, and the state is setting up mass inoculation centers, as will the Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA). The state has also established a new, more centralized website that should ease the confusion created by dozens of separate vaccination portals.

But more will be needed. Many households in minority neighborhoods lack access to computers and high-speed broadband, so convenient local signup facilities are essential. Trusted community-based leaders can help walk residents through the process and answer questions about vaccines safety and efficacy. Mobile vaccination clinics can help overcome problems posed by lack of transportation and impaired physical mobility.

Good governance requires that we continuously measure what we are doing so that as inequities emerge, whether by race, age, or geography, they can be addressed.

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The challenge of measuring equity in COVID-19 vaccinations - Brookings Institution

Illinois to increase COVID-19 vaccine distribution in its southern region – WSIL TV

March 20, 2021

CARBONDALE, Ill. (WSIL) -- Governor JB Pritzker was in Carbondale Friday morning to discuss improving vaccine equity in Southern Illinois.

Thursday, the governor announced new guidelines for the state to re-open further, based on its vaccination metrics. Pritzker met with local health leaders and Illinois National Guard members at the Carbondale Civic Center, and was very positive about vaccination progress in the state and the Southern region.

"At this site alone the team has administered over 12,000 doses since opening about a month ago," says Pritzker, on the clinic at the Civic Center, adding to the grand total of more than 31,000 doses in Jackson County alone since the Guard deployed.

Those numbers are only expected to increase as more vaccine supply makes its way to Illinois.

"This week, more than 800,000 doses were delivered to Illinois," says Pritzker. "An eight times increase compared to our first delivery back in December. And that number will likely surpass one-million doses per week in April."

While the Governor did not directly address any inequities in vaccine distributions, Jackson County Health Department administrator Bart Hagston says, communities of color are less vaccinated, and they're addressing more ways to remedy that.

"I think the governor is very concerned about not only the geographic distribution of the vaccine, but also getting vaccine into communities of color and other underserved populations," says Hagston. "So, we're trying to do that here in Jackson County by working with some African American churches and other community groups."

Other counties in the region are working towards those same goals, which Pritzker says comes with more Mobile Clinics the National Guard is helping to make possible. More than two dozen mobile clinics operate in the state, eight of those are in its southern region. Hagston says, additional clinics will have an impact as qualifications for vaccinations lift.

"Wherever we can go to reach people that may not be able to make it here to our fixed sites, we're going to be working our way up to getting out there," says Hagston.

Governor Pritzker says the State is "on the verge" of reaching Phase 5 of the Restore Illinois Plan, a move that will be "based on the data." He says, "Although the light at the end of the tunnel is getting brighter, we're not there yet."

Illinois has administered over 4.4 million doses of the COVID-19 vaccine, according to Pritzker. More than 28 percent of adults are vaccinated, including more than 605 of seniors, 65-and-over.

Residents who dont have access to or need assistance navigating online services can call the toll-free IDPH hotline at 833-621-1284 to book an appointment. The hotline is open 7 days a week from 6 am to midnight with agents available in English and Spanish.

View News 3's Local Vaccine Information page to locate a Vaccination Clinic near you, and view the Interactive COVID-19 Tracker for updates on the numbers in your region.

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Illinois to increase COVID-19 vaccine distribution in its southern region - WSIL TV

More appointments opening up for COVID-19 vaccination at Winston-Salem Fairgrounds – WGHP FOX 8 Greensboro

March 20, 2021

WINSTON-SALEM, N.C. Beginning on Saturday, people will be available to sign up for new COVID-19 vaccine appointments opening up at the Winston-Salem Fairgrounds Education Building, according to a news release from Forsyth County Public Health.

Seniors, health care workers,essential workersand people with medical conditions that put them at higher risk of serious illness are eligible.

On Saturday starting atapproximately2 p.m.,230 appointments will be available online at Bit.Ly/FCNCCovidVaccine for Monday, March 22.

The two-dose Pfizer and Moderna vaccines will be administered at the appointments. Second dose appointments will be scheduled onsite after vaccination.

