Category: Covid-19 Vaccine

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Japan starts COVID-19 vaccinations with eye on Olympics – The Associated Press

February 20, 2021

TOKYO (AP) Japan launched its coronavirus vaccination campaign Wednesday, months after other major economies started giving shots and amid questions about whether the drive would would reach enough people quickly enough to save a Summer Olympics already delayed by the pandemic.

Despite a recent rise in infections, Japan has largely dodged the kind of cataclysm that has battered other wealthy countries economies, social networks and health care systems. But the fate of the Olympics, and the billions of dollars at stake, makes Japans vaccine campaign crucial. Japanese officials are also well aware that rival China, which has had success beating back the virus, will host the Winter Olympics next year, heightening the desire to make the Tokyo Games happen.

Japans rollout lagged behind other places because it asked vaccine maker Pfizer to conduct clinical trials with Japanese people, in addition to tests already conducted in six other nations part of an effort to address worries in a country with low vaccine confidence.

That longstanding reluctance to take vaccines usually because of fears of rare side effects as well as concerns about shortages of the imported vaccines now hang over the rollout, which will first give shots to medical workers, then the elderly and vulnerable, and then, possibly in late spring or early summer, the rest of the population.

Medical workers say vaccinations will help protect them and their families, and business leaders hope the drive will allow economic activity to return to normal. But the late rollout will make it impossible to reach so-called herd immunity in the country of 127 million people before the Olympics begin in July, experts say.

That will leave officials struggling to quell widespread wariness and even outright opposition among citizens to hosting the Games. About 80% of those polled in recent media surveys support cancellation or further postponement of the Olympics.

Despite that, Japanese Prime Minister Yoshihide Suga and others in his government are forging ahead with Olympic plans, billing the Games as proof of human victory against the pandemic.

Japan has not seen the massive outbreaks that have buffeted the United States and many European countries, but a spike in cases in December and January raised concerns and led to a partial state of emergency that includes requests for restaurants and bars to close early. Suga has seen his support plunge to below 40% from around 70% when he took office in September, with many people saying he was too slow to impose restrictions and they were too lax.

The country is now seeing an average of about 1 infection per 100,000 people compared with 24.5 in the United States or 18 in the United Kingdom. Overall, Japan has recorded about 420,000 cases and 7,000 deaths, according to data compiled by Johns Hopkins University.

In a room full of journalists Wednesday, Dr. Kazuhiro Araki, president of Tokyo Medical Center, rolled up his sleeve and got a shot, one of the first Japanese to do so.

It didnt hurt at all, and Im feeling very relieved, he told reporters while he was being monitored for any allergic reaction. We now have better protection, and I hope we feel more at ease as we provide medical treatment.

About 40,000 doctors and nurses considered vulnerable to the virus because they treat COVID-19 patients are in the first group slated to be vaccinated using shots developed by Pfizer and its Germany-based partner BioNTech after the vaccine was authorized Sunday by Japans regulator. It requires two doses, though some protection begins after the first shot.

Japans late authorization of the vaccine means it lags behind many other countries. Britain started inoculations on Dec. 8 and has given at least one shot to more than 15 million people, while the United States began its campaign on Dec. 14 and about 40 million people have received shots. Vaccines were rolled out in many European Union countries in late December, and the campaigns there have come under criticism for being slower.

But Japans vaccine minister, Taro Kono, defended the delay as necessary to build confidence in a country where mistrust of vaccines is decades old. Many people have a vague unease about vaccines, partly because their side effects have often been played up by media here.

I think it is more important for the Japanese government to show the Japanese people that we have done everything possible to prove the efficacy and safety of the vaccine to encourage the Japanese people to take the vaccine, Kono said. So at the end of the day we might have started slower, but we think it will be more effective.

Half of the recipients of the first shots will keep daily records of their condition for seven weeks; that data will be used in a health study meant to inform people worried about the side effects. Studies on tens of thousands of people of the Pfizer vaccine and others being administered currently in other countries have found no serious side effects.

We would like to make efforts so that the people can be vaccinated with a peace of mind, Chief Cabinet Secretary Katsunobu Kato told reporters.

The development of a Japanese COVID-19 vaccine is still in the early stages, so the country, like many others, must rely on imported shots raising concerns about supply issues seen in other places as producers struggle to keep up with demand. Suga on Wednesday acknowledged the importance to strengthen vaccine development and production capability as important crisis management and pledged to provide more support.

Supplies will help determine the progress of the vaccination drive in Japan, Kono said.

The first batch of Pfizer vaccines that arrived Friday is enough to cover the first group of medical workers. A second batch is set for delivery next week.

To get the most from each vial, Japanese officials are also scrambling to get specialized syringes that can draw six doses per vial instead of five by standard Japanese-made syringes.

After the front-line medical workers will come inoculations of 3.7 million more health workers starting in March, followed by about 36 million people aged 65 and older beginning in April. People with underlying health issues, as well as caregivers at nursing homes and other facilities, will be next, before the general population receives its turn.

Some critics have noted the vaccination drive which requires medical workers to be carried out adds to their burden, since Japanese hospitals are already strained by daily treatment of COVID-19 patients. Theres an added worry that hospitals will have no additional capacity to cope with the large number of overseas visitors the Olympics would involve.

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Japan starts COVID-19 vaccinations with eye on Olympics - The Associated Press

How soon will COVID-19 vaccines return life to normal? – Science Magazine

February 20, 2021

The parking lot at Dodger Stadium in Los Angeles serves as a drive-thru COVID-19 vaccine site open into the night.

