Category: Covid-19 Vaccine

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NMDOH provides breakdown of COVID-19 vaccinations: Who can get it and how to register – KRQE News 13

January 30, 2021

WATCH: Full interview with Matt Bieber, communications director for New Mexico Department of Health

by: Allison Keys

ALBUQUERQUE, N.M. (KRQE) As time continues to pass, more and more people are getting the COVID-19 vaccine. However, some still have concerns when it comes to getting it.

Communications director for the New Mexico Department of Health Matt Bieber discusses how the vaccines are going and provides answers to questions some may have. Currently, NMDOH states following groups are eligible for the COVID-19 vaccine in New Mexico:

Bieber explains that these individuals represent about 700,000 to 800,000 New Mexicans. Were currently receiving enough vaccine in the state to introduce 25 or 30,000 new people into this system each week, said Bieber. So at this pace, its going to take us a couple of months at a minimum to get through the folks who are currently eligible which means that at this pace, frontline essential workers would be eligible later this spring.

He states that there are some variables. There is a possibility that there could be one to two new vaccines approved and introduced into the distribution system which would speed up the pace at which residents are vaccinated.

Regarding safety, Bieber explains that the Moderna and Pfizer vaccines have been put through rigorous clinical trials with tens of thousands of participants. Those who received the vaccine have reported only minor effects such as fever, or pain at the injection site.

Registering to receive the vaccine is easy. Just visit cvvaccine.nmhealth.org and enter basic contact information and health conditions. If you are in one of the phases that are currently eligible for the vaccine, you may be contacted fairly quickly.

Its hard to give more precise estimates than that because were randomizing invitations within the eligible groups. The reason were doing that is to be as fair as possible, said Bieber.

NMDOH has recently started providing additional communication via email and text to New Mexicans that are currently registered letting them know that they are in the system and the department will be reaching out in the future when the vaccine is available to them.

The vaccine is free to everyone. You may see a copay but your insurance company must reimburse that just as with testing. All vaccinations in New Mexico are free and insurance companies arent allowed to charge you anything for them, said Bieber.

NMDOH also provides a COVID-19 Vaccine Dashboard that displays cumulative doses administered in the state, total registrants, and a breakdown of vaccinations per county.

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NMDOH provides breakdown of COVID-19 vaccinations: Who can get it and how to register - KRQE News 13

List of East TN pharmacies and clinics to offer COVID-19 vaccinations – WATE 6 On Your Side

January 30, 2021

KNOXVILLE, Tenn. (WATE) The Tennessee Department of Health on Thursday released a list of 100 community pharmacies and clinics that will soon be able to administer COVID-19 vaccinations.

The list includes 24 clinics, 20 chain pharmacies, and 64 local, hometown pharmacies. The state said vaccines are expected to arrive at these locations this week.

The state is allowing the business to decide how and when the vaccinations are given a drive-thru or walk-in clinic, sign-ups or first-come-first-serve style, for example. Each location will offer whatever method works best for their community.

Here are the COVID-19 community vaccination locations:

ANDERSON COUNTY

BLEDSOE COUNTY

BRADLEY COUNTY

CAMPBELL COUNTY

CARTER COUNTY

CLAIBORNE COUNTY

COCKE COUNTY

GRAINGER COUNTY

GREENE COUNTY

HAMBLEN COUNTY

HAMILTON COUNTY

LOUDON COUNTY

MCMINN COUNTY

MONROE COUNTY

MORGAN COUNTY

POLK COUNTY

RHEA COUNTY

SEVIER COUNTY

UNICOI COUNTY

UNION COUNTY

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List of East TN pharmacies and clinics to offer COVID-19 vaccinations - WATE 6 On Your Side

Collin and Denton counties will receive a large bump in COVID-19 vaccines next week – The Dallas Morning News

January 30, 2021

AUSTIN North Texas is set to receive a major influx of COVID-19 vaccine next week, driven by large one-time allocations to providers in Collin and Denton counties, state officials announced Friday.

