Category: Covid-19 Vaccine

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CDC gathering information on COVID-19 vaccine hesitance in Alabama – WSFA

March 11, 2021

And were really just trying to convince them what we already believe, which is this is a safe and effective vaccine and its really good, good for you if you take it because COVID is, you know, really a bad thing to get. So if we can convince these people who are trusted voices then they can do the hard work of actually communicating to people, you know, at the community level, Harris said.

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CDC gathering information on COVID-19 vaccine hesitance in Alabama - WSFA

Appointments slow to fill at some Washington COVID-19 vaccination sites – KING5.com

March 11, 2021

While appointments the COVID-19 vaccine now seem to be plentiful, the state says that demand is still outstripping supply.

SEATTLE For those whove ever booked a COVID-19 vaccine appointment in Washington state, it seemed like available slots were gone before you saw them or would vanish just before you could click on them.

Many people are still reporting frustration, but if you look around appointments seem to be more available. Booking vaccine appointments, at least some of the time, is now easier to do.

In Seattle, at vaccine sites in Rainier Beach and West Seattle, there were still hundreds of appointments available as of late Tuesday.

The city told KING 5 News that 500 out of 3,400 appointments are still available through March 13 at the Rainier Beach site, and 600 out of 1,800 appointments are available at the citys site in West Seattle.

At one of the states large mass vaccine sites in Wenatchees Town Toyota Center, more than 100 slots were still available at 4 p.m. on March 9. More than 230 were available mid-morning, and that was not counting the extra allotment of 180 slots set aside in case teachers and school staff wanted to come down. A special opening for teachers and staff is scheduled for Wednesday.

Demand is still outpacing supply, said Washington State Department of Health spokesperson Lisa Stromme Warren.

Warren added that the state Department of Health is trying to be nimble, and with more grocery store workers and others becoming eligible on March 22, it might become harder to book again.

Weve seen examples using covidwa.com, where hospitals and clinics took a day or more to fill up slots.

But many people arent wasting time when they spot an opening.

I dont think a lot of people know about it, so that might be the issue. But the minute I found out about it I was on it quick, fast and in a hurry, Chanel Flemings said outside the Rainier Beach site.

She left on Tuesday with her first dose of the Moderna vaccine.

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Appointments slow to fill at some Washington COVID-19 vaccination sites - KING5.com

Grand Prairie giving another 3,000 doses of COVID-19 vaccine this week – The Dallas Morning News

March 11, 2021

Grand Prairie will give another 3,000 doses of the COVID-19 vaccine to residents Wednesday in a drive-through line.

The citys vaccination site is at The Theatre at Grand Prairie, 1001 Performance Place, in partnership with Irving. In total, 2,000 first Moderna vaccine doses and 1,000 second doses will be administered, according to the citys website.

Since the vaccination site opened on Feb. 3, registered residents went inside the site. However, that has changed this week as the city is trying a drive-through style distribution method.

Second doses will be given Wednesday to residents who received their first dose from the site on Feb. 10. Residents should arrive at the site Wednesday at about the same time they did for their initial dose, according to the city.

Grand Prairie is offering residents free transportation to the vaccination site, through its Grand Connection bus service. Reservations have to be made 24 hours in advance by calling 971-237-8546, and free rides are only available on days the vaccination site is open.

In the early stages of the vaccine rollout, doses are being reserved for frontline health care workers, first responders, people over the age of 65 and people with certain underlying health conditions who are especially vulnerable to the virus, otherwise referred to as groups 1A and 1B.

Register for the vaccine online through Dallas County here.

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Grand Prairie giving another 3,000 doses of COVID-19 vaccine this week - The Dallas Morning News

My experience with the second COVID-19 vaccination dose – Red and Black

March 11, 2021

On March 5, a month after my first dose, I received my second dose of the Moderna COVID-19 vaccine at a Publix in Johns Creek. It was no walk in the park, but I am grateful I received it. Here is my experience.

My appointment was at 10:30 a.m., and the process to get signed in seemed the same as before. I was handed a piece of paper asking me for some medical history and if I had any extreme symptoms from my first dose. After filling out the paperwork, I had to wait about 15 minutes for the pharmacist to get to me since there was a line.

Once I was ready to get vaccinated, the pharmacists double-checked and asked if I had any extreme reactions to the first dose. I told her I had common symptoms, but nothing too extreme.

After I received the vaccine, I had to wait for 15 minutes to check if I have any side effects which I didnt so I drove back home.

About five hours after getting the vaccination, my arm began to feel sore and swollen, but I had no other symptoms.