By Jon CohenFeb. 16, 2021 , 5:45 PM

SAN DIEGOTwenty days into the new year, cars were entering a parking lot bumper-to-bumper in the shadow of Petco Park, home of the San Diego Padres baseball team. Arms waving, attendants directed the cars into three lines, which split into four more, and yelled as though the first pitch had already been thrown. Im going to load you up, Im sending you 10, you can stack them! one attendant hollered to another.

But the Padres dont play in January.

Instead, Petco Park was home field for this citys drive-thru COVID-19 vaccinations. For 9 days straight, health workers there had been injecting about 5000 people between 7 a.m. and 7 p.m. Run by infectious disease clinician Shira Abeles of UC San Diego Healthdubbed the vaccine czar by the 300 people she manages at the Petco operationit is the citys largest vaccination site, focusing on health care workers and anyone 75 or older. Cars moved through stations where workers checked people in, injected them, and then watched them for at least 15 minutes to make sure they didnt have immediate side effects.

The traffic flow was slow but steadyand no one honked. Above their masks, the visitors eyes were smiling. If vaccine hesitancy has an opposite, this was it.

By the end of January, nearly 100 million people around the world had received COVID-19 vaccines, and more than 1 million were getting shots each day in the United States and China. The effort was lagging in Europe, and staggering global inequities remain. The World Health Organization noted on 5 February that 75% of vaccinations have occurred in 10 countries. About 130 countries had yet to inject anyone with a COVID-19 vaccine. Still, the vaccines, shown in clinical trials to have efficacies of up to 95% against symptomatic disease, have finally given the world the prospect of an escape from COVID-19s long siege. There is so much hope, Abeles says.

Now, as vaccination campaigns gain speed, a raft of pressing questions have arisen: Does being immunized mean you wont spread the virus? When will the campaigns begin to curb the pandemic and allow daily life to return to normal? And what do the new variants of SARS-CoV-2, able to spread faster or evade immune responses, mean for the promise of vaccines? The reality here is this virus is evolving, says Lawrence Corey, a virologist at the University of Washington, Seattle, who co-leads the U.S. governmentsupportednetwork that tests COVID-19 vaccines.

Still, answers are emerging.

One month into the U.S. vaccination campaign, Abeles thinks she has seen its effect already. Beginning in mid-December 2020 some 11,000 UC San Diego Health employees began to receive the Pfizer-BioNTech or the Moderna vaccine, both of which contain messenger RNA (mRNA) that directs the bodys cells to make the surface protein from SARS-CoV-2, spike, to trigger an immune response. Despite reports of health care workers hesitant to get the vaccines, 96% of Abeless colleagues accepted the shots. Each week, those employees are tested for SARS-CoV-2, which exploded in San Diego county starting in December, even if they are feeling healthy.

At the peak, UC San Diego Health was detecting 20 to 30 infections each day in employees, many asymptomatic. By the third week in January, the number had fallen to just a handful. Abeles emphasizes that the evidence is far from conclusive, but says we are extremely hopeful that the link between the drop and the mass vaccination is real.

More compelling, if still preliminary, evidence comes from Israel, home to the worlds most aggressive and best studied immunization campaign so far. A country of 9 million people, Israel has universal health care provided mainly through four HMOs with excellent electronic medical records. The Israeli government negotiated with Pfizer to rapidly roll out its mRNA shots in exchange for sharing data about their impact with the company. Between 19 December and 4 February, 39% of Israelis had received at least one dose of the vaccine. Per capita, that is far higher coverage than in any country other than the similarly small United Arab Emirates (36%).

Nationally, COVID-19 cases and hospitalizations appear to be dropping faster among people 60 or older, the first to receive the vaccines, than among the 40- to 60-year-old segment. And in a 1 February press release, the Maccabi Research and Innovation Centeran arm of one of the four HMOsnoted it had tracked 132,015 of its members over age 60 who had received a vaccine dose in the first 9 days of the immunization campaign. Diagnosed SARS-CoV-2 infections in that group peaked about 10 days after immunizations began. By day 28, when most people had received their second, booster dose, diagnoses had fallen by two-thirds, and COVID-19related hospitalization had dropped from a daily high of seven people to one. In the general population, the team notes, reported cases dropped much more slowly.

Israels aggressive COVID-19 vaccine rollout targeted the elderly first, and an analysis of 132,015people 60 and older who received their initial dose in late December 2020 suggests the shots already started reducing the toll of the pandemic in that country 1 month later.

(Graphic) N. Desai/Science; (Data) Maccabi Research and Innovation Center

That finding constitutes persuasive evidence of real-world benefit of vaccination, especially since prior behavioral restrictions in Israel did not seem to selectively protect those over 60, says Roby Bhattacharyya, an infectious disease specialist at Massachusetts General Hospital.

In the United States, people living in long-term care facilities, most of them elderly, and facilities staff were put at the front of the line for vaccines. Those residents account for about 40% of the countrys COVID-19 deaths, so the impact of vaccinations on their hospitalization and mortality will probably be seen within a month or two, certainly, says Ira Longini, a biostatistician at the University of Florida (UF).

The effect may have already become visible. COVID-19 cases have been dropping nationwide since December, including at nursing homes. Interventions other than vaccines explain some of the fall. But a county-level comparison of facilities that got their first shots from 18 to 27 December and those that didnt showed the drop in daily cases was more than twice as large in the earlier vaccinated facilities (a 48% decline versus 21%).