The boost comes as the state receives an increase in Moderna-manufactured vaccine from the federal government. Theres also a one-time supply of about 127,000 shots that were not used during the statewide effort to inoculate nursing home residents and staff.

Those leftover doses are driving the one-time bump for Collin and Denton counties, where vaccine allocations have been significantly less than their share of the population, state officials said.

Denton Countys public health department will be shipped nearly 32,500 shots next week in what is the states largest single allotment to date. In past weeks, the countys health department has received fewer than 10,000 doses. Similarly, five providers in Collin County will together receive about 42,900 doses next week. Thats four times more than what county providers were sent this week.

We have a one-time big allocation of vaccines we can push out. We are using that to catch up some of the counties that were behind, said Chris Van Deusen, a spokesman for the Texas Department of State Health Services.

Dallas County providers will receive 48,000 shots next week, with most going to hubs run by Parkland Hospital, UT Southwestern, the countys public health department and the city.

Texans are eligible for a shot if they are front-line health care workers, nursing home residents, age 65 and older or have a chronic health condition.

Over 1.7 million Texans have received their first dose of the COVID-19 vaccine to date.

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Collin and Denton counties will receive a large bump in COVID-19 vaccines next week - The Dallas Morning News

Johnson & Johnson COVID-19 vaccine to be made in Baltimore – WBAL TV Baltimore

January 30, 2021

TO GO. EMERGENT BIOSOLUTIONS HAS ABOUT 1,000 EMPLOYEES AT TWO BALTIMORE LOCATIONS THAT WILL MAKE THE JOHNSON & JOHNSON CORONAVIRUS VACCINE. THAT IS WHEN THE FOOD AND DRUG ADMINISTRATION GIVES THEM OK FOR MASS PRODUCTION. >> OVER THE COMING MONTHS, WE EXPECT TO MANUFACTURE HUNDREDS OF MILLIONS OF DOSES TO KEEP DOSES FLOWING TO THE AMERICAN POPULATION. PHIL: AS PART OF THE CLINICAL TRIALS THE COMPANY HEADQUARTERED IN GAITHERSBURG IS ALREADY MAKING THE VACCINE TO BUILD UP A STOCKPILE AND TO FILL THE PIPELINE, SO TO SPEAK, TO GET THE PRODUCT MOVING ONCE ITS -- IT IS APPROVED. THATS EXPECTED TO HAPPEN SOON. ITS ATTRACTIVE TO THOSE ON THE FRONT LINES BECAUSE THE VACCINE IS GIVEN IN ONE DOSE AND STORAGE IS MUCH EASIER THAN THOSE >> THE PRODUCT CANDIDATES WE ARE WORKING ON ARE STABLE AT REFRIGERATED TEMPERATURES, TWO TO EIGHT DEGREES CENTIGRADE. THATS A TYPICAL KIND OF CLINIC REFRIGERATION TEMPERATURES, WHICH MAKES THEM MORE EASILY DISTRIBUTED ACROSS THE GLOBE. PHIL: AND IN THE GLOBAL FIGHT AGAINST THE CORONAVIRUS PANDEMIC BALTIMORE WILL TRULY HAVE A HAND IN THE MAJOR BATTLE OF GETTING PEOPLE VACCINATED. >> THERES A LOT OF DEMAND OUT THERE. IM IN THE VACCINE BUSINESS. I RUN THE MANUFACTURING OF THIS ORGANIZATION, BUT IVE GOT A FAMILY AND MY FAMILY ASKS ME EVERY DAY. I GET LOTS OF TEXT MESSAGES ABOUT HOW ARE THINGS GOING AND WHEN ITS GOING TO BE AVAILABLE. ITS JUST AN AMAZING OPPORTUNITY WE HAVE TO LEAVE AND INDELIBLE MARK, A POSITIVE MARK ON THE COURSE OF AMERICAN HISTORY. PHIL: EMERGENT BIOSOLUTIONS ALSO HAS A CONTRACT WITH ASTROZENICA TO MAKE YET ANOTHER CORONAVIRUS VACCINE. THEY ARE ALSO MAKING A TREATMENT FOR THE CORONAVIRUS RIGHT HERE IN BALTIMORE

