Category: Covid-19 Vaccine

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In the COVID-19 vaccine race, we either win together or lose together – World Health Organization

February 14, 2021

Of the 128 million vaccine doses administered so far, more than three quarters of those vaccinations are in just 10 countries that account for 60% of global GDP.

As of today, almost 130 countries, with 2.5 billion people, are yet to administer a single dose.

This self-defeating strategy will cost lives and livelihoods, give the virus further opportunity to mutate and evade vaccines and will undermine a global economic recovery.

Today,UNICEF and WHO partners for more than 70 years call on leaders to look beyond their borders and employ a vaccine strategy that can actually end the pandemic and limit variants.

Health workers have been on the frontlines of the pandemic in lower- and middle-income settings and should be protected first so they can protect us.

COVAX participating countries are preparing to receive and use vaccines. Health workers have been trained, cold chain systems primed. Whats missing is the equitable supply of vaccines.

To ensure that vaccine rollouts begin in all countries in the first 100 days of 2021, it is imperative that:

We need global leadership to scale up vaccine production and achieve vaccine equity.

COVID-19 has shown that our fates are inextricably linked. Whether we win or lose, we will do so together.

_____________________

Note to Editors

Dr. Tedros will be addressing the UNICEF Executive Board today at 10:00 am EST. Watch it live on http://webtv.un.org/

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In the COVID-19 vaccine race, we either win together or lose together - World Health Organization

Mass COVID-19 vaccination site opening in Gilroy – KRON4

February 14, 2021

SANTA CLARA COUNTY, Calif. (KRON) A COVID-19 mass vaccination site is coming to Gilroy.

Officials on Friday announced a new large-scale appointment-only vaccination site is expected to open by the end of February at Gilroy High School.

The site is part of the countys ongoing effort to make the vaccine available in areas of the county with the highest rates of COVID-19.

According to officials, Gilroy is one of the most impacted communities in Santa Clara County, facing the highest case and positivity rates of any city in the county.

Our County is operating one of the most effective vaccination programs in the State, and has made excellent progress in vaccinating the hardest hit regions of the County, including Gilroy, said Mike Wasserman, President of the Santa Clara County Board of Supervisors.We are looking forward to opening this site, which will provide expanded access to vaccination for residents of Gilroy and the rest of the southern Santa Clara County.

Visit the Countys COVID-19 vaccine website,sccfreevax.org, for the latest updates on vaccine eligibility and distribution.

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Mass COVID-19 vaccination site opening in Gilroy - KRON4

How next week’s wintry weather is impacting COVID-19 vaccination efforts across North Texas – WFAA.com

February 14, 2021

Judge Clay Jenkins said in a tweet that Fair Park would be closed Saturday through Monday, but that officials would monitoring conditions to decide when to reopen.

Updated at 9:50 p.m. with information about Denton, Collin counties.

With cold temperatures and wintry precipitation forecasted to hit North Texas over the next few days, local officials are evaluating their vaccine operations.

Officials said Friday the vaccination distribution plans for the next few days could change based on the weather. Heres what we know so far about the plans for Fair Park and Arlington E-Sports Stadium, heading into the weekend:

Fair Park in Dallas:

FRIDAY: OPEN, NOON TO 7PM

Vaccinations began around noon. Dallas County Judge Clay Jenkins said they are only administering second shots to those who were due to get their second shots Monday to Thursday of this week.

Operations were moved inside Friday. Earlier this week, Dallas County officials told WFAA its difficult to keep the vaccine at a stable temperature once thawed, while standing outside for drive-thru operations.

On Friday, Jenkins said there are heated buses to take you to the building from your car."

If your day was (Saturday to get the vaccine), and were not open (Saturday), and were able to open again some time next week, youll be the first ones to get in, Jenkins said.

Jenkins tweeted Friday afternoon that the site, which was originally going to be open Sunday, is now going to be closed.

"We understand this is a frustrating situation for many who were hoping to receive their second dose of the vaccine on their scheduled date," Jenkins tweeted. "With expected extreme weather conditions, including dangerously low temperatures and hazardous roadways, we must prioritize peoples safety."

Fair Park is closed "due to weather."

NEXT WEEK: TO BE DETERMINED

Jenkins said the forecast appears to be favorable next Friday and Saturday. But plans for the middle of the week are still up in the air.

Well just have to wait and see about Tuesday through Thursday, Jenkins told WFAA. If the weather is not safe for seniors to drive on it doesnt matter whether were (giving shots) inside or outside (at Fair Park) we wont be open because Im not going to have people get into a dangerous car wreck to get here.