Blunting COVID-19 cases nationwide is a long game, however, especially in a country such as the United States, where the vaccine rollout has not been as fast or uniform as in Israel. We have a big country. We have a lot of transmission, Longini says. I dont think well see a big impact on numbers of cases from vaccines until the summer.

If vaccines created whats known as sterilizing immunity all the time, no vaccinated person would transmit the virus. Vaccinated grandparents could safely play with their unimmunized grandchildren. Countries could welcome visitors who had proof of vaccination with little fear of introducing new viral variants or reigniting outbreaks.

That level of assurance is a tall order. Few vaccines, for any infectious diseases, create sterilizing immunityeven the most effective ones. The inactivated poliovirus vaccine developed by Jonas Salk did little to block infection or transmission of the virus, yet it powerfully prevented paralytic polio. By 1961, 6 years after it was licensed, only 54% of the U.S. population had received the vaccine, yet paralytic polio cases had dropped by more than 90%.

For practical reasons, the recent COVID-19 vaccine efficacy trials evaluated mainly the frequency of symptomatic disease, typically detected after participants feel sick and get a virus test. Its tougher to identify all SARS-CoV-2 infections, which remain invisible if they dont cause symptoms. Yet models suggest asymptomatic cases account for about half of transmission, so tracking them among vaccine recipients is key. There are easy ways to look at transmission and hard ways, says Ruth Karron, who runs the Johns Hopkins University Center for Immunization Research.

One approach, says John Mascola, who heads the Vaccine Research Center at the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases (NIAID), is to ask: If youre vaccinated, could you have the virus in your nose and shed it? Thats how researchers studying the AstraZenecaUniversity of Oxford vaccine recently tried to get at transmission. In a U.K. efficacy trial of that vaccine, participants did weekly nasal swabs at home. Results showed vaccination reduced asymptomatic infections by 49.3%. The data suggest, but do not prove, that the vaccine stymies viral spread; misleading news coverage claimed the vaccine had cut transmission by two-thirds. Moderna has also reported a similar decline in asymptomatic infections after just one dose of its mRNA vaccine in a subset of its large efficacy trial, which found overall that the vaccine had 94% efficacy against mild disease.

Several COVID-19 vaccine studies have opted for a simpler, if less precise, look at the issue. They took repeated blood samples from people in both the placebo and vaccinated groups at different time points. The trials tested for antibodies against the viral N protein, which are triggered by infection but not by most vaccines. If the placebo group has more positive N antibody tests than the vaccinated group, that would suggest the vaccine had cut asymptomatic infectionsand therefore transmission. No group has yet reported results from those serosurveys.

Early data from Israel indicate vaccinated people who nevertheless became infected with SARS-CoV-2 have reduced levels of virus, which may make them less contagious. A research team from the Maccabi group and the Israel Institute of Technology measured viral loads in nasal samples taken from more than 1000 people who became infected between 12 to 28 days after their first dose, the period in which immunity begins to build. The amount of virus found was significantly less than in a similar group of unvaccinated, infected Israelis, the group reported on 8 February in a preprint on bioRxiv.

Israel has vaccinated more of its population than any countryand has already seen encouraging drops in COVID-19 cases, hospitalizations, and deaths.

Myron Cohen, an infectious disease clinician at the University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill, and colleagues at the COVID-19 Prevention Network have a proposal at NIAID to study the question in college students. One group would receive the vaccine immediately and a control population would get it weeks later. Both groups of students would swab their noses daily to assess whether there are differences in the rate of asymptomatic SARS-CoV-2 infections and levels of the virus. Withholding vaccine would be ethically dodgy if doses were plentiful, but most college students are still not eligible for vaccination, and they are less likely to develop serious COVID-19 than older adults. Cohen is confident the trial will receive the necessary ethical approvals.

Knowing whether vaccines stop transmission may not matter to government officials. In the next 6 months, were probably going to have a menu of vaccines and each is going to have characteristics related to the cold chain, number of doses required, reactogenicity, and efficacy, Karron notes. Were going to make policy decisions about use based on all of those characteristics. I dont think that some superimprecise measure of transmission is going to be one of the things that goes into our calculus.

But Cohen contends that the difficult studies to evaluate whether immunized people spread the virus are worth doing. Unless we answer this question, we are a masked society. We need to address this to become maskless.

That depends on the definition of normal. To many people now, it means herd immunity, in which a high percentage of a population has either been vaccinated or naturally infected, leaving too few susceptible hosts for a virus to continue to spread. Its such a clean, beautiful concept, the tipping point idea, that if we can just get there, the virus will go away, and then we can just go about our business as if its gone, Longini says. Its kind of a pie-in-the-sky concept thats very, very attractive.

The idea of herd immunity, a term imported from livestock veterinarians, has become more beguiling as huge swaths of populations in parts of the world recover from SARS-CoV-2 infections, leaving them with some degree of immunity. In India, for example, serosurveys have found antibodies to the virus in about half of people in the city of Delhi and the entire state of Karnataka. And though no one is claiming this meets the herd immunity threshold, new cases have recently dropped precipitously.

Still unclear is what percentage of a population needs to be vaccinated or recovered from COVID-19 before herd immunity kicks in. Early predictions were between 60% and 70% and then rose as high as 90%but thats all based on modeling or even guesswork. Anthony Fauci, who heads NIAID, has been taken to task for changing his own estimates. Recently on CNN, Fauci acknowledged that: I think we all have to be honest and humble. Nobody really knows for sure.