Johnson & Johnson COVID-19 vaccine to be made in Baltimore

Updated: 5:27 PM EST Jan 28, 2021

The Johnson & Johnson one-shot coronavirus vaccine is expected to be a game-changer in fighting COVID-19 -- and it will be made in Baltimore.|| Coronavirus updates | Maryland's latest numbers | Get tested | Vaccine Info ||Workers at Emergent BioSolutions near Johns Hopkins Bayview Medical Center said they are ready to go as soon as the U.S. Food and Drug Administration gives approval.Gaithersburg-based Emergent BioSolutions has about 1,000 employees at two Baltimore locations that will make the Johnson & Johnson coronavirus vaccine."Over the coming months, we expect to manufacture hundreds of millions of doses to keep doses flowing to the American population," said Sean Kirk, executive vice president of manufacturing and technical operations for Emergent BioSolutions.Maryland online vaccination site locatorVaccine Data DashboardMaryland vaccination plan FAQsAs part of the clinical trials, the company is already making the vaccine to build up a stockpile and to fill the pipeline to get the product moving once its approved, which is expected soon.The Johnson & Johnson vaccine is attractive to those on the front lines because the vaccine is given in one dose and storage is much easier than those already on the market."The product candidates we are working on are stable at refrigerated temperatures -- 2 to 8 degrees centigrade. That's a typical kind of clinic refrigeration temperatures, which makes them more easily distributed across the globe," Kirk said.In the global fight against the coronavirus pandemic, Baltimore will have a hand in the major battle of getting people vaccinated."It's just an amazing opportunity we have to leave an indelible mark, a positive mark on the course of American history," Kirk said. "There's a lot of demand out there. I'm in the vaccine business. I run the manufacturing of this organization, but I've got a family, and my family asks me every day, I get lots of text messages about how are things going and when it's going to be available."Emergent BioSolutions also has a contract with AstraZeneca to make its coronavirus vaccine. The company is also making a treatment for the coronavirus in Baltimore.

The Johnson & Johnson one-shot coronavirus vaccine is expected to be a game-changer in fighting COVID-19 -- and it will be made in Baltimore.

|| Coronavirus updates | Maryland's latest numbers | Get tested | Vaccine Info ||

Workers at Emergent BioSolutions near Johns Hopkins Bayview Medical Center said they are ready to go as soon as the U.S. Food and Drug Administration gives approval.

Gaithersburg-based Emergent BioSolutions has about 1,000 employees at two Baltimore locations that will make the Johnson & Johnson coronavirus vaccine.

"Over the coming months, we expect to manufacture hundreds of millions of doses to keep doses flowing to the American population," said Sean Kirk, executive vice president of manufacturing and technical operations for Emergent BioSolutions.

As part of the clinical trials, the company is already making the vaccine to build up a stockpile and to fill the pipeline to get the product moving once its approved, which is expected soon.

The Johnson & Johnson vaccine is attractive to those on the front lines because the vaccine is given in one dose and storage is much easier than those already on the market.

"The product candidates we are working on are stable at refrigerated temperatures -- 2 to 8 degrees centigrade. That's a typical kind of clinic refrigeration temperatures, which makes them more easily distributed across the globe," Kirk said.

In the global fight against the coronavirus pandemic, Baltimore will have a hand in the major battle of getting people vaccinated.

"It's just an amazing opportunity we have to leave an indelible mark, a positive mark on the course of American history," Kirk said. "There's a lot of demand out there. I'm in the vaccine business. I run the manufacturing of this organization, but I've got a family, and my family asks me every day, I get lots of text messages about how are things going and when it's going to be available."

Emergent BioSolutions also has a contract with AstraZeneca to make its coronavirus vaccine. The company is also making a treatment for the coronavirus in Baltimore.

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Johnson & Johnson COVID-19 vaccine to be made in Baltimore - WBAL TV Baltimore

Missing vials of COVID-19 vaccine prompts St. Pete police investigation into St. Pete Fire Rescue – WFLA

January 30, 2021

WASHINGTON (NewsNation Now) The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention issued an order late Friday requiring masks in interstate transportation and at transit hubs, including airplanes, mass transit, taxis and trains, starting late Monday.