Vaccination is by appointment-only. No walk-ups with be accepted.

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More appointments opening up for COVID-19 vaccination at Winston-Salem Fairgrounds - WGHP FOX 8 Greensboro

Health Department To Expand COVID-19 Vaccine Eligibility To Include Phases 2a And 2b On Monday – The Chattanoogan

March 20, 2021

The Hamilton County Health Department will align with the State of TennesseesVaccination Planand expand COVID-19 vaccine eligibility to include phases 2a and 2b, effective March 22.

Phase 2a Includes:

Tennesseans Employed in the Following Critical Infrastructure Industries

Phase 2b Includes:

Tennesseans Employed in the Following Critical Infrastructure Industries

These new Phases include our Countys critical infrastructure workers, many of whom continued to interface with the public when other sectors shut down or offered their staff a work-at home option, says Hamilton County Health Department Administrator Becky Barnes. These essential workers repaired utility poles after a storm, worked in factories to keep food on the table, kept our transportation systems open and made essential support services available. We encourage everyone who qualifies in this new phase to make an appointment beginning Monday.

Make An Appointment

People in the eligible phases (1a1, 1a2, 1b, 1c, 2a, 2b & Adults 55+), especially those in the most recent age group addition of55-64, are encouraged to sign up now to ensure their vaccination appointment. Visitvaccine.hamiltontn.govtomake an appointment online. Appointments are available for the current phase this Sunday. Those who do not have access to the internet can call the appointment call center to make an appointment over the phone:

First dose appointments: 423-209-5398

Second dose appointments: 423-209-5399

Spanish appointment line: 423-209-5384

All three call center lines are open Monday-Friday from 8AM-4PM. Due to high call volume, callers may experience a busy signal and need to hang up and call back.

The Health Departments general COVID-19 hotline 423-209-8383 is available to connect people to vaccine and testing resources. Hours are Monday-Friday from 8AM-4PM and Saturday 10AM-3PM. Bilingual representatives are available.

Visithttps://vaccinefinder.org/search/and enter your zip code for a full list of providers and pharmacies offering the COVID-19 vaccine.

Current Phases/Eligibility

COVID-19 vaccine appointments are for people who live or work in Hamilton County and meet current eligibility. For a full list of eligible phases, visitvaccine.hamiltontn.govand click on the Current Phases/Eligibility tab. To see the list in Spanish, visit the Spanishwebsiteand scroll to the bottom.

The Health Department will ask for documentation to show that patients live or work in Hamilton County. The Department will not ask for proof of Phase 1C or work category status. A list of documents accepted is available on the Health Departments website.

Important Information to Know Prior to Appointment

Do not arrive more than 15 minutes prior to your scheduled appointment.

Wear appropriate clothing to get a shot in upper arm

Bring proof of Hamilton County residency (if applicable)

Bring proof of Hamilton County employment (if applicable)

Bring proof of age (if applicable)

Print and complete the COVID-19 Vaccine Encounter form for both first and second dose appointments. Click here to download the form:https://bit.ly/3caxvL3. Forms are available on-site, but bringing a completed form to the vaccination site will accelerate the process.

Be prepared to wait 20 minutes after shot

Be prepared for the entire process to take an hour or more

Vaccination Record Card

When patients receive their first dose with the Health Department, they will receive a Vaccination Record Card with the following important information.

The vaccine manufacturer (either Moderna or Pfizer)

The date the first dose of vaccine was given

The date the second vaccine dose is due. This date is not an appointment. Patient must schedule a second dose appointment.

Additional Resources

Stay up-to-date on new vaccine appointment information. Follow the health department via their email newsletter and social media accounts, available at this link:health.hamiltontn.org/AllServices/Coronavirus(COVID-19)/ConnectWithUs.aspx.

Transportation is available to the vaccination site. Call 423-209-8383 to schedule a ride.

