Category: Covid-19 Vaccine

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A Skin Patch To Deliver The COVID-19 Vaccine – LAist

January 25, 2021

Arts And Culture

Updated January 24, 2021 2:55 PM

Published January 24, 2021 1:38 PM

Cheech Marin (Cheech & Chong, Born in East L.A.) is one step closer to opening a center dedicated to Chicano art in Riverside.

City officials announced in 2017 that it will commit $10.7 million to the project, and late last week, the City Council approved a management agreement and a bid for the construction company.

Marin is one of the world's leading collectors of Chicano art, and his collection will be the anchoring exhibit at the Cheech Marin Center, planned to open inside the Riverside Art Museum this Fall.

Drew Oberjuerge, the museums executive director, said that while construction is underway on the center and museum doors are closed during the pandemic, Marins project has been active online. The actor has been hosting public Zoom conversations, including a recent event with Carlos Santana.

Cheech is talking to these artists and these creative people to get a deeper understanding about their art, what's motivated them in the past, Oberjuerge said. We've also had [talks with] photographers who documented the protests around the Chicano moratorium.

Marin has spoken on the Riverside Art Museums Instagram about why he's drawn to the artists in his collection.

Julia Paskin

Rain

Updated January 24, 2021 12:31 PM

Published January 24, 2021 12:30 PM

The rain that blanketed L.A. on Saturday has tapered off, but is likely to return tonight and continue into Monday.

Some areas in SoCal may get snow at elevations as low as 2,500 to 3,000 feet.

Adam Roser, a meteorologist with the National Weather Service, said Big Bear will get six-to- eight inches of snow, and towns nearby could get even more.

Places just to the west of Big Bear, or Lake Arrowhead, will probably see a foot, maybe more, he said.

The rain is expected to be periodic on Monday night and Tuesday probably a beautiful day to go see the snow in the mountains, said Roser and return at its heaviest on Tuesday night or Wednesday morning, when total rainfall could hit two inches.

Experts are advising residents to drive with extra caution, particularly through higher elevations, and to expect snow and ice on mountain highways such as the Grapevine and the Cajon Pass.

Julia Paskin

The Vaccine

Updated January 24, 2021 10:29 AM

Published January 24, 2021 9:54 AM

A new vaccine distribution supersite is open in Orange County, the second to open in the area following the launch of the Disneyland site on Jan. 13.

The new location, at Soka University in Aliso Viejo, is in the southern part of the county.

Molly Nichelson, a spokesperson for the Soka site, said that workers there can administer around 3,000 vaccinations per day.

We have approximately 600,000 people in the tier 1A in Orange County, she said, so obviously we're trying to make sure we can get through those people as quickly as possible.

Wait times at Disneyland have been between one and two hours, so seniors coming to Soka University are encouraged to bring a chair while they wait, and an umbrella for the rainy weather.

Orange County's vaccine supersites all require appointments, which can be made online. The County has also set up a multilingual hotline for questions about the online appointment system, at 714-834-2000.

Julia Paskin

The Vaccine

Updated January 24, 2021 9:22 AM

Published January 24, 2021 9:21 AM

Local researchers are working to turn the COVID-19 vaccine into an easy-to-deliver skin patch.

Similar to nicotine patches used to quit smoking, such liquid-coated swaths are already used for vaccine administration to guard against other illnesses.

Dr. Lbachir BenMohamed, who is leading the research at UC Irvine's School of Medicine, said that switching the coronavirus vaccine from an injection to a patch will make distribution easier.

Delivering the vaccine is six times more expensive than the vaccine itself, he said. If we come up with something that you can just put in an envelope and ship it to a remote area, I think that is going to be a game changer.

A vaccine patch would also eliminate the need for the constant cold storage currently required for some of the approved vaccines.

BenMohameds lab started testing the vaccine patch with mice late last week. If the trials are successful, the patch will be submitted to the Food and Drug Administration.

Julia Paskin

Politics

Updated January 24, 2021 8:34 AM

Published January 24, 2021 8:01 AM

The FBI is investigating vandalism and an explosion at an area church known for its anti-LGBTQ stance.

Police and firefighters responded to smoke coming from the First Works Baptist Church in El Monte just after 1 a.m. on Saturday. The walls were vandalized and the windows were broken. No injuries were reported.

Church pastor Bruce Mejia has been the target of protests for preaching again same-sex relationships, and for making derogatory statements about women, Jewish people, and the Black Lives Matter movement.

The Southern Poverty Law Center classified the church as a hate group in 2019.