The CDC said the mask mandate, effective from Feb. 1 at 11:59 p.m. EST, also covers ride-share vehicles and subways and makes not wearing a mask as instructed a violation of federal law. The order does not apply to private cars or commercial trucks being driven by a sole operator.

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Missing vials of COVID-19 vaccine prompts St. Pete police investigation into St. Pete Fire Rescue - WFLA

East Bay Doctor Denied Ability to Administer COVID-19 Vaccines on Her Own – NBC Bay Area

January 30, 2021

An East Bay doctor says shes especially frustrated about the vaccine rollout. Though the state approved her to help give out doses, Contra Costa County said "no thanks."

San Ramon Doctor Melissa McNamara has been closely watching as clinics continue administering vaccinations.

I felt a call to the cause to help out, she said, adding she watched a doctor who runs a private practice in Walnut Creek give COVID-19 vaccines in Lafayette a week and a half ago.

McNamara knew she could do the same,she has the space, volunteers and now the equipment to pull it off.

I went through a process where Cal Vacs has you apply, you give them your credentials, you tell them the equipment you have, said McNamara.

She invested $15,000 buying equipment like this deep freezer to accommodate the Pfizer vaccine. And after days of making multiple orders to the state and county she was told her help was not needed.

What I really wanted from Contra Costa County was the ability to help my neighbors who are medical people, she said.

McNamara said there are about 100 health care workers in her building and many are having trouble getting their vaccinations.

She said workers either cant get an appointment, or theyre unable to travel to a vaccination site during work hours.

Every day you see people, its scary, said Jess Gruezo, a phlebotomist who works in McNamaras building.

The county told NBC Bay Area that McNamara was denied because "with the current vaccine capacity, we have more than enough to administer the vaccine we are getting, so there is no need for additional vaccination sites."

In fact, the county says its focusing on setting up bigger vaccination sites in hard hit communities.

But McNamara says something has to change.

I feel the current system the way it is is not working, she said.

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East Bay Doctor Denied Ability to Administer COVID-19 Vaccines on Her Own - NBC Bay Area

Novavax says its Covid-19 vaccine is 90% effective in late-stage trial – STAT

January 29, 2021

A Covid-19 vaccine from Novavax proved nearly 90% effective in preliminary results from a key clinical trial in the United Kingdom, the company said, but in a separate trial appeared far less effective against a new variant of the coronavirus that was first identified in South Africa.

In its 15,000-volunteer U.K. trial, Novavax said, the vaccine prevented nine in 10 cases, including against a new strain of the virus that is circulating there. But in a 4,400-volunteer study in South Africa, the vaccine proved only 49% effective. In the 94% of the study population that did not have HIV, the efficacy was 60%.

In the U.K. trial, Novavax observed 62 cases of symptomatic Covid-19, with 56 in the placebo group and six among volunteers who got the vaccine. One patient on placebo developed severe Covid-19, compared with zero in the vaccine group. The company provided few details on the vaccines safety, saying only that the serious side effects were rare and balanced between the studies vaccine and placebo groups.

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In the South African study, 29 cases of symptomatic Covid-19 were observed in the placebo group, and 15 in the vaccine group.

Its unclear whether these data will be enough for U.S. approval, or if the U.S. will wait for further data, as it appears to be doing with vaccines developed by AstraZeneca and Oxford University. Novavax said it expects to file for an emergency authorization in the U.K. in the coming months, once it has final data from its clinical trial there. The company said it has been in contact with the Food and Drug Administration but didnt provide details on its plans.

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Operation Warp Speed, the U.S. governments vaccine incubator, is running its own large U.S. trial of the Novavax vaccine in the United States and Mexico. Researchers expect to complete enrollment in the first half of February.

Carlos del Rio, a professor of infectious diseases at the Emory University School of Medicine, said the overall efficacy numbers were impressive, and that the vaccine showed at least some efficacy against the variant first identified in South Africa.