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Health Department To Expand COVID-19 Vaccine Eligibility To Include Phases 2a And 2b On Monday - The Chattanoogan

Why Your Doctor Was Left Out Of The COVID-19 Vaccination Plan – FiveThirtyEight

March 20, 2021

Like many older Americans, my dad wanted to get his COVID-19 vaccine but found the process of signing up for an appointment frustratingly complicated. In his home state of Oklahoma, there were multiple websites. It wasnt clear, though, whether each site offered the same appointments or different ones. And refreshing the page at just the right time to snag a coveted spot seemed impossible. Ive got my annual checkup tomorrow, he said to me. Cant I just get the vaccine from my doctor?

Unfortunately, the answer was no. Americans are used to thinking of their doctors offices as the place to go for vaccinations, but the process for distributing the COVID-19 vaccine has largely bypassed primary care physicians. Thats something physicians themselves have been frustrated about recently. In a survey of primary care doctors, 32 percent said they hadnt been included in any state or regional planning and had no idea when or if they would get vaccines for their patients. Years of surveys suggest, however, that primary care doctors are the most trusted source of information about vaccines and vaccine safety. A 2015 survey of Oklahoma residents, for example, found that 81 percent trusted their health care providers for health information thats compared with 24 percent who said the internet was a trustworthy source. (Presumably, their daughters writing on the Internet ranks higher than that.)

The exclusion of primary care doctors is just one of the many ways that a pandemic vaccine rollout differs from the normal, everyday process of getting people vaccinated. We have a process that we know works experts I spoke to, in fact, described the United States normal vaccination system as one of the best in the world. So why not use it in a pandemic?

Because everything from the logistics of the vaccines to the patients themselves is different.

There are a number of reasons why people like my dad cant just go to their primary care doctor for a COVID-19 vaccine, said Julie Swann, a professor and head of North Carolina State Universitys department of industrial and systems engineering. The storage and distribution needs of the different vaccines, especially the requirements for ultra-cold storage, are a big part of this. Initially, the Food and Drug Administration said the Pfizer vaccine had to be stored between -112 degrees Fahrenheit and -76 degrees Fahrenheit something most doctors offices couldnt do. Nor do they have the ability to vaccinate as many people per day as public health experts say is necessary to effectively combat the virus.

What is the maximum number of doses that doctors office is going to give out in a single day? said Swann. Even if you have more of these individual doctors, if you have 10 mass vaccination sites and each doing 5,000 shots per day, how many doctors would you need if the doctors are only giving 100 [vaccinations] per day?

Likewise, there are time limits to how fast each vial of vaccine must be used once its opened, said Julie Murphy, a senior administrator at the nonprofit Immunization Action Coalition. Were accustomed to single-dose vials or prefilled syringes in the fridge, she said. Even when other vaccines do come in multi-dose vials, theyre stabilized with preservatives that make them work well in a primary care setting, where youre likely to go through five doses over a couple days but not necessarily in the six-hour time window the preservative-free COVID vaccines demand.

The absence of primary care doctors isnt the only way COVID vaccine distribution differs from normal. For example, vaccines arent usually free to the public or allocated to states by the federal government. Nor are there usually reporting requirements that anyone distributing vaccines must regularly submit information on the supply left in their inventory. The process of distribution has changed in multiple ways even from state to state or county to county. And while there are lots of ways to get vaccine distribution wrong, experts said theres no single way to do it right either.

In fact, its important to remember that this vaccine distribution is different from anything else weve ever done before, said Dr. Yvonne Maldonado, professor of pediatric infectious diseases at Stanford University. Nobody has ever tried to wipe out a pandemic in real time like this. The closest analogy, she said, is probably the elimination of smallpox, and that didnt have such a short time constraint. Its no wonder, then, that what were doing now doesnt always look like what weve done in the past.

But this doesnt mean experts are ignoring the lessons of past vaccination campaigns. In fact, during the H1N1 pandemic, Swann was part of a team modeling pandemic supply chains for the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. One of the things she did was analyze which kinds of vaccine distribution locations were most effective. States that had sent more vaccine to locations that were easier for people to access had higher rates of administration of the vaccine to high-risk adults. When she says places that are easier to access, she means pharmacies.