Recent developments have been sobering. The COVID-19 vaccines rolling out are highly effective against hospitalization and death, but their success against mild and moderate symptoms plummets when faced with viral variants that can evade vaccine-triggered antibodies. And herd immunity, even if it emerged, could easily fade as immunity waned or new variants arose.

Yet there is growing recognition that even if widespread vaccination cant halt the spread of the virus, it promises a major step back toward normal. Preventing severe disease and death in the elderly and people with comorbidities such as obesity and hypertensionthe most vulnerableis still a resounding victory over the virus, many epidemiologists say.

A nursing home resident in Greece thanks a social worker after receiving a COVID-19 vaccine.

Large swaths of the population might still become infected and develop minor disease or asymptomatic infections. That prospect worries some scientists and clinicians, who note that even mild cases can lead to the long COVID phenomenon of lingering symptoms. Hospitals, though, will not become overwhelmed with emergency cases and deaths will become increasingly rare.

To Corey, those metrics are the most relevant. When will the ICU use and all of this decant so that were at the point where, yes, we can sort of tolerate this? he asks.

Were not going to shut down this virus and end transmission, agrees Nicole Lurie, an adviser to the Coalition for Epidemic Preparedness Innovations. We have to make a decision as a society about how much of this we can and want to live with. Society lives with influenza, after all, which remains endemic despite a vaccine. But Lurie stresses that flu is not an appealing model. It kills up to 60,000 people per year in the United States alonea toll she would not want to accept from COVID-19.

Still, immunologist Brigitte Autran, a member of Frances Scientific Committee on COVID-19 Vaccines, says herd immunity isnt needed to bring back normalcy. The first goal is to have individual protection, and by summing the individual protections, to have a protection of the society that will allow countries to come back to almost real, true lives.

That concern quickly moved from the theoretical to the real world when multicountry studies recently revealed several vaccines were least effective against symptomatic COVID-19 in South Africa. Thats where 95% of infections now stem from a viral variant that in test tube studies could dodge antibodies against the viral spike protein. Novavaxs protein-based vaccine went from 89.3% protection in the United Kingdom, where the variant is rare, to 49.4% in South Africa. And South Africa even halted its planned rollout of the AstraZeneca-Oxford vaccine, which consists of a harmless viral vector carrying the gene for the spike protein, after a small trial there indicated the vaccine had 22% efficacy.

Still, the vaccine-triggered immune responses may retain plenty of muscle, enough to prevent serious symptoms. A third vaccine, from Johnson & Johnson, also fell short against mild disease in South Africa, but it prevented almost all severe diseasewith no hospitalizations or deaths. (The AstraZeneca-Oxford and Novavax studies were too small to address impact on severe disease.)

One explanation could be that the level of key spike antibodies, those capable of neutralizing SARS-CoV-2s infectivity, jumped so high after vaccination that there was a cushion: Even though several labs reported that the variant in South Africa reduced the impact of the vaccine-induced antibodies by up to ninefold, if those immune fighters rise to high enough levels they may still pack enough punch to thwart serious disease.

Other arms of the immune system less affected by the mutations in the variant likely contribute to protection. Pfizer and BioNTech have shown their mRNA vaccine triggers a steep increase in key T cells. One set, which carries the CD8 receptor, targets and destroys cells that SARS-CoV-2 manages to infect. Underscoring the importance of those cells, Pfizer and BioNTech found that even though neutralizing antibody levels triggered by their vaccine were minimal in the 21 days between the first and second doses, it still gave 52.4% protection against disease during that period. Vaccine-induced T cell responses are important for COVID-19 vaccines, particularly for resistant variants that might partially evade neutralizing antibodies, suggests Dan Barouch of Harvard Medical School, whose lab has documented the importance of CD8+ cells for protecting monkeys from coronavirus reinfection.

Mixing and matching COVID-19 vaccines may also boost both antibody and T cell responses to higher levels, creating bigger cushions. Studies of various combinations have begun.

Thats the realm of modelers like Longini. Often, they restrict their analyses to tight geographical areas, which makes it easier to amass high-quality data and to account for variables that can alter outcomes. So Longini and Thomas Hladish, also at UF, created a model for their home state that extrapolates from actual case numbers for COVID-19 and assumes a rapid rollout, starting with people older than 65, of vaccines that are 60% effective at preventing infection. Assuming the virus doesnt change, they found that a vaccination campaign reaching half the population would slash symptomatic disease and death by 30% by August.

Surprisingly, their Florida model shows COVID-19 cases would steadily decline even without vaccination. Thats because the states reproductive number for SARS-CoV-2how many other people each COVID-19 case infectshas dropped below 1. Its mostly masking, social distancing, and the slow buildup of natural immunity in the population, Longini says. Indeed, as in many U.S. states, Floridas cases began to drop steeply in January.

But that decline could quickly reverse if a mutant strain takes off thats 50% more infectious, such as the B.1.1.7 variant strain that exploded first in the United Kingdom and has come to the United States, including Florida. We will have a much bigger epidemic that starts happening now, Longini says. But with more viral spread, the impact of vaccination would be bigger, averting twice as many symptomatic cases and deaths.

Models suggest the impact of COVID-19 vaccinations in San Diego will be blunted by the fast-spreading B.1.1.7 variant, which already accounts for 5% of SARS-CoV-2 infections there. If other prevention efforts are relaxed, a surge of cases will swamp the gains from vaccination.

Swipe or click the arrows to view modeling of other vaccination and behavior scenarios.