By the same token, the lower efficacy against that variant could be a vulnerability in the United States, where it was first reported in South Carolina on Thursday, and elsewhere.

Nahid Bhadelia, medical director of the special pathogens unit at Boston Medical Center, emphasized that although the drop in efficacy against the South African variant is bad news, the results arent a complete wash. The vaccine, she said, can still make a huge difference. But the results also emphasize the important work of figuring out how to develop booster shots against new variants, especially given the news that the South Africa strain, B1351, was found in South Carolina.

Novavax said it is already at work on a new version of the vaccine designed to combat more infectious strains of SARS-CoV-2, which could work as a booster shot for people already inoculated. But clinical testing isnt expected until the second quarter of this year.

Some experts cautioned against over-interpreting the efficacy results in the South Africa trial, noting that they amounted to a relatively small number of cases in a preliminary analysis.

I am not sure that it is disappointing. The U.K. data look very good. The South Africa data may be more nuanced, said Anna Durbin, a professor at the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health, noting that each trial defined symptomatic disease slightly differently. She said she would be interested in seeing more data on the severity of disease in the cases reported.

Scott Gottlieb, the former FDA commissioner and Pfizer board member, said he didnt think it was a surprise that the vaccine was less effective against the new strain.

We have already seen experimentally that there is a falloff in neutralization against that variant with the other vaccines, and we should expect that this may be common to all the vaccines that use the original spike protein as the epitope, regardless of how that protein is being delivered, he said.

More data will be available with results from Johnson & Johnson, expected soon, because that trial will include patients from both Brazil and South Africa.

I think this raises the stakes on putting boosters into development that are based on these new variants, and building a regulatory process that allows this sort of incremental, follow-on innovation to reach the market based on something short of brand new, full-blown outcomes studies, Gottlieb said.

Novavaxs data arrive as countries around the world scramble to secure enough vaccine doses to protect their populations. In the U.S., the federal government has struggled to meet demand for doses of the only two authorized vaccines, from Moderna and partners Pfizer and BioNTech.

Novavax has said it expects to produce about 2 billion doses of its vaccine in 2021. The U.S. has signed a contract to buy 100 million of them and has the option to acquire more.

Like all the Covid-19 vaccines that are being used or are in final test, Novavaxs two-dose shot works by mimicking a protein called spike, which is found on the surface of SARS-CoV-2. When the immune system catches sight of that protein, it produces antibodies against it, thereby protecting the body from a case of Covid-19.

But Novavax is using the most tried-and-true technology among the frontrunners in the race to develop Covid-19. The first two vaccines authorized in the U.S. use a technology called mRNA, which slips genetic material into cells to create a protein that stimulates the immune system. Others still in development, such as one from Johnson & Johnson and another from AstraZeneca, use genetically altered viruses to do something similar.

Like some approved vaccines, Novavaxs vaccine manufactures fragments of the spike protein in insect cells and then adds another chemical, called an adjuvant, to stimulate the immune system to respond. This approach is used in an approved flu vaccine sold by Sanofi, and was the approach that Sanofi and GlaxoSmithKline planned to use in their own Covid-19 vaccine. The similarities are not entirely coincidental. Gale Smith, the former chief scientific officer of the company that developed that vaccine, is now a scientist at Novavax. But while the drug giants stumbled, Novavax, a small company that has not previously brought a product to market, has mostly hit its marks.

The company presented promising early data in August that showed neutralizing antibody levels that were roughly quadruplethose seen in patients who had recovered from Covid-19, among the best for any vaccine in early testing. Those same results were published in the New England Journal of Medicine in September.

In July, Novavax received $1.6 billion in funding from Operation Warp Speed to scale up its manufacturing processes, with the agreement that the 100 million doses of vaccine that would result would be owned by the U.S. government.

The good news, said Natalie Dean, a biostatistician at the University of Florida, is that, from the start, several different vaccine technologies have been developed against Covid-19. That makes the world more ready for what comes next.

This is why its important to have an open pipeline, Dean said. At every stage we want to not put all our eggs in one basket. And this is the same situation. We still dont know about durability, we dont know how the vaccines work against different variants. At all stages we want a diversity of approaches.