Open after working hours and on weekends and with no need for a prior relationship with the patient, pharmacies turned out to be really efficient at getting vaccines to more people, faster. Prior to the H1N1 pandemic, though, only some states allowed pharmacists to administer vaccinations. The lessons learned in that pandemic ended up changing laws nationwide, and now pharmacies are not only a normal place to get a flu vaccine but also a big part of the COVID-19 vaccine response.

Mass vaccination sites can leave a trust gap in who gets vaccinated, however. Theyre good at efficiently vaccinating lots of people quickly not necessarily good at vaccinating everyone. When the Kaiser Family Foundation polled Americans about the COVID-19 vaccines in December, they found that 39 percent were adopting a wait and see approach they didnt want to be among the first and fastest to get the vaccine. That same group, though, showed a lot of trust in their doctors to tell them which vaccine was safe and when it was safe to get it 87 percent of those wait-and-seers trusted their own health care providers. Primary care doctors are likely going to become an important part of COVID vaccination later, Murphy said, when getting more people vaccinated starts to mean getting the hesitant people vaccinated.

In the meantime, though, primary care offices can help with another pandemic vaccination problem catching Americans up on the everyday vaccines they may have missed over the past year. Weve been tracking a falloff in immunization rates across all age groups for all the other diseases, Murphy said. Its a serious concern.

Its a pandemic, but your health matters in ways beyond just whether you get COVID. For older adults, going for an annual physical even if theres not a prized vaccine dose waiting is pretty important. So thats what my dad did. And then, undeterred by his annoyance with the system, he made a separate appointment to get his COVID-19 vaccine.

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Why Your Doctor Was Left Out Of The COVID-19 Vaccination Plan - FiveThirtyEight

‘It’s a very special picture.’ Why vaccine safety experts put the brakes on AstraZeneca’s COVID-19 vaccine – Science Magazine

March 20, 2021

A doctor administers a dose of the AstraZeneca vaccine against COVID-19 in Dippoldiswalde, Germany, on 15 Marchthe day the German government said it would temporarily halt the use of the vaccine because of safety concerns.

By Gretchen Vogel, Kai KupferschmidtMar. 17, 2021 , 1:30 PM

Sciences COVID-19 reporting is supported by the Heising-Simons Foundation.

The decision this week by more than 20 European countries to temporarily stop using AstraZenecas COVID-19 vaccine has opened a rift between vaccine safety experts, who say the cases of serious clotting and bleeding that triggered the pause are alarming and unusual, and public health officials concerned that the immunization pause on a continent in the grip of the pandemics third wave could take a heavy toll.

The harm caused by depriving people of access to a vaccine will likely vastly outweigh even the worst case scenario if any link to the clotting disorders is eventually found, University of Leeds virologist Stephen Griffin told the United Kingdoms Science Media Centre. The European Medicines Agency (EMA) and the World Health Organization have recommended that countries continue immunizations while they investigate the reports.

Scientists dont know whether the vaccine causes the syndrome, and if so, what the mechanism is. Everyones scratching their heads: Is this a real signal? says Robert Brodsky, a hematologist at Johns Hopkins University. But vaccine safety officials say they did not take the decision lightly, and that symptoms seen in at least 13 patients, all between ages 20 and 50 and previously healthy, in at least five countries are more frequent than would be expected by chance. The patients, at least seven of whom have died, suffer from widespread blood clots, low platelet counts, and internal bleedingnot typical strokes or blood clots. Its a very special picture of symptoms, says Steinar Madsen, medical director of the Norwegian Medicines Agency. Our leading hematologist said he had never seen anything quite like it.

A somewhat similar blood disorder, called immune thrombocytopenia (ITP), has been seen in at least 36 people in the United States who had received the Pfizer and Moderna vaccines against COVID-19, The New York Times recently reported. The U.S. Food and Drug Administration said it was investigating these cases, but also said the syndrome did not appear to be more common in vaccinated people, and immunizations in the United States have continued. But Madsen says the cases seen in Europe in recent weeks are distinct from ITP, which lacks the widespread blood clots seen in the European patients.