(Graphic) N. Desai/Science; (Interactive) K. Franklin/Science; (Data) Kristian Andersen/Scripps Research Institute; Natasha Martin/UC San Diego

Modeler Natasha Martin and her team at the University of California, San Diego, have looked at the interplay of variants and vaccines in an even smaller area: their home county. Sequencing of COVID-19 cases in San Diego county has shown the highly transmissible B.1.1.7 variant has a 5% prevalence so far10 times higher than recently estimated for the nation. Martins model shows that if the variant takes over, as many researchers expect, aggressive vaccination campaigns over the next 3 months will still cut case numbers in half. But if the county drops its guard and people become lax about prevention efforts, COVID-19 cases will triple even with rapid vaccination. We are at a critical moment in the epidemic, where our progress in terms of declining cases could quickly be reversed as the B.1.1.7 strain expands, Martin says. We have the tools we need to fight the spread of this virus: masking, social distancing, vaccination. Now is the time to vaccinate as many people as fast as we can, and double down on masking and distancing.

Vaccine developers proved in 2020 that they can move from concept to candidate vaccine, ready to test in people, in as little as 2 months. Changing the genetic code used in an mRNA or vector-based vaccine, or making a new inactivated-virus preparation, should be at least as fast. (A genetically engineered protein, such as the Novavax vaccine, takes longer.)

But by far the biggest time sink and expense for getting COVID-19 vaccines into use were the large-scale efficacy trials, which took about 4 months. Would those need to be repeated for each updated vaccine? No, says Peter Marks, who heads the vaccine division at the U.S. Food and Drug Administration. All the agency would likely require, he says, is a modest size study in humans showing the immune responses elicited by the new vaccine resemble those triggered by the original and are likely to be protective.

Flu vaccines, after all, are updated yearly to keep up with the ever-morphing influenza virus and are quickly approved. Makers can pop out components from the old vaccine and replace them with new ones. Regulators require minimal evidence about the revised productoften just animal studies showing it performs as well as last years model.

But with COVID-19 vaccines, no one knows which immune responses correlate with protection. Many vaccine experts assume neutralizing antibodies to the spike protein are the most important driver of protection. To prove that, however, researchers need to compare immune responses between vaccinated people infected by viruses that broke through their protection and vaccinated people who did not become infected. A more in-depth sieve analysis of breakthrough cases refines the correlates of protection by looking at the genetics of the variants that break through. Those studies are underway, but the Moderna and Pfizer-BioNTech vaccines, the first approved, worked so well that it was difficult to figure out the protective immune responses. There werent that many vaccinated, infected people, explains Mascola, who is helping coordinate the analyses.

Still, Marks says he anticipates that by the time makers of vaccines formulate new preparations to combat variants and test them in small human studies, the key immune responses will have become clear. We may well have the correlate confirmed by March when it is really needed, he says. That could open the way for rapid approval and rollout of boosters designed to keep up with the evolving virusand ensure that any hard-won progress against the pandemic isnt undone.

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How soon will COVID-19 vaccines return life to normal? - Science Magazine

1 in 3 US troops have refused to get a COVID-19 vaccine, a Pentagon official said – Business Insider

February 20, 2021

Around one-third of US troops are refusing to get a COVID-19 vaccine, a top Pentagon official said Wednesday.

"Acceptance rates are somewhere in the two-thirds territory," Air Force Maj. Gen. Jeff Taliaferro, the Joint Staff's vice director for operations, told the House Armed Services Committee during a hearing on the Defense Department's response to the pandemic.

The vaccine is not compulsory for service members, but Taliaferro told Rep. Mike Rogers, the top Republican lawmaker on the committee, that the military must do better "to help them understand the benefits."

The military's acceptance rate is, however, higher than that of the general population, which, according to the Kaiser Family Foundation, is around 50%.

As of Wednesday, a total of 916,575 doses have been administered to DOD personnel, with 359,000 troops having received their first shot and 147,000 troops fully vaccinated, Pentagon spokesman John Kirby told Politico.

Taliaferro added that service members are deployable even if they have not been vaccinated.

Air Force Maj. Gen. Steven S. Nordhaus, the National Guard Bureau's director of operations, also told the hearing that the vaccine acceptance rate in the National Guard was around "two-thirds to 70%."

The US military had, until Wednesday, given little indication how many troops had been vaccinated.

The silence had led critics to question whether the military was hiding data.

"Nobody is hiding data," Kirbytold Politico. "We don't have a system in place across the services to specifically track data with respect to those individuals who for whatever reason are declining."

In his opening statement during Wednesday's hearing, Rep. Rogers said that it was important that US military personnel are vaccinated.

"It's critical for our national security that every service member, as well as DOD civilian personnel and contractors, receive vaccines as soon as possible," he said.

"I am interested to hear from our witnesses what percentage of our service members have been vaccinated, what the refusal rate has been, and what steps they are taking to get more shots into arms."

Last December, the Pentagon announced that top commanders, including former acting Secretary of Defense Chris Miller, would be getting their vaccines publicly to send a "message" of confidence.

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1 in 3 US troops have refused to get a COVID-19 vaccine, a Pentagon official said - Business Insider

CDC gives guidance on Motrin and Tylenol with COVID-19 vaccine – WKBN.com

February 20, 2021

Sometimes, people will take pain medication in anticipation of discomfort before an injection

by: WKBN Staff

Credit: Images By Tang Ming Tung/DigitalVision/Getty Images

(WKBN) The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) is warning people to hold off on taking Tylenol or Motrin (NSAIDs) before getting a COVID-19 vaccination.

Sometimes, people will take pain medication in anticipation of discomfort before an injection, but that is not recommended for the COVID-19 vaccine, according to the CDC.