At hour eight, I began to feel warm and tired and decided to keep working, as it was not too bad. However, at hour 10 I started to experience immense fatigue, body aches, headaches and a fever of 102 degrees Fahrenheit. This fever soon became off and on with chills later in the night. I took 325 mg of Tylenol which helped break the fever, and I fell asleep.

The next morning, I woke up with a fever again of 100 degrees Fahrenheit and felt really cold along with a massive headache and soreness all over my body. My arm was still swollen, but the soreness in my arm was nothing compared to the headache.

Until noon, I felt these body aches and had a headache and fatigue. My fever had dissipated at about 10:30 a.m. By 1 p.m. I felt completely fine except for some weakness due to the body working so hard in dealing with the vaccination. I drank a lot of water which helped gain back some strength and hydration.

Overall, my symptoms lasted about a day and were more immense than the ones I had with the first dose. However, it was not anything that I couldnt handle. I reminded myself that I had gotten vaccinated, which would always make me feel better and remind me that I am part of a bigger effort in not only keeping myself safe, but the people and community around me. Getting the vaccination and its symptoms are better than getting COVID-19 itself.

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My experience with the second COVID-19 vaccination dose - Red and Black

My COVID-19 vaccine story and what happened next – Harvard Health Blog – Harvard Health

March 11, 2021

Like most healthcare workers, I was thrilled when I was eligible to receive the COVID-19 vaccine. Ive been involved in COVID-19 patient care since the very start of the pandemic in the US, and I had seen what this virus can do to people. We all felt incredibly helpless against this incredibly contagious bug.

With time, experience, and study, weve learned which treatments help and which dont. Even more importantly, we now have vaccines.

The Pfizer/BioNTech and Moderna mRNA vaccines tested in about 18,600 and 15,000 participants, respectively were the first available in the US via emergency FDA authorization. They remain the most effective. Trials showed about 95% efficacy in preventing symptomatic COVID-19 infection after two doses.

More importantly, no one not one participant who caught COVID-19 after receiving either of these vaccines died, or even got sick enough to be hospitalized. And the numbers of vaccinated participants who did get COVID-19 were very low: only 11 in the Moderna trial (compared to 185 who received placebo), and nine in the Pfizer trial (compared to 169 who received placebo). These numbers are real reason to have hope!

So, on January 3rd, I strode into our hospital employee vaccination clinic and almost cried with joy as I got my jab of the Moderna vaccine. Yes, I felt yucky the following day: headache, body aches, fatigue. These mild, flulike symptoms are common after many immunizations, and especially so after these COVID-19 vaccines. I worked from home and took Tylenol, and was fine in a matter of hours.

Theres nothing like a real-life test to drive home the need for vaccines. While I was getting my first dose, my husband was at work. We learned later that he had had a high-risk exposure to COVID-19 that very same day (ironically, he does not work in healthcare, but in professional sports). We went into strict quarantine right then.

Alas, seven days after his exposure, he came down with fever, chills, fatigue, congestion, cough. Two tests confirmed full-blown COVID-19.

Of course my husband wore a mask and we tried to be socially distant. But with two kids in remote school, me trying to keep up with virtual clinical work, and no chance of allowing anyone in to help us, he inevitably got pulled into the day-to-day survival of the household. And seven days after his symptoms started, our ten-year-old son had fever, chills, fatigue, congestion, cough. He was also COVID-positive. And he has asthma.

Actually, both my husband and our son have asthma, but my sons asthma was especially aggravated. He coughed and coughed. I administered his breathing treatments, sometimes in the middle of the night, and admittedly not always while wearing a mask. I couldnt have had more continual high-risk exposure to this virus, far more high-risk than when I worked on the COVID inpatient ward in April.

But during that whole month living among highly symptomatic COVID-infected loved ones, I was being tested regularly through my hospitals occupational health department, as well as by a clinical trial looking at vaccine effectiveness among healthcare workers. I tested negative four times.

One dose, three solid weeks of high-risk exposure, no infection.

There is still one mystery: our nine-year-old daughter never got infected. She was tested three times that month, all negative. We dont think she had prior asymptomatic infection, because if she had, we all would have been infected for sure. Weve been more careful than many families because of my work we would never want to accidentally infect anyone. Im immune! shes very proud to announce to anyone who will listen. And we think she is, somehow.

My husband and son recovered well, thankfully. I received my second dose of the Moderna vaccine on January 31st, and I will say that the day after was a doozy: low-grade fever, fatigue, headache, body aches, sore arm. Again I worked from home, but this time I gave in to a nice hefty dose of Aleve. All those symptoms cleared up and I was back to normal the next day. And that week I tested negative for a fifth time.