The United Kingdom, which has administered the AstraZeneca vaccine to more than 10 million people, has so far not reported similar clusters of unusual clotting or bleeding disorders.

In Europe, a 49-year-old intensive care nurse in Austria was one of the first cases. She died last week from what officials called clotting disorders that culminated in internal bleeding. (A colleague at the same hospital who received the vaccine developed lung embolisms, but was expected to recover.) A similar constellation of symptoms has been identified in four patients in Norway, two of whom have died, Madsen says.

German officials said Monday they had received seven reports of cerebral venous thrombosis (CVT), three of them fatal, in patients who had recently been vaccinated with the AstraZeneca vaccine. In this rare type of stroke, the vein that drains blood from the brain is blocked, which can result in massive, deadly bleeding in the brain. All of the patients also had low levels of platelets, which aid in clotting, a possible sign of more widespread clotting. One affected patient had blood clots from head to toe, says Clemens Wendtner, a hematology and infectious disease specialist at the Munich Clinic, Schwabing. The symptoms remind Wendtner of a syndrome called disseminated intravascular coagulation (DIC), in which blood clots form throughout the body, depleting its platelet supply. When the clots cause blood vessels to burst, the body is less able stop the internal bleeding, which can damage the brain or other organs.

Arnold Ganser, a hematologist at Hannover Medical School, says he is treating another patient who developed CVT within days of vaccination. He says that patient appears to be suffering from another condition called atypical hemolytic uremic syndrome (HUS). (The patient, a woman older than 60, is not yet counted in the seven cases announced in Germany on Monday.) Although it can look similar to DIC, HUS develops from damage to the vascular walls. It is usually caused by a bacterial toxin, but can also arise from unknown factors.The condition can be treated with an antibody targeting the complement system, a cascade of molecular interactions that aids immune clearance of pathogens or diseased cells, and Ganser says the patient appeared to be responding to that treatment.

Germany paused vaccinations on Monday on the recommendation of the Paul Ehrlich Institute (PEI), the countrys agency in charge of vaccine safety. PEI head Klaus Cichutek says all seven cases of CVT had occurred between 4 and 16 days after vaccination, and that an analysis suggested only a single case would normally be expected among the 1.6 million people who received the vaccine in that time window. A group of experts convened on Monday agreed unanimously that there seemed to be a pattern here and that a link to the vaccine was not implausible and that this should be investigated, Cichutek says.

Other factors played a role in the recommendation, including the fact that the syndrome is so severe and difficult to treat, and that it affects relatively young people who are at low risk of dying from COVID-19. It was also an opportunity to urge people to seek medical attention immediately if they develop persistent headaches or unusual bruising in the week following vaccination, Cichutek says.

But the decision put PEI at odds with EMA, which says vaccinations should continue for now. When you vaccinate millions of people, its inevitable that you have rare or serious incidences of illnesses that occur after vaccination, EMA head Emer Cooke said at a press conference yesterday. EMA will convene a panel on Thursday to help figure out whether there was a causal relationship between the vaccinations and the highly unusual syndrome. For the moment, the agency is firmly convinced that the vaccines benefits outweigh any risks, Cooke said.

If possible, we need to have a European decision this week on the basis of what we know.

Madsen believes the unusual symptoms may be the result of a very strong immunological reaction. Acute infections can trigger clotting and bleeding, sometimes culminating in DIC, Wendtner notes. But abnormal clotting is also a feature of COVID-19. Its possible, Wendtner says, that the unusual cases had a COVID-19 infection before they got vaccinated; many were health care workers and teachers who may have been exposed at work. Coming on top of the infection, the vaccine might somehow have triggered an overreaction by the immune system, sparking the clotting syndrome. Ganser thinks patients suffering from CVT may be the tip of the iceberg and that more people may suffer similar, but milder, symptoms.