Researchers say they dont have the information right now on the impact of those medications on the COVID-19 vaccine-induced antibody response.

Also, antihistamines are not recommended prior to getting the vaccine. Doctors say antihistamines do not prevent a reaction and could mask a problem.

NSAIDs may be taken after the vaccine is administered, according to the CDC.

Also, the COVID-19 vaccine should not be taken at the same time as any other vaccine. Health officials say you should wait at least 14 days after receiving the COVID-19 vaccine to get any other immunizations.

COVID-19 and other vaccines may be administered within a shorter period of time in situations where the benefits of vaccination outweigh the risks.

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CDC gives guidance on Motrin and Tylenol with COVID-19 vaccine - WKBN.com

Florida Governor Accused Of ‘Playing Politics’ With COVID-19 Vaccine – NPR

February 18, 2021

Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis speaks to the media at a COVID-19 vaccination site near the upscale Lakewood Ranch community in Bradenton, Fla., on Wednesday. Chris O'Meara/AP hide caption

Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis speaks to the media at a COVID-19 vaccination site near the upscale Lakewood Ranch community in Bradenton, Fla., on Wednesday.

In Florida, Democrats are criticizing Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis, who they claim is allowing politics to play a role in COVID-19 vaccine distribution. DeSantis became testy when questioned by reporters at a vaccination event near Lakewood Ranch, an upscale community on Florida's Gulf Coast.

The vaccination event was the latest in a series of state-sponsored clinics at retirement communities. Under DeSantis' "Seniors First" initiative, the COVID-19 vaccine is being made available to everyone age 65 and over in Florida an estimated 4.5 million people.

According to the Bradenton Herald, DeSantis reached out to the developer of the Lakewood Ranch community, offering to use it as the site for a vaccination drive. Working with a county commissioner, the state reserved shots for residents of two ZIP codes in Manatee County that cover Lakewood Ranch and other well-to-do communities.

At a news conference, reporters peppered DeSantis with questions about the perception that he was favoring one community over another in a county where vaccinations have lagged behind the rest of the state. DeSantis responded by threatening to take the state's vaccination distribution effort elsewhere. "If Manatee County doesn't like us doing this," DeSantis said, "then we are totally fine putting this in counties that want it. We're totally happy to do that."

DeSantis said the 3,000 shots being made available for residents of Lakewood Ranch and nearby communities were in addition to the county's regular vaccine allotment. Commissioners in Manatee County expressed concern that the event favored wealthy neighborhoods over underserved communities.

Democrats immediately sent out news releases criticizing DeSantis for injecting politics into vaccine distribution. Florida Agriculture Commissioner Nikki Fried, who has suggested she may challenge DeSantis when he's up for reelection next year, said, "There is no reason that Governor DeSantis should be rationing vaccines based on political influence. This is troubling and potentially illegal." State Sen. Annette Taddeo said the governor owes residents of Manatee County an apology. She said, "Veiled threats should not and cannot be tolerated by any public official." Manny Diaz, the new head of Florida's Democratic Party, said DeSantis must stop "playing politics" with vaccine distribution. Diaz said, "Threatening retribution and less vaccine access for communities that criticize the vaccine rollout for its problems is shameful and inhumane."

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Florida Governor Accused Of 'Playing Politics' With COVID-19 Vaccine - NPR

More than 695000 Minnesotans have received COVID-19 vaccine – Minneapolis Star Tribune

February 18, 2021

More than 695,000 people in Minnesota have received COVID-19 vaccine, according to the latest state figures on Wednesday, including nearly 25% of teachers and 40% of senior citizens.

State health officials said the updates represent progress in Minnesota amid plans to reopen more schools to in-person learning over the next month.

"Thanks to vaccines and the hard work of so many people we are getting closer to the end of this pandemic," said Jan Malcolm, state health commissioner.

Of the 695,629 people who have received some COVID-19 vaccine in Minnesota, 246,431 have completed the two-dose series. The state has prioritized limited initial doses for health care workers, long-term care facility residents, educators and senior citizens.

The vaccination progress comes amid declining spread of the novel coronavirus that causes COVID-19. The Minnesota Department of Health on Wednesday reported 10 more COVID-19 deaths and 783 infections bringing the state's totals to 6,390 fatalities and 475,379 infections.

The positivity rate of diagnostic testing a key measure of viral spread in Minnesota has dropped below the 5% caution threshold to 3.7%. The number of Minnesota hospital intensive care beds filled with COVID-19 patients has declined to 54 from a peak of 399 on Dec. 1.

State health officials remain concerned about the emergence of more infectious variants of the SARS-CoV-2 coronavirus, though. State infectious disease director Kris Ehresmann on Tuesday said genomic sequencing analysis in Minnesota has detected 40 cases of COVID-19 involving a more infectious variant first found in the United Kingdom.

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More than 695000 Minnesotans have received COVID-19 vaccine - Minneapolis Star Tribune

Pa. discovers big COVID-19 vaccine glitch thousands of second doses given out by mistake – PennLive

February 18, 2021

For weeks, state officials have been blaming much of Pennsylvanias slow COVID-19 vaccine rollout on providers unnecessarily holding back doses to make sure people got second doses when needed.

In fact, they forcefully urged providers not to hold back doses, assuring them the second of the two required doses would be available when needed.

Yet on Wednesday, Acting Health Secretary Alison Beam announced providers since early January have been giving out second doses of the Moderna vaccine as first doses, characterizing it as a significant mistake. More than 100,000 people could be affected, Beam said.