On Jan. 17, Keep El Monte Friendly, an activist group devoted to inclusivity, held a protest outside First Works against what it calls the churchs hateful rhetoric. The group has since cancelled a demonstration planned for today, and issued a statement condemning the attack.

Julia Paskin

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A Skin Patch To Deliver The COVID-19 Vaccine - LAist

Merced County to hold two more COVID-19 vaccination clinics this week, heres where to sign up – YourCentralValley.com

January 25, 2021

A medical staff member prepares the Pfizer-BioNTech COVID-19 vaccine at Tudor Ranch in Mecca, Calif., Thursday, Jan. 21, 2021. (AP Photo/Jae C. Hong)

MERCED COUNTY, Calif. (KSEE/KGPE) Merced County announced Sunday it will hold two more COVID-19 vaccination clinics later this week in Merced and Los Banos.

The additional clinics follow the successful launch of four vaccination clinics last week, the county Department of Public Health said.

A total of 800 doses will be split between the two sites this week and additional allocations will be provided to eligible Merced County healthcare providers to administer.

The health department reported that the state provided a smaller allocation of doses last week and county officials are advocating for a higher allocation of doses in coming weeks.

Residents are advised to visit Vaccinate Merced County to determine eligibility and receive further vaccination notifications.

Anyone who doesnt have access to a computer or internet can call the Public Health Information Line at 209-381-1180 starting on Monday at 10 a.m. on a first-come, first-served basis to request an appointment.

The Public Health Department said eligible residents who register through the website will receive a notification email with appointment options, which will remain available until the schedule is full.

Those who would like to receive a vaccination are strongly encouraged to sign up at Vaccinate Merced County in order to be notified of future availability and appointment options. Vaccination appointments are prioritized based on state eligibility criteria and are handled in the order submitted.

The county is currently vaccinating residents that fall under Phase 1A along with individuals 65 and older.

Vaccinations are appointment only at the moment in order to administer the vaccine orderly and effectively, officials said. Additional vaccination sites and options are planned as the vaccine becomes more widely available.

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Merced County to hold two more COVID-19 vaccination clinics this week, heres where to sign up - YourCentralValley.com

Opinion | Misinformation about the COVID-19 vaccine is incredibly dangerous – UI The Daily Iowan

January 25, 2021

We have seen how powerful social media is in spreading information. With the emergence of the COVID-19 vaccine, its important to make sure that information is accurate

Shivansh Ahuja for The Daily Iow

Patients are injected with the COVID-19 vaccine at the VA Medical Center in Iowa City on Tuesday, Dec. 22, 2020. The center received the Modern vaccine for its employees.

Nearly a year has passed since the start of the COVID-19 pandemic. With the virus came fear and uncertainty because of fast-spreading misinformation.

Social media plays an intrinsic role in our society and has become a lightning-quick outlet for information. With the emergence of a vaccine, its important that correct information is circulating rather than fear mongering false information that will turn people away.

We have witnessed through this year how misinformation endangered health care workers handling the pandemic, such as the false idea that masks are not effective ways to curb the spread of the virus. Now, we are seeing more wrong claims circulate about the vaccines.

Because of the novelty of the COVID-19 vaccine, misleading information could be detrimental to slowing the spread of the virus and encouraging people to get vaccinated.

Social media companies are now challenged with the task of keeping up with false claims and conspiracies about the vaccine. Shortly after the vaccine came out, social media was filled with false claims about the vaccine altering peoples DNA or not being able to keep up with the mutated strains of the virus.

The spread of this information only instills fear and distrust in people, perpetuating the severity of COVID-19 in the U.S.

In Iowa, 144,955 COVID-19 vaccines have been administered as of Jan. 2. 4.12 percent of the population has received at least a single dose of the vaccine. However, the number of people fully vaccinated is only 12,629.

As of this month, 9,411 doses of the COVID-19 vaccine have been administered in Johnson County, making Johnson County the second-highest county in number of vaccines administered in the state.

According to MU Health Care, it would be ideal to have 80-90 percent of the population vaccinated in order to achieve herd immunity.

With only 4.12 percent of the state vaccinated, Iowa has a long way to go. Spreading accurate information is crucial to administering the COVID-19 vaccine.

As of November, 60 percent of U.S. adults reported that they would get the COVID-19 vaccine with only 37 percent feeling comfortable being among the first vaccinated.

These numbers were found to be influenced by many different factors. However, hesitation mainly stemmed from whether people had concerns of falling ill, levels of trust in the vaccine, and participants experience receiving other vaccines.

Peoples willingness to receive the COVID-19 vaccine heavily relies on their trust in the medicine behind it.