If there really is a link between the vaccine and the blood disorders, Brodsky says a lot of evidence points to a crucial role for the complement system. Dysregulation of that system can lead to diseases that Brodsky terms complemenopathies. What complementopathies have in common is: They all have thrombosis as part of it, they all have thrombocytopenia as part of it, they all have relative resistance to traditional anticoagulants and they all have triggers such as infections, inflammation, pregnancy, cancer, vaccines.

In a paper published in October in Blood Brodsky and colleagues showed that the spike protein of SARS-CoV-2, by binding to the inner surface of blood vessels, can activate the complement system. In some people that leads to the cells lining the vessel being attacked, which in turn can lead to blood clotting and ultimately cause severe disease. Brodsky says he has had several patients with a complement disorder called paroxysmal nocturnal hemoglobinuria whose symptoms worsened after receiving a COVID-19 vaccine. It doesnt prove anything, but there is a lot of smoke here.

Some have instead speculated that specific batches of the vaccine caused the problem, for instance because they were contaminated or contained a higher dose. Thats unlikely, Cooke said yesterday, because across Europe, the patients received doses from many different batches. AstraZeneca supplies Europe with vaccine from several plants, however, and EMA could not say whether all of the batches involved came from the same facility.

AstraZeneca said in a statement that a careful review of all available safety data of more than 17 million people vaccinated in the European Union and UK with COVID-19 Vaccine AstraZeneca has shown no evidence of an increased risk of pulmonary embolism, deep vein thrombosis or thrombocytopenia, in any defined age group, gender, batch or in any particular country. The Company is keeping this issue under close review but available evidence does not confirm that the vaccine is the cause.

The pause is quickly developing into a full-blown crisis for Europe, where vaccination has been sluggish compared with the United States and the United Kingdom while cases have raced upward, thanks in part to more transmissible variants. Several hundred thousand people per day were receiving the AstraZeneca vaccine across Europe until last weekend. That puts enormous pressure on regulatory agencies to resolve the issue quickly.

The rate of immunizations in the next 4 weeks will be crucial for how many people eventually get sick and die in the third wave in Germany, says Dirk Brockmann, a disease modeler at the Robert Koch Institute. We actually need to speed up vaccinationsa lot, he says.

Paul Hunter, an infectious disease expert at the University of East Anglia, noted in a statement that even if the risk of CVT is raised by the vaccine to five or more cases per million people vaccinated, the COVID-19 infection fatality rate for men in their mid-40s is 0.1%, or 1000 deaths per million infected.

Given the rarity of the syndrome and the vaccines enormous benefits, it might be worth restarting immunizations even if the complications are connected to the vaccine, but with precautions, Cichutek says, such as informing people about what to do if certain symptoms appear or excluding some groups of people from the vaccinations. If possible, we need to have a European decision this week on the basis of what we know, Cichutek says.

Brodsky says the people to watch might be the same people who are at very high risk from COVID-19, which could mean that the risk of getting the virus still exceeds that of developing these blood issues.

Karl Lauterbach, a German politician and epidemiologist, says he would have let the vaccinations continue while the safety concerns are investigated. But Wendtner says officials had little choice given the severity of the reactions. In communicating about vaccine or drug safety, he says, there is nothing worse than trying to sweep things under the rug. If the investigations show there was no connection to the vaccine, he says, then we can be even more certain that the vaccine is safe.

*Update, 17 March, 4:55 p.m.:This story has been updated to add comments from Robert Brodsky.

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'It's a very special picture.' Why vaccine safety experts put the brakes on AstraZeneca's COVID-19 vaccine - Science Magazine

Deliveries of COVID-19 vaccines procured through COVAX accelerate – World – ReliefWeb

March 18, 2021

17 Mar 2021

PAHO Director reports 728,000 doses will be delivered to five countries in the Americas in coming days.

Washington, D.C., March 17, 2021 (PAHO) Deliveries of COVID-19 vaccines are picking up speed across the Americas as more countries prepare for the imminent arrival of doses procured through COVAX, the global mechanism for equitable distribution of vaccines, Pan American Health Organization (PAHO) Director Carissa F. Etienne reported today.