Because of the error, Beam said up to 60,000 people could have to reschedule appointments, and up to 55,000 others might be delayed in getting their initial doses.

While not fully reconciling the apparent conflict in guidance, Beam laid out the details while also saying the state can adjust so that everyone gets their second dose within an acceptable time frame. There is no medical difference between the first and second doses, so the situation should provide no immediate health danger, she noted.

Beam refused to assign blame, although she suggested the state health department is at least partly responsible.

What we are working on is making sure our department, our communication, our transparency, our end of the bargain is improved upon, Beam said.

Beam said the problem only involves the Moderna vaccine, one of two vaccines distributed so far, with the other being the Pfizer vaccine.

She said the mistake began in early January, with the consequences compounding each week.

The state recently discovered the problem, she said, when the weekly request for second Moderna doses equaled the entire supply received so far.

Beam also said the mistake can be corrected with little or no harm. That can largely be accomplished by rescheduling appointments for second Moderna doses. While people generally receive their second dose within about 28 days, Beam said some could wait up to 42 days for their second dose, which would still fall under federal guidelines.

The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention has said the second Moderna doses are fully effective if given within 42 days of the first shot; there is limited research on its effectiveness beyond 42 days, the CDC said last week.

Beam said her department has found unused inventories around the state to help fill the void. She further expressed confidence the federal government will provide doses within the needed time frame. She said she expects the two sources will allow the 30,000 to 60,000 people who are affected to get their second dose within the appropriate time frame.

She further pledged the health department in conjunction with vaccine providers will make sure people are contacted and their appointments are rescheduled. She said appointments will need to be moved to the following week or at most two weeks from the original appointment.

In a strained briefing with news reporters, Bean didnt detail how the situation squares with the fact her department for weeks has been telling providers not to hold back second doses and assuring them a second dose, from a separate supply, will be available when needed.

However, she said the situation has been discussed with the new legislative task force formed to improve Pennsylvanias vaccine rollout and it agrees with the response she detailed. She said the task force, just formed last week, has met three times to improve communication and address issues with the vaccine rollout.

All of us are focusing on the path forward, and the fix directionally moving Pennsylvania forward as well, Beam said.

Beams further called the situation a stark reminder that right now, there is not enough vaccine for everyone who is eligible to get it.

Pennsylvania has so far given vaccine doses to about 1.7 million people, including about a half-million who have received the two doses needed to be fully protected.

This week it will receive 183,575 first doses, along with 143,275 second doses. The vaccine supply has been growing, although slowly, with this weeks allocation having increased by about 8,000 doses from last week, a state official said Wednesday.

In a separate news conference Wednesday afternoon, Gov. Tom Wolf said his administration will work to ensure those who need the second dose will get it. He also said theres no doubt that there will be other ways the vaccine rollout can improve in the future.

We will look for ways and find ways to make the system work even better, Wolf said.

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Pa. discovers big COVID-19 vaccine glitch thousands of second doses given out by mistake - PennLive

The destinations open to travelers vaccinated against Covid-19 – CNN

February 18, 2021

(CNN) As the Covid-19 pandemic continues to wreak havoc on the travel industry, countless destinations around the world are rolling out vaccines to their most vulnerable citizens.

Meanwhile, Denmark has announced plans to launch a coronavirus digital passport by the end of February that will act as documentation the holder has been fully vaccinated against Covid-19.

As a result, a number of destinations are choosing to either drop border restrictions for travelers who've been fully vaccinated, or ease them significantly.

From Cyprus to the Seychelles, here are seven destinations reopening to tourists who've received the Covid-19 vaccine.

Cyprus

Late last year, Cyprus official revealed plans to drop restrictions for vaccinated travelers.

ETIENNE TORBEY/AFP via Getty Images

Back in December, Cyprus became the first destination to announce plans to allow travelers who've been fully vaccinated to enter without having to go into quarantine.

In addition, visitors who provide proof that they've received both doses of a Covid-19 vaccine will be allowed to visit without providing a negative PCR test result on arrival.

While it was previously claimed that the new rules would come into effect on March 1, this not been confirmed by government officials as yet.

Currently travelers who are permitted to visit Cyprus have the option to either provide a negative PCR test taken within 72 hours before travel, or undergo a test on arrival.

They must then go into quarantine for two weeks in government-assigned accommodation. The isolation period can be shortened slightly if travelers undergo a molecular test on their tenth day of quarantine at their own expense and receive a negative result.

Estonia

EU travelers arriving in Estonia who are fully vaccinated do not have to quarantine.

Sean Gallup/Getty Images

The European country is also accepting those with vaccinations from nine suppliers across the world rather than just Moderna, Pfizer-BioNTech or Oxford-AstraZeneca, the three that have been approved by the European Union.

Only vaccination certificates produced in Estonian, Russian or English will be recognized and visitors who've previously had Covid will need to submit a doctor's certificate, as well as a recent PCR test indicating they are no longer infected with the virus.

Georgia

Visitors who provide evidence they are fully vaccinated will be exempt from quarantine in Georgia.

VANO SHLAMOV/AFP via Getty Images

Georgia, which sits at the crossroads between Asia and Europe, has also opted to lift restrictions for fully vaccinated travelers.

The Ministry of Foreign Affairs for Georgia recently announced that all visitors who've received two doses of any Covid-19 vaccine are permitted to enter the nation without producing a negative PCR test.

Non-vaccinated travelers must present a negative PCR test result taken within 72 hours of travel and are also required to take a second test "at their own expense" on day three of their stay.