Its understandable that there would be doubts and concerns about receiving a vaccine for a virus especially for marginalized communities that historically have been exploited by medical professionals. This is why it is all the more important to make sure there is easily accessible accurate information circulating through the media.

Columns reflect the opinions of the authors and are not necessarily those of the Editorial Board, The Daily Iowan, or other organizations in which the author may be involved.

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Opinion | Misinformation about the COVID-19 vaccine is incredibly dangerous - UI The Daily Iowan

Fact check: The vaccine for COVID-19 has been nearly 20 years in the making – USA TODAY

January 25, 2021

The nation's preeminent infectious disease expert says he believes the country can expect "some degree of normality that is close to where we were" by the end of next year if 75-80% of the population is vaccinated. (Dec. 9) AP Domestic

It is approaching a year since the World Health Organization declared COVID-19 a pandemic,and on Dec. 8, Britain was the first Western country to begin vaccination against the virus. The rollout was followed by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration's emergency authorization of Pfizer-BioNTech's COVID-19 vaccine on Dec. 11 and Moderna's on Dec. 18.

Given the quick scientificresponse to thenewly emergingvirus, one Instagram post is calling foul, questioning why vaccines for equally debilitating diseases, predating the pandemic, have not yet been developed.

The Nov. 30 Instagram postfromauthor Boyce Watkins shares a screenshot of a Facebook comment alleging countless years of research effort have yielded no vaccine.

"40 years worth of research...no vaccine for HIV (sic) At least 100 years research...no vaccine for cancer (sic) Ongoing research...no vaccine for the common cold (sic) Less than a year for a covid (sic) vaccine? Thanks but a hard pass on that shot..." claims "Lee Morin" in the comment.

"This does make you wonder: How did you come up with this so fast, but you can't vaccinate against viruses that have been harming people for centuries?" asks Watkins. The post has received over 13,800 likes and comments agreeing with Watkins' charge.

"Come on. You have 7 BILLION customers. No other virus/cancer/ailment has that many customer. Follow the money," writes Instagram user borzirtc.

Other social media users have posted the same or a similar claim, as recently as Jan. 13.

USA TODAY has reached out to those who posted the claim for further comment.

More: Fact check: COVID-19 outbreak at NY nursing home started before vaccinations

The COVID-19 vaccine is using new technology that has never been used before in traditional vaccines. Here's how an mRNA vaccine works. USA TODAY

Operation Warp Speed, the private-public partnership initiated by the White House during the pandemic, may give the impression the COVID-19 vaccine developed overnight, but in actuality, it depends on research datingback nearly 100 years.

Coronaviruses were first encountered in April 1930, when a strange respiratory disease ravagedpoultry farms across North Dakota and Minnesota, killing tens of thousands of baby birds, The Scientist reports. Unsure of what exactly this illness was, veterinarians Arthur Schalk and Merle Hawn of North Dakota Agricultural College, now North Dakota State University, called it "infectious bronchitis of baby chicks," the viral agent later named infectious bronchitis virus.

Further scientific research into IBV and recognition that it was not like influenza A, a flu virus known to causebronchitis, would transpire over the next 30 years. In November 1968, a group of scientists wrote to the journal Nature asking for IBV, and viruses resembling it like mouse hepatitis virus discovered in 1947, to be classified as coronaviruses, a name derived from its appearance the spikeproteins castinga halo around the surface, much like the sun's corona on electron microscopeimaging.

More: Fact check: Pregnant women do receive vaccines, but more study needed on COVID-19 shot

While coronaviruses could cause a variety of fatal diseases in animals, the two known to infect humans were not a grave concern, as they only causedthe common cold. This belief was challenged in November 2002 with the emergence of a new respiratory illness in Guandong Province, China, that would infect over 8,000 people worldwide and claim 774 lives.

In less than a month, researchers decoded the enormous genome of the new virus, which caused adisease called severe acute respiratory syndrome.Researchers concluded it was a coronavirus, likely to have jumped from animals to humans because it was only somewhat related to other known coronaviruses. (It took over 15 years of search to identify bats as the potential animal source.)By July 2003, thanks to isolating and quarantining patients, the World Health Organization declared SARS officially contained.

Nevertheless, fears of future seasonal SARS outbreaks called for a vaccine. SARS-CoV's spike protein was an obvious choice for a target.Prior research found the spike protein was criticalin determining which species a coronavirus infected, where it preferredto hunker down called organ or cell tropism and disease severity. The spike protein had even been proposed as a vaccine target for canine coronavirus in 1991.