Tarrant County

ARLINGTON E-SPORTS STADIUM:

Vaccines were administered from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. Friday.

SATURDAY, SUNDAY & MONDAY: CLOSED

Arlington Fire Department Lt. Richard Fegan told WFAA the E-Sports vaccination site will be closed.

TUESDAY: OPEN, WEATHER-PERMITTING

As of right now, Fegan said the plan is to give people their second doses, weather-permitting.

WEDNESDAY: OPEN, WEATHER-PERMITTING

There were people who did not show up for their appointments this week due to the weather Arlington Fire prepared for this. It is possible that on Wednesday, they may be giving out first shots to people who missed their appointments this week.

AFD will send notifications to everybody involved.

The vaccination site at Amon Carter Stadium at TCU won't open now until Feb. 20.

Denton County

No vaccine clinics are scheduled in the early part of the week, including Texas Motor Speedway. Officials will monitor weather and will consider reopening clinics Friday or Saturday.

Collin County

Appointments at the large Plano site at John Clark Stadium will be cancelled Monday and Tuesday. Appointments will be rescheduled when the weather cooperates

The Allen site will resume Friday, Feb. 19.

The other smaller sites are basing decisions on weather and how much vaccine state allocates to them.

*These are latest updates provided to WFAA from each county as of Friday, Feb. 12. and will be subject to change. Please refer to your county's public health page for immediate changes and updates.

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How next week's wintry weather is impacting COVID-19 vaccination efforts across North Texas - WFAA.com

Wichita Public School teachers to begin receiving COVID-19 vaccinations – KSN-TV

February 14, 2021

WICHITA, Kan. (KSNW) Wichita Public Schools teachers will begin receiving COVID-19 vaccinations on Saturday, February 13.

The district has received its first supply of vaccines on Friday (Feb. 12) and will begin the first round at theWichita Public Schools Alvin Morris Administrative Center. The prioritization plan for employees will follow Phase 2 of Governor Kellys vaccination plan. Employees who are eligible will be notified directly by Health Services.

Employees who responded to the survey will be considered for vaccination through the AMAC site.

More information can be found here.

Were thrilled to have them said Terri Moses with Wichita Public Schools. Weve been ready. We filled out the forms, we got the space set up. Weve been ready. Its just a matter of when we got the phone call that they were available.

The distribution plan is as follows:

The district said staff from multiple buildings will be selected for vaccination on a given day, rather than vaccinating all staff at one building on the same day and risking impact based on vaccine reaction.

The district added if employees have an opportunity to receive a vaccine at another location, they are encouraged to do so. No staff members are required to get the vaccine.

We wanna make sure we educate people in terms of the values of the vaccinations, but also the negatives, said Moses. We also want people to make an educated decision in regards to whether or not they get vaccinated.

The distribution process was created with the help of staff members and local health officials. The district sent a survey out to all staff members and said about half returned with responses.

One of the absolute musts of this process is getting vaccinations to as many people in the community as we can and that includes our staff, said Moses.

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Wichita Public School teachers to begin receiving COVID-19 vaccinations - KSN-TV

Should you mix and match COVID-19 vaccines? Scientists are seeking answers – Science Magazine

February 12, 2021

As more COVID-19 vaccines become available, researchers are testing the impact of pairing different products that require two shots.

By Jon CohenFeb. 12, 2021 , 9:00 AM

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

With nine vaccines now showing they can powerfully prevent severe illness and death from COVID-19and vaccines in short supplyresearchers are mulling an issue that, even a few months ago, was only hypothetical: Should people mix and match vaccines that require two shots?

If some combinations work, they may provide needed flexibility whenever production of a vaccine falters, as often happens. And theres even a chance that mixing doses of two different vaccines may boost the protection against COVID-19.

One mixed vaccine trial is already underway: It is examining matching a dose of the Sputnik V vaccine made by Russias Gamaleya Research Institute of Epidemiology and Microbiology with a booster dose of a similar vaccine made by AstraZeneca and the University of Oxford. A second trial, examining a combination of the AstraZeneca-Oxford and Pfizer-BioNTech vaccines, which mixes two different technologies, is just getting started, and others are under discussion.

Until these trials produce results, however, health officials are urging caution. The U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention has discouraged people from mixing vaccines unless there are exceptional situations, such as a shortage of the vaccine they received first because of production or distribution hiccups. In the United Kingdom, Public Health England has taken a similar position.