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Novavax says its Covid-19 vaccine is 90% effective in late-stage trial - STAT

Covid-19 numbers are dipping in the US, even as variants are lurking and the vaccine rollout lags – CNN

January 29, 2021

So, as the nation waits for widespread vaccines, the steps people should take to slow the spread are the same as always: wear masks, avoid congregate settings and wash hands, experts have said.

Covid-19 numbers are on a downswing

New daily recorded cases in the US are falling. Health experts had warned that the November-December holidays, with boosts in travel and indoor gatherings, would send Covid-19 cases soaring.

And soar they did, reaching a pandemic-record average of more than 249,200 cases a day across a week as of January 10, according to Johns Hopkins University data.

The surge has fallen off: The average was down to about 166,380 cases a day across a week as of Tuesday -- a drop of more than 33% from the peak.

And the country has reported fewer than 200,000 new cases a day for 10 straight days -- the longest such stretch since before Thanksgiving.

Hospitalizations are falling: About 108,950 Covid-19 patients were in US hospitals on Tuesday -- a number generally dropping since a pandemic peak of 132,474 patients recorded January 6.

The statistic is now about where it was just before mid-December, according to the COVID Tracking Project.

Deaths reported per day are hovering just under a record: The country averaged 3,349 Covid-19 deaths a day across a week as of Tuesday.

That's very close to a pandemic peak average of 3,355 reached on January 13 -- and far ahead of the averages around 1,000 just in mid-November.

Experts have said movements in the volume of deaths can lag weeks behind case and hospitalization numbers, because those who succumb to the disease can first be sick for weeks.

That's in part because of seasonality, institute director Dr. Christopher Murray said Monday -- meaning warmer weather can mean less opportunity for spread, with more social opportunity outdoors.

But vaccinations, too, "will prevent a lot of death," Murray said.

About those variants

Dr. Leana Wen, emergency physician and former Baltimore health commissioner, is among experts worrying that more-transmissible variants could lead to more case surges if they take hold.

"We've seen what happens in other countries that have actually had coronavirus under relatively good control, then these variants took over and they had explosive spread of the virus, and then overwhelmed hospitals," Wen told CNN Monday.

'Get as many people vaccinated as quickly as you possibly can'

One obvious way to combat these variants -- and to lessen the chances of more-dangerous mutations from occurring -- Fauci has said, is to get vaccinated.

"The best way you prevent the evolution of mutants is to suppress the amount of virus that's circulating in the population. And the best way to do that is to get as many people vaccinated as quickly as you possibly can," Fauci told CNN on Monday.

Evidence indicates the effectiveness of vaccine-induced antibodies might be diminished against the mutant first seen in South Africa, but "it's still well within the cushion-range of being an effective vaccine," Fauci said.

The World Health Organization, meanwhile, has stressed that rich nations need to do more to ensure vaccines are available worldwide. That's not only for moral reasons but also because dangerous mutations could emerge in places where people are not vaccinated in sufficient numbers -- and end up sickening people already vaccinated.

"A me-first approach leaves the world's poorest and most vulnerable people at risk. It's also self-defeating," WHO Director-General Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus said Wednesday.

Keep masking up, experts say

The steps people should take to fight variants and get the country closer to normal while waiting for vaccines follow the now-familiar roadmap of pandemic precautions, from wearing masks to avoiding crowds to basic hand-washing.

New strains put "a lot of pressure on us to try (to) do everything we can to get transmission down," Dr. Richard Besser, former acting director of the CDC, said Tuesday.

"Vaccines are part of that, but the biggest part of that is trying to come together as a nation and see: Can we get those people who aren't wearing masks to do so? Can we get people to social distance and avoid crowded indoor places?" he said

"If we can do those things, we can blunt the impact of the pandemic this winter."

These prevention measures in tandem with the vaccine rollout -- even over several months -- should bring increasing relief, Dr. Ashish Jha, dean of Brown University's School of Public Health, told CNN late last week.

"I am hopeful that by late spring into early summer, life will begin to feel really meaningfully different and better," he said.