More: Fact check: Vaccination helped eradicate smallpox

A number of vaccines targeting the spikeprotein were designed, tested in animal models and found to be quite promising against SARS and other coronavirus illnesses like Middle East respiratory syndrome,which appeared in 2012. But further testing reached an impasse when funding declined steadily in the years following the 2003 outbreak, said Dr. Peter Hotez,a vaccine scientist and dean of the National School of Tropical Medicine at Baylor College of Medicine in Houston, whose team collaborated withGalveston National Laboratory to create a SARS vaccinein 2016.

"We manufactured a really great SARS 1 vaccine in the lab. We actually had a manufacturer at Walter Reed, but then we couldn't raise the money to do all the clinical testing," he told USA TODAY.

Funding was not the only issue. Testing whether a vaccine can prevent disease requires the disease to still be around. Since there have been no major outbreaks of SARS since 2003, testing vaccine efficacy was difficult. But more instrumental is interest: FewSARS or MERS cases meant pharmaceutical companies were less inclined to invest in a likely rarely used vaccine.

More: Fact check: Doctors say Hilary Duff likely didn't contract pink eye from COVID-19 tests

Typically, the road to creating new vaccines is long, with many steps:Finding and developing a vaccine target (exploratory), testing it in tissue- or cell-cultures and animal models (preclinical) followed by three phases of clinical trials with human volunteers.

If a vaccine proves its mettle, its developers have to seek and gain approval from the FDA before manufacturing. Lastly,in phase four, quality control monitorsfor any possible vaccine side effects.

For vaccines to be effective, a specific targetis needed. This vaccine target, also called an antigen, istypically a fragment of the disease-causing agentthat instructs the immune system on how to recognize and destroy it upon contact. Searching for a suitable antigen can be an arduous process but prior coronavirus research made it all the more easier.

"When the Chinese put up the COVID-19 sequence on bioRxiv in January, our community of scientists looked at it and said, 'Yeah, we got this because we know how to do it.' It was all about plug and play based on all thatexperience," said Hotez.

Having a running start does not mean the testing process was accelerated, however. Hotez, whose recombinant proteinsubunit COVID-19 vaccine is undergoing clinical trials in India, stated the vaccine still underwent testing among a large group of human volunteers, even more than a typical trial with over 30,000 to 60,000 people.

What accelerated the vaccine process was manufacturing.

"The two accelerants are doing the manufacturing of risk (scaling up manufacturing based on the assumption the vaccine will work, also called at-risk manufacturing) and manufacturing the vaccine in parallel with clinical trials. That's new because we usually wait for the phase three results," he said.

More: Fact check: The US saw more deaths in 2020 than in 2019, driven by the COVID-19 pandemic

Human immunodeficiency virus, the culprit behind acquired immunodeficiency syndrome, commonlyknown asAIDS,is a tricky virus. Much like the novel coronavirus, HIV binds to a protein on the surface of T cells,a type of white blood cell, to enter.Once inside, HIV integrates its genetic material with its host cell's DNA, using the host's DNA replication machinery to create new viruses, which blast off to infect and kill other T cells.

Finding a specific and effective vaccine target is therefore difficult, especially since HIV mutates frequently in order to mask itself from the immune system. According to the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Disease, common vaccine approaches using inactivated or live HIV formshave either not been "effective in eliciting immune responses in clinical trials" or are too dangerous to use.

The same goes for the common cold,which is caused by asmorgasbord of viruses includingover 150 different types of rhinovirus, a common troublemaker.

"It's hard to create a vaccine when you have so many different viruses causing similar symptoms. To make a universal vaccine against all of them is probably pretty daunting, it might be doable, but it's daunting," explained Hotez.

More: Fact check: Biden said he plans to increase COVID-19 small business relief to people of color and women

Cancer, an abnormal growth of the body's own cells due to unchecked genetic mutations, is no virus, but the struggle in finding a suitable vaccine target is not any easier.

"The challenge is getting antigen targets and also access, because a lot of the antigens, or cancer proteins, are first inside the cell. They may not be presented to the immune system so these are much more complicated targets," said Hotez.

Advancesin messenger RNA-based vaccine technology in recent years may help fast-tracksome cancer vaccines, he acknowledged. The platform, which provides the body the equivalent of a genetic assembly instruction booklet for manufacturing target-specific antibodies, has been used for rabies, influenza and Zika and is considered an attractive approach for its low cost, speed of manufacturing, potency and versatility, Nature reported.

Many cancer vaccines using mRNA are in the works, like Moderna's personalized cancer vaccine, mRNA-4157, which is being tested in patients with metastatic common epithelial cancer. The Boston-based pharmaceutical company also announced on Jan. 11 it was working on a mRNA HIV vaccine with phase I clinical trials expected sometime in 2021.