I know that some folks are hesitating about the vaccine; some people are hesitant to receive any vaccines. Others have read the media reports on the very, very few and rare allergic reactions. Its true that if someone has a history of a severe allergic reaction to any ingredient in the vaccine, they should not receive it. Otherwise, eligible adults can feel safe to roll up their sleeves. After all, a lot of people have died from COVID-19.

Both the data as well as my own real-world experience with this vaccine are incredibly positive and reassuring. I am confident that we can get to a new normal. We may still be wearing masks and social distancing to some extent remember, vaccinated people can still get infected, its just less likely and they dont get very sick. We dont yet know if people who have been vaccinated might get an asymptomatic infection that they could spread, or about the role of viral variants.

We may still see cases of COVID-19 among people who havent yet received the vaccine and those who decline it. But for the most part, once most folks are vaccinated, I predict a resurgence in restaurants and travel, weddings and family dinners. And I cant wait!

Follow me on Twitter @drmoniquetello

For more information about COVID-19 vaccines, see the Harvard Health Coronavirus Resource Center vaccine page.

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My COVID-19 vaccine story and what happened next - Harvard Health Blog - Harvard Health

Northern Light Health to open COVID-19 vaccine appointments for teachers, educators of all ages – NewsCenterMaine.com WCSH-WLBZ

March 11, 2021

Dr. James Jarvis announced the appointments would open later this week, with shots likely going into arms next week.

BANGOR, Maine Northern Light Health is one of Maine's first major hospital systems to open vaccine appointments for teachers, school staff, and child care providers of all ages.

Dr. James Jarvis said during Wednesday's briefing that Northern Light plans to expand vaccinations to school staff and child care providers of all ages as early as next week, and said appointments will open later this week.

He said districts will send out the link specifically created for these groups.

Northern Light will not be sharing the link at this time.

People must show proof of licensure or employment with a school ID, paystub, or proof of certification.

"People should not share this link with friends and family, because those not eligible for vaccine will be turned away," Jarvis said.

Dr. Jarvis also said Northern Light is planning to open the Piscataquis Ice Arena on March 19, with a goal of 1,500 vaccinations each week.

He said the site at the Portland Expo is ramping up vaccinations as well.

Teachers are eligible for vaccines in Maine and nationwide.

Under a directive from President Joe Biden, retail pharmacies that participate in a federal program must receive any open appointments for the rest of March exclusively for school staff. In Maine, Hannaford, Walmart, Sam's Club, and Walgreens' pharmacies are currently participating.

Maine's Department of Health and Human Services established dedicated clinics for school staff age 60 and older for March 12, 13, and 14. Districts will notify staff of the locations.

Teachers can also sign up at other hospital or health care vaccine clinics along with other Mainers age 60 and up.

Watch the full Northern Light Health press conference here:

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Northern Light Health to open COVID-19 vaccine appointments for teachers, educators of all ages - NewsCenterMaine.com WCSH-WLBZ

Pa. notches two days of 110,000 COVID-19 vaccinations as supply grows – PennLive

March 11, 2021

Pennsylvanias weekly COVID-19 vaccine allocation from the federal government has risen to about 480,000 first and second doses, with the number of first doses up by about 12,000 from last week, state officials said Wednesday.

Moreover, the state has averaged about 67,200 vaccinations per week for the past week, including two days of about 110,000 people getting vaccinated.

Gov. Tom Wolf stressed Wednesday that the supply is still short of demand. However, he said the federal government is going a good job of increasing the supply, and echoed President Joe Bidens recent prediction that everybody who wants a vaccine should have one by the end of May.

State officials said they expect Pennsylvanias supply to get a further boost from expanded production of the newly approved Johnson & Johnson vaccine. And with the Johnson & Johnson vaccine requiring only one dose, that could rapidly increase the rate of vaccinations, state health department spokesman Barry Ciccocioppo said.

However, Ciccocioppo seemed to contradict Wolf when asked how many vaccine doses have been wasted because of events such as people not showing up for late-day appointments after vaccine doses have been opened. Once opened and brought up to usable temperature, vaccine must be used within about six hours or it will spoil.

Ciccocioppo said about 1,500 doses have been lost, although he pointed out the number includes doses lost through incidents such as being dropped. Thats out of about 3 million doses received by the state.

Wolf, at a separate event on Wednesday, was asked how many doses have been thrown out. He said so far, none have been thrown out.

Wolf went on to stress that Pennsylvania has a law against throwing out vaccine. Rather, if providers have doses that would otherwise spoil, they should just give the vaccine to someone, regardless of whether the person is in Phase 1A.

State officials on Wednesday also outlined the process the state health department uses in allocating doses to counties.