During her weekly media briefing, Dr. Etienne said that over the next few days, PAHOs Revolving Fund will deliver 728,000 COVAX-procured COVID-19 vaccines to five regional countries. In total, PAHO has placed orders for more than 3.4 million doses, she said.

For all these countries even those which received small donations earlier this month these COVAX deliveries will enable the start of steady vaccination efforts, Dr. Etienne said. We are happy that vaccines through COVAX are being delivered but we recognize that the need for more vaccines and sooner is great in the Americas.

She said only two vaccine manufacturers are dispatching millions of doses to dozens of countries around the world. This is a bottleneck that still prevents us from getting vaccines to every country at the same time, she said. But shipments will become more regular as more doses are available to COVAX in the next few months.

The upcoming shipments to five nations follow delivery of 400,000 doses of COVAX-procured vaccines to regional countries, including Peru, Guatemala, El Salvador, Honduras, and Jamaica. Colombia received COVAX-procured doses through a pilot program earlier this month.

COVAX is a global effort between the Coalition for the Promotion of Epidemic Preparedness Innovations (CEPI), the Gavi Vaccine Alliance (Gavi), and the World Health Organization (WHO), working in partnership with UNICEF as key implementing partner. In the Americas, the PAHO Revolving Fund is the recognized procurement agent for the COVAX facility. Thirty-six countries in the Americas are participating in COVAX.

With COVID vaccination campaigns underway throughout our region, were at the beginning of the end of this pandemic. But while theres reason for hope, we must also remember that doses are limited, and it will be several months before we can rely on vaccines to control this virus.She said that as vaccinations are administered, our goal must be to save as many lives as possible by prioritizing early doses for those who are at highest risk of infection. The health workers who are treating COVID patients, the elderly and those living with existing conditions must come first. In total, nearly 1.3 million people were infected with COVID-19 in the Americas in the past week, and almost 31,000 died because of the virus.

Caribbean nations are also looking forward to arrivals of vaccines. Fifteen Caribbean countries will receive just over 2.1 million doses of COVAX-procured vaccines by May, according to allocation figures provided for the first round of deliveries. Next week, we expect that many countries in the Caribbean will start to see the first COVAX shipments arrive on their shores, Dr. Etienne said.

A fourth vaccine, the Johnson & Johnson vaccine, has been authorized by WHO, which issued an Emergency Use License (EUL) last week. COVAX has secured over 100 million doses of the vaccine for 2021 and up to 500 million through 2022, with doses expected to start arriving in July. The vaccine, which provides protection with a single dose, promises to accelerate vaccination efforts.

So far, 28 million doses of COVID-19 vaccines have been administered to Latin American and Caribbean populations while nearly 138 million doses have been provided throughout the Americas.

Dr. Etienne cautioned that countries must maintain public health measures hand washing, social distancing, and mask wearing. Even people who have been vaccinated should adhere to the measures. Stopping this pandemic will require both that we limit new infections and that we expand access to vaccines, she said. So, we must not let our guard down now. Lets keep hope alive.

Even as vaccines arrive, Dr. Etienne pointed out, COVID-19 is accelerating its spread in about half of the countries in the Americas.

The number of cases is rising in many South American countries, including Uruguay, Ecuador and Venezuela. In the last week, Paraguays health system issued an urgent warning as hospitals have filled with COVID patients, Dr. Etienne said. Major cities like Lima and Rio de Janeiro have imposed curfews and lockdowns to control recent spikes.

In Brazil, several areas are experiencing record-high infections and hospital beds are nearing capacity in more than half of states. The country is reporting the second highest COVID daily death toll in the world.

New infections are declining in the U.S. and Mexico while cases are increasing in Canada, particularly among young adults. In the Caribbean, new infections are declining but many islands are reporting a rise in COVID 19-related deaths.

ContactsDaniel EpsteinNancy NusserSebastin Olielmediateam@paho.org

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Deliveries of COVID-19 vaccines procured through COVAX accelerate - World - ReliefWeb

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