But the scarcity of COVID-19 vaccinesand the urgency of stepping up vaccination ratesis pushing the mix-and-match issue to the fore. As we have more products that are the interchangeable, thats going to have a huge implications for the conduct of this mass vaccination campaign in a setting of uncertain supplies, says Bruce Gellin, who heads global immunization for the nonprofit Sabin Vaccine Institute.

There are definite advantages to having data that could support a more flexible immunization program, if needed and if approved by the medicines regulator, said Jonathan Van-Tam, the United Kingdoms deputy chief medical officer, in announcing the trial combining the AstraZeneca-Oxford and Pfizer-BioNTech vaccines.

Researchers have past experience with mix-and-match vaccine trials. For more than 20 years, the long-struggling HIV vaccine field has tried to combine different vaccine strategies to elicit more powerful immune responses, but none has succeeded. Johnson & Johnson brought an Ebola vaccine to market in the European Union that combines its preparation with one that uses a completely different formulation made by Bavarian Nordic. Similarly, to trigger more robust protection in the elderly, a shot of a pneumococcal conjugate vaccine is boosted by one that contains a pneumococcal polysaccharide. The inactivated polio vaccine, for safety reasons, has also been given before one made with live attenuated virus, which can sometimes cause the disease if the virus mutates. But there are few other examples of using two vaccines approved for market in a one-two punch.

Mixing and matching COVID-19 vaccines raises several potential complications. One is regulatory: What if, say, only one is authorized for emergency use? Another is immunological: Whereas some vaccines share the same underlying technology platformssuch as the messenger RNA technology used by both the Pfizer-BioNTech collaboration and Modernaothers do not.

Different platforms may, on the other hand, turn on different arms of the immune system. And pairing matched platforms may dodge unwanted immune responses. For example, both Gamaleyas Sputnik V vaccine and the AstraZeneca-Oxford vaccine employ different adenovirus (Ad) vectors to deliver a key gene to human cells. Both require a prime shot followed by a booster. The Lancet has published efficacy data for each vaccine, and they have received emergency use authorizations in several countries.

Gamaleya uses two different Ad vectors that contain the spike gene for its priming and booster shots: Ad26 followed by Ad5. AstraZeneca and Oxford use the same chimpanzee adenovirus (ChAd) for both its prime and booster. In theory, AstraZenecas use of the same vector for both shots means the immune response triggered by the first shot could cripple the booster. That potential problem could be avoided by pairing the AstraZeneca shot with the Sputnik V one, presumably in either order.

Gamaleya, in turn, might benefit from using the AstraZeneca-Oxford vaccine as a booster because the institute, according to a Bloomberg report, has had problems making the Ad5 vector. (Sputnik V representatives told Science they had no comment about the Bloomberg report, but said delays in supplies to Latin America could occur as they upgrade manufacturing facilities.) And many researchers have criticized Gamaleya for choosing Ad5 because of disastrous trials in 2007 with an Ad5-based HIV vaccine that somehow increased the risk of infection with the AIDS virus. So an Ad26-ChAd combination gets around that concern.

Sputnik Vs financial backers also contacted CanSino Biologics, a Chinese company that makes an Ad5 spike vaccine thats used as a single shot, to discuss pairing their vaccines, CEO Yu Xuefeng told Science. But they have not negotiated a deal as of yet. CanSino has not reported efficacy data. (A health adviser to Pakistans prime minister tweeted on 8 February that the CanSino candidate worked in a trial there and in other countries. Yu said he couldnt confirm the report because the company has not seen the data, but believes it is accurate.)

The United Kingdoms National Immunisation Schedule Evaluation Consortium is moving ahead with an elaborate mix-and-match study of the AstraZeneca-Oxford and Pfizer-BioNTech vaccines. It has eight different strategies that will involve giving the vaccines in different orders and at different intervals. Van-Tam hopes the trial will produce greater insight into how we can use vaccines to stay on top of this nasty disease.

Gellin, for one, is frustrated that more mix-and-match trials arent already up and running. Its got to be a top priority for someone, he says. But Gellin concedes the regulatory issues are daunting. This is something that companies should do, and maybe theyll be able to do it, he says. But theyll probably require more lawyers than volunteers.

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Should you mix and match COVID-19 vaccines? Scientists are seeking answers - Science Magazine

Pfizer hopes to start testing COVID-19 vaccine on children this year – WGN TV Chicago

February 12, 2021

CHICAGO Pfizer says it hopes to start testing its COVID-19 vaccine on adolescents within the first part of the year.