The department uses a formula based on a countys total population, its population of residents 65 and older, its number of COVID-19 infections and it number of COVID-19 deaths. The department gives the most weight to a countys 65 and older population and its number of COVID-19 deaths, with the two accounting for 60% of the decision.

At the opening of a vaccination site in Lancaster County on Wednesday, Wolf was challenged on claims, including some made by elected officials, that counties surrounding Philadelphia are getting less than their fair share of vaccine.

Wolf said health department data shows allocations for those counties have been at or above the state average. Moreover, he said the health department is devoted to fair allocation of doses and is continually asking itself whether vaccine is being distributed in the fairest, best way, and adjusting the process accordingly.

As Republican state Sen. Ryan Aument stood near, Wolf credited a bipartisan state task force with solving problems related to vaccine distribution.

I know this is a divisive period of time for politics, Wolf said. But I think weve actually figured out how we can have very rational conversations, can disagree with each other, and do it in a way that actually leads, I think so far, to really good outcomes, so that were in a better position than we were before the vaccine task force started.

He said inadequate vaccine supply remains the biggest barrier to vaccinating everyone who wants a dose.

Pennsylvania vaccine providers this week requested almost 425,000 first doses of vaccine nearly double the states allocation for the week, a state official noted on Wednesday.

Right now the demand outstrips the supply. The hope is that we will get to the reverse of that quickly within the next few months, Wolf said.

More from PennLive

Groups urge Gov. Wolf to open private events and weddings at 50% capacity

Pa. will get $7 billion in federal COVID-19 relief package. How will it be used?

The rest is here:

Pa. notches two days of 110,000 COVID-19 vaccinations as supply grows - PennLive

A pandemic expert weighs in on the long road ahead for Covid vaccines – STAT

March 8, 2021

Though nearly 300 million doses of Covid-19 vaccines have been administered around the globe so far, the world still has a long way to go before we can think about declaring the pandemic over.

Vaccine distribution remains wildly inequitable, with wealthy countries vaccinating at far higher rates than low- and middle-income countries.

Meantime, with the scramble to ramp up manufacturing, there are concerns that the production of Covid-19 vaccines could cannibalize the ability of companies to make and distribute other vaccines, like those that protect against dangerous pathogens like rabies, tetanus, measles, and human papillomavirus.

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CEPI, the Coalition for Epidemic Preparedness Innovations, is among the organizations thinking critically about these issues. Its also one of the partners along with the World Health Organization and Gavi, the Vaccine Alliance in COVAX, an entity striving to expand access to scarce Covid vaccines on behalf of low- and middle-income countries.

As it has several times throughout the course of the pandemic, STAT spoke recently to Richard Hatchett, CEO of CEPI. Hatchett told us the group will later this week launch the strategy for its next set of goals and take part in an important discussion at the London think tank Chatham House aimed at finding ways to unblock the vaccine production bottlenecks without harming non-Covid vaccine production.

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Excerpts from the conversation are below, lightly edited for length and clarity.

In terms of CEPIs future, are you talking about the process of getting to next-generation Covid-19 vaccines? Or are you talking about the fact that there will be future pandemics and we need to start to prepare for them? Or both?

Its actually both. Were kind of poised between trying to think about how we can end the Covid pandemic, but also beginning to look at the institutions and things that we have set up and thinking about how we can carry those forward and the opportunities for pandemic preparedness in the period after.

Initially we were thinking about the next-generation vaccines as just offering attributes that you would want in vaccines for managing Covid for the long term. So, you know, low cost. Ideally in a single dose. Ease of administration might be factors. More thermal-stable products. But I think the introduction of the variants also forces us to think about multivalent vaccines [meaning they would protect against several strains of the virus] or vaccines that can be easily turned from one strain to another if we get into that kind of a dynamic.

But were also drawing lessons from this experience in turning toward the future and thinking about how we can systematically reduce or even eliminate the risk of future pandemics.

Flu vaccines have to be updated virtually annually, and their efficacy is far from ideal. It would be such a missed opportunity if the world follows that paradigm again and then never comes up with a pan-coronavirus vaccine. Wouldnt it be better to not follow the flu path if we didnt need to?

The answer is yes. And I think you will be pleased to hear that we are very shortly going to be putting out a call for proposals around were calling them fully protective betacoronavirus vaccines, which seem to be the main threat. [Both SARS-1, which caused a less widespread outbreak in 2003, and SARS-CoV-2, which causes Covid, are betacoronaviruses.]