CNN's Amanda Watts, Elizabeth Cohen, John Bonifield, Andrea Diaz, Maggie Fox, Naomi Thomas, Sandee LaMotte, Deidre McPhillips and Jen Christensen contributed to this report.

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Covid-19 numbers are dipping in the US, even as variants are lurking and the vaccine rollout lags - CNN

VERIFY: Yes, text message offering to get paid to participate in COVID-19 vaccine trial is real – KHOU.com

January 29, 2021

The text reads, Interested in a paid COVID-19 vaccine clinical trial? Theres a telephone number and email to contact someone at Centex Studies.

HOUSTON Theres a text message going around asking people if they are interested in getting paid to participate in a COVID-19 vaccine trial. Someone thought it sounded too good to be true. So, they asked the VERIFY team to check it out.

The text reads, Interested in a paid COVID-19 vaccine clinical trial? Theres a telephone number and email to contact someone at Centex Studies.

Our source for this is Dr. Joe Pouzar, principal investigator at Centex Studies, a clinical research network in Texas and Louisiana that conducts clinical trials on various conditions including Alzheimer's, diabetes, endometriosis and most recently, the COVID-19 vaccine. He tells the VERIFY team, the company is reaching out to potential participants through text message.

That's one of many ways that we're recruiting for the trial. We have a presence on Facebook and other social media as well, Dr. Pouzar said.

Dr. Pouzar says Centex Studies is looking for several hundred people in the Houston area to participate in a COVID-19 vaccine trial sponsored by Janssen, which is owned by Johnson & Johnson.

It's two injections. They're spaced roughly two months apart. Then, there's ongoing follow up for any side effects, and also for overall effectiveness and antibody levels. That goes on about two years after the start of the clinical trial, Dr. Pouzar said.

Participants will be paid $100 per visit. Centex Studies says they began recruiting through text in November.

I can't think of anything that would be more important right now in the field of medicine than combating this particular pandemic, Dr. Pouzar said.

So, we can VERIFY the text message is legit.

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VERIFY: Yes, text message offering to get paid to participate in COVID-19 vaccine trial is real - KHOU.com

At least 2,300 doses of COVID-19 vaccine have gone to waste in Washington – KING5.com

January 29, 2021

According to an incomplete data set, healthcare providers have wasted thousands of doses of the COVID-19 vaccine.

OLYMPIA, Wash. At least 2,315 doses of the COVID-19 vaccine have gone to waste in Washington state, according to information reported to the state.

That data is incomplete and is only what's been reported to the state Immunization Information System so far. Not every health care provider is entering data the same way or reporting all fields, according to a state spokesperson.

Earlier this month, the Washington State Hospital Association said that though it isn't happening frequently, doses are being thrown out.

An employee at a MultiCare facility said doses of the vaccine are being thrown away at the end of shifts because state guidelines make it difficult to provide doses for those who don't meet the criteria for the current phase at that time the state was in Phase 1A. If someone doesn't show up for their appointment, the clinic administering the vaccine is left with an extra which cannot be saved because it expires too quickly.

The state is now in the first tier of Phase 1B.

Washington State Hospital Association CEO Cassie Sauer said if this happens, its only a few doses at a time.

If youre doing 500, 700 doses a day, to end up at the end of the day with three leftovers, you know, wed like there to be zero but thats a hard ratio to hit, Sauer said earlier this month.

The Department of Health sent this statement to KING 5 regarding the vaccine doses and ways to make sure they do not go to waste.

"We've seen a few cases of vaccine excursion, usually with it being out of temperature range. In those cases, they are referred to Moderna or Pfizer, and the manufacturer lets them know viability. There have also been a few cases when people didnt know to what to do with extra vaccine who to give vaccine to if they cant find a 1A person. Providers in that situation are asked to make a clinical judgment about who should receive the vaccine. One reason DOH expanded Phase 1A to add tier 2 was so that those who have vaccinated their tier 1 employees can begin vaccinating in tier 2."

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At least 2,300 doses of COVID-19 vaccine have gone to waste in Washington - KING5.com

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