Those who've traveled to the United Kingdom within 14 days of their visit must undergo a 12-day mandatory quarantine upon entry.

Iceland

In May, Iceland is ditching border restrictions for those who've had a full course of the Covid vaccine.

Maja Hitij/Bongarts/Getty Images

From May 1, fully vaccinated travelers from European Union countries, as well as Liechtenstein, Norway and Switzerland, can skip quarantine when they arrive in Iceland and will not be required to submit a negative PCR test.

Visitors who can provide a paper vaccination in Icelandic, Danish, Norwegian, Swedish or English proving they've had two doses of one of the three main Covid-19 vaccines will be exempt from border restrictions.

Non-vaccinated arrivals from destinations where travel to Iceland is permitted must take a Covid test on arrival, before going into quarantine for five to six days and taking a second test.

Exemptions will be made in some circumstances, such as those with a valid medical reason.

Poland

Poland has been allowing travelers to enter without going into quarantine since December 28.

LUDOVIC MARIN/AFP via Getty Images

Travelers from EU countries can visit Poland without undergoing its mandatory 10-day quarantine "on the basis of a certificate confirming vaccination against Covid-19."

Those who provide a negative SARSCoV2 test on arrival are also exempt as long as there's no more than 48 hours between the time they receive their test result and the time they cross the border.

Romania

Fully vaccinated visitors arrivijng in Romania can also avoid having to quarantine.

IONUT IORDACHESCU/AFP via Getty Images

All travelers arriving in Romania from permitted destinations who have been fully vaccinated from Covid have been exempt from quarantining on arrival since January 18.

The new rules were announced by the European's country's National Committee for Emergency Situations (CNSU), who stipulated that visitors and returning residents will need to show evidence that they've had two doses of the vaccine in order to avoid mandatory isolation.

The second dose must have been administered at least 10 days prior to their arrival.

Those who submit a PCR taken no fewer than 72 hours before entry must quarantine for 10 days.

The Seychelles

Vaccinated travelers can visit the Seychelles without having to isolate, but they are still required to submit a negative PCR test.

Yasuyoshi Chiba/AFP via Getty Images

Fully vaccinated visitors are now permitted to enter the remote destination situated off the coast of Tanzania without having to quarantine for 10 days.

However, those who've received a full course of any Covid-19 vaccine are still required to present a negative PCR test result taken within 72 hours of travel, as well as a certificate from their national health authority verifying that they've been fully vaccinated.

The 115-island nation is aiming to become the first nation to vaccinate its entire population after receiving a donation of 50,000 doses from the United Arab Emirates government.

President Wavel Ramkalawan hopes over 70% will be vaccinated by mid-March. Restrictions will be further relaxed if this target is reached, meaning those permitted to enter the Seychelles will only have to submit proof of a negative Covid-19 PCR test taken within 72 hours of travel.

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The destinations open to travelers vaccinated against Covid-19 - CNN

Biden administration increases the number of Covid vaccine doses shipped weekly to states and pharmacies – CNBC

February 18, 2021

Boxes containing the Pfizer-BioNTech Covid vaccine are prepared to be shipped at the Pfizer Global Supply Kalamazoo manufacturing plant on December 13, 2020 in Portage, Michigan.

Morry Gash | Getty Images

The Biden administration is increasing the number of Covid-19 vaccine doses shipped to states weekly, sending out 13.5 million doses this week and doubling the number going to retail pharmacies, White House press secretary Jen Psaki said Tuesday.

As of last week, the administration was sending out 11 million doses to states every week. Overall, Psaki noted, the administration has increased the number of doses shipped weekly to states by 57% since President Joe Biden was inaugurated Jan. 20.

Psaki also announced that the White House is doubling the number of doses being shipped directly to retail pharmacies around the country, expanding it from 1 million doses sent to 6,500 pharmacies last week. Psaki said the White House will ship 2 million doses per week to stores going forward and plans to eventually expand to 40,000 stores nationwide.

"This program will expand access in neighborhoods across the country so that people can call and make an appointment and get their shot conveniently and quickly," she said. "This is a critical, critical part of our plan."

The administration has been announcing gradual increases in the amount of vaccine being distributed every week while opening up new distribution channels such as pharmacies, community health centers and federally run vaccination centers. After a slower-than-expected initial rollout of the vaccine, many states now say the lack of supply from the federal government is the biggest constraint.

The pace of vaccination across the country has picked up in recent weeks, and the difference between doses distributed and doses administered has narrowed. More than 52.8 million doses have been administered as of Sunday, according to data from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, out of 70 million doses delivered to states.

Biden announced last week that the U.S. has secured 100 million more doses of the Pfizer-BioNTech vaccine and 100 million more of the Moderna vaccine, increasing the total U.S. supply to 600 million doses. The Food and Drug Administration is also expected to authorize Johnson & Johnson's one-shot Covid-19 vaccine for emergency use as soon as later this month.

It's unlikely to be an immediate boon to supply, but will help ramp up the number of doses available to Americans in the late spring and summer. Dr. Anthony Fauci, White House health advisor, said Tuesday that by May the vaccine could be available to any American who wants it, slightly later than his previous forecast of opening up access to the vaccine in April.

"It may take until June, July and August to finally get everybody vaccinated," he said on CNN. "So when you hear about how long it's going to take to get the overwhelming proportion of the population vaccinated, I don't think anybody disagrees that that's going to be well to the end of the summer and we get into the early fall."

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Biden administration increases the number of Covid vaccine doses shipped weekly to states and pharmacies - CNBC

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