Theres been quite a buzz about that recently. Our timing seems to have been good. I mean, weve been working on gearing this initiative up for some time and didnt know that all these efforts were going to be attracting the attention that theyve attracted in the last month or so. But there are at least 20 groups around the world that are trying to move in that direction. And were going to be putting out a major initiative, and hopefully by the end of this month, actually.

But obviously, we dont know what the art of the possible is. And I think certainly in the near term, we need to be thinking about different strategies for ensuring that we can provide protection against the emerging variants.

A number of wealthy countries have locked up a lot of vaccine doses more than theyll actually need for their populations. Is this getting in the way of the rest of the world accessing vaccine? Should countries like the U.S. be saying to some of the manufacturers: Were not going to need that order. You can sell it to somebody else or were donating it to COVAX.

COVAX would welcome that and we are working through making sure that we are ready to receive and use promptly any doses that are contributed.

But I was in the U.S. government during the 2009 H1N1 pandemic and actually I led the policy development process around vaccine donation, which led to the international donation program. H1N1 was nothing like SARS-CoV-2 in terms of its severity or impact. And yet the debate within a reasonably progressive administration in that pandemic was intense. And I can only imagine what it must be like inside governments now, which are struggling to get vaccine to meet their domestic demand.

Every government has to figure out for itself what it can do. For most of last year, we made the argument that there were two core pieces. One was that it was the right thing to do. The other was from enlightened self-interest, which was even if you protect your own population, all countries are interdependent on each other and entangled in a global economy that will continue to suffer if the pandemic isnt brought under control everywhere.

And the third argument that has entered the discussions and I think, somewhat to my surprise actually, seems to be the most impactful is the argument from biology that the virus is out there mutating. And it may be that your huge investment in vaccine is completely upended by variants that evade the immunity that the vaccine provides. And theres been a real sea change, with G7 and other wealthy nations really realizing they do need to figure out how to end the pandemic.

Do you think theres room to be a little bit more generous or a little bit more accepting of the notion that other people have a right to vaccine too?

Im fully in the choir. I might be your associate pastor.

One other thing that I dont know if its on your radar screen but were having a two-day meeting at Chatham House to talk about supply-chain concerns. Whats happening right now is that all of the vaccine manufacturers who have achieved some kind of positive Phase 3 result are now really dialing up their manufacturing. And I think there are nine or 10 vaccines that have been approved by some regulatory authority, somewhere. Theyre all dialing up their production simultaneously.

So what youve got is a potentially very concerning situation where the main types of vaccine depend largely on a relatively narrowly defined set of critical inputs, whether these are consumables or raw materials that theyre all depending on. And that actually other vaccines and other biological medical products depend on as well.

Vials and vial stoppers?

Exactly. The bags. The stoppers. The tubing. There are actually chemical raw materials and other things as well. And we were beginning to get signals from individual vaccine manufacturers that they are on relatively thin ice in terms of supplies to continue their manufacturing. Simultaneously we were having conversations with some of the upstream providers of these critical supplies, hearing about lengthening back-order times and compensatory behaviors of the companies that rely on these materials placing larger orders because they were concerned they were going to need to stockpile or hoard.

Which makes it worse?

Which makes it worse. Vicious cycle. And then youve also got the overlay of the countries being increasingly antsy and willing to impose export controls or in the case of the United States, to use the Defense Production Act. And so it was a concern seeing all of these trend lines that will intersect not too far in the future and could actually result in a compromise even of the existing capacity.

Its easy for world leaders to think that the solution is just creating more manufacturing capacity. And thats all well and good if the upstream supply issues are sorted out and you can make more vaccine. But just having more square footage isnt it going to result in more vaccine if the system has got a sort of upstream bottleneck.

Is there a risk theyre going to have to start siphoning off materials needed for the production of regular vaccines?

Well, I think its something that people are concerned about. The estimated global aggregate production of vaccines was in the range of 3.5 billion to 5.5 billion doses, pre-Covid. And what we are being told by the vaccine manufacturers, based on their projections, is that theyre aspiring to produce 10 billion to 12 billion or 14 billion doses of Covid vaccines alone in 2021. So youre looking at a huge uptick in terms of vaccine production.

There are concerns that the consumption of resources to produce those vaccines could have an impact on the production of non-Covid vaccines. And we obviously want to prevent that from happening.

We need the stakeholders to understand the different stresses that each one is under the countries, the vaccine manufacturers, the upstream suppliers and to think about possible solutions. The solutions that are available to governments, in particular, can be quite blunt instruments. And if they arent used carefully, they can potentially be counterproductive.

I havent yet been vaccinated. But I am looking forward to the day.

Me too.

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A pandemic expert weighs in on the long road ahead for Covid vaccines - STAT

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