A spokesperson told WGN theyve finished enrolling more than 2,000 children ages 12-to 18 for the trial. However, the protocol has not been approved by regulators.

Pfizer is the only manufacturer whose trials may be far enough along to have vaccine data on kids by the end of the summer.

Moderna is still enrolling participants for its adolescent trial.

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Pfizer hopes to start testing COVID-19 vaccine on children this year - WGN TV Chicago

Fact vs. Fiction: Are people really dying from the COVID-19 vaccine? – WPXI Pittsburgh

February 12, 2021

For example, if youre vaccinating nursing home patients, there are some nursing home patients that are going to die within the week after vaccination, irrespective of whether they got that vaccine. So, just because theres a temporal association, meaning a time association got a vaccine and you died, doesnt mean that theres a causal association that the vaccine was the reason that you died, Dr. Amesh Adalja, a Johns Hopkins infectious disease expert, said.

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Fact vs. Fiction: Are people really dying from the COVID-19 vaccine? - WPXI Pittsburgh

Is it safe for cancer patients to get the COVID-19 vaccine? – WANE

February 12, 2021

FORT WAYNE, Ind. (WANE) Many oncologists are being asked by patients if its safe for them to get the vaccine once it becomes available.

According to the National Cancer Institute, an estimated 1,806,590 new cases of cancer were diagnosed in the United States and 606,520 people died from the disease in the year 2020 alone. With the disease touching so many lives, it can make healthcare decisions more difficult.

Those types of questions are not unexpected, said Dr. Neil Sharma, the president of Parkviews Cancer Institute

The short answer is yes, it is safe for most cancer patients to get vaccinated.

We dont have direct studies on cancer patients, said Dr. Sharma.Therefore, the CDC is still allowing for patients who have active cancer treatment or had cancer in the past, to get vaccinated at this time.

However, there are some caveats. Dr. Sharma says CDC guidelines do allow for patients who have active cancer treatment or had cancer in the past, to get vaccinated as long as they dont have certain key contraindications.

For example, Dr. Sharma says that patients who have had a lymphoma and required a bone marrow transplant, may want to pause around getting vaccinations.

If youve had a stem cell transplant I would recommend that you talk to your bone marrow transplant experts, prior to getting the vaccination, said Dr. Sharma.

He also says anyone who has had a severe adverse reaction to some of the listed components of the vaccine in the past, would not necessarily be eligible for it.

For the most part, the potential side effects cancer patients getting vaccinated could see are the same as any other patients. The only difference, according to Dr. Sharma, would be if theyre in an immunocompromised state where their white blood cell count is significantly lower.

There are many of the patients we asked them to get a complete blood cell count and speak to their oncologist, said Dr. Sharma. After, their oncologist will often approve the vaccination unless some contraindications are seen, either on the complete blood cell count or just based upon their history with allergies.

Ultimately, Dr. Sharma says cancer patients should talk with their oncologist and primary care physician about the risks and benefits of getting vaccinated.

If they have concerns or may have a pause on getting vaccinated, its still worthwhile having the conversation, said Dr. Sharma. Its always worthwhile to consider vaccination, because the risks of coronavirus can be quite high, especially in our elderly populations who may be treated for cancer.

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Is it safe for cancer patients to get the COVID-19 vaccine? - WANE

Covenant Health offering COVID-19 vaccine appointments to ages 70 and older – WATE 6 On Your Side

February 12, 2021

KNOXVILLE, Tenn. (WATE) Covenant Health is scheduling COVID-19 vaccination appointments for community members age 70 and older.

The health care provider is taking appointments by phone, online chat and an online appointment scheduler. The Covenant Health Vaccination Center is at Fort Sanders West, 220 Fort Sanders West Blvd. in Knoxville.

To schedule an appointment by phone, call the Covenant Health Call Center at 865-374-6159 between 8 a.m. and 4:30 p.m. Monday through Friday.

Vaccine seekers can book online appointments via the Covenant Health COVID-19 Vaccine Appointment Scheduler.

The vaccine is given in two doses, 19-23 days apart.

You will schedule your first vaccine appointment, then be prompted to schedule your second appointment after receiving your first dose, Covenant Health says on its website.

Those that provide a mobile number and/or email address when scheduling your appointment, will receive a text/email reminder to schedule the second dose. Those that dont will have to call865-374-6159after receiving your first vaccine to schedule the second dose.

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Covenant Health offering COVID-19 vaccine appointments to ages 70 and older - WATE 6 On Your Side

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