We rate this claim MISSING CONTEXTbecause without additional context it might be misleading. Vaccines require specific targets against which they train the immune system. COVID-19's spike protein was identified nearly 20 years ago as a potential vaccine target during the development of the SARS vaccine, following the 2003 SARS outbreak.This has helped expedite the vaccine process, given that vaccine platform technologieshave advanced in recent years, as well. Another accelerant was the commercial-scale production of COVID-19 vaccine doses prior to FDA clearance, called at-risk manufacturing, when early results appeared promising. Finding suitable vaccine targets for HIV, cancer and the common cold has been more difficult in comparison as these diseases have either elusive or highly variable targets.

Thank you for supporting our journalism. You can subscribe to our print edition, ad-free app or electronic newspaper replica here.

Our fact check work is supported in part by a grant from Facebook.

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Fact check: The vaccine for COVID-19 has been nearly 20 years in the making - USA TODAY

Seniors, shelters eager to get the COVID-19 vaccine as Illinois enters the next phase but they hope the pace picks up – Chicago Tribune

January 25, 2021

Andrew Brewer, one of three cooks at Franciscan Outreach homeless shelter, cleans pots and pans after making the day's lunch, Jan. 22, 2021. "I will take the vaccine if there is a chance of not catching it again," Brewer said about taking the COVID-19 vaccine. He said he had COVID-19 in May. (Jose M. Osorio / Chicago Tribune)

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Seniors, shelters eager to get the COVID-19 vaccine as Illinois enters the next phase but they hope the pace picks up - Chicago Tribune

Opinion: COVID-19 vaccine is a game-changer that can stop the pandemic – The Detroit News

January 25, 2021

Samuel L. Stanley Jr., Mark S. Schlissel and M. Roy Wilson Published 10:51 p.m. ET Jan. 23, 2021

As COVID-19 case counts continue to rise across the United States, getting everyone possible vaccinated as soon as enough doses are available is vital to stopping this pandemic, reviving our national economy and getting children and college students back to in-person school.

The alternative is what we have now: high caseloads that are overwhelming our hospitals and health care workers, and millions of students able to attend classes only online. Our economy will continue to falterand layoffs will increaseas the coronavirus makes it unsafe to shop and dine as we normally do. Family gatherings and large meetings will remain off limits or, if held, become potential superspreader events.

As presidents of the three major public research universities that make up Michigans University Research Corridor Michigan State University, the University of Michigan and Wayne State University weve been on the front lines of battling the COVID-19 pandemic. URC researchers have worked to develop tests, treat the virus and create vaccines. Were training thousands of physicians, nurses and other health care workers in dealing with the virus. Were helping educators, business owners and government officials deal with the challenges of COVID-19.

As COVID-19 case counts continue to rise across the United States, getting everyone possible vaccinated as soon as enough doses are available is vital to stopping this pandemic, the university presidents write.(Photo: JOSEPH PREZIOSO, AFP via Getty Images)

In undertaking these efforts, it has been helpful that all three of us have medical degrees in addition to experience as university leaders. Our backgrounds:

Michigan State University President Samuel L. Stanley Jr.is an expert in infectious diseases.

University of Michigan President Mark S. Schlissel is an immunology expert.

Wayne State University President M. Roy Wilson has expertise in epidemiology and health disparities.

With this training, were familiar with the science and medicine behind a pandemic such as COVID-19, how vaccines work and how herd immunity develops.

When it is our turn according to CDC and state guidelines, were eager to get vaccinated ourselves. And we are urging all our students, staff, faculty and patients to do the same. We know vaccines have effectively stopped the spread of other bacteria and viruses, including those that cause the flu, tuberculosis, polio, smallpox, typhoid, measles, hepatitis, shingles and pneumonia.

Millions of people worldwide have benefited from these vaccines, and the COVID-19 vaccines are no different. Although theyve been researched and rolled out in record time, that doesnt mean theyre unsafe. They have been built on decades of investment in vaccine discovery and development, proven vaccine innovation and a focused global effort. They have been tested and proven safe and effective in studies gone over carefully by scientists trained in evaluating vaccines. The COVID-19 vaccines provide protection against a disease that has killed more than 400,000 of our friends, family members and co-workers across the nation and more than 2 million people worldwide.

Protecting the health of our students, faculty and staff has been the driving force behind our actions at all three universities since the pandemic began. Weve focused our research on finding vaccines and treatments, developing better and faster COVID-19 tests, and on helping health care and essential workers get the personal protection equipment they need to stay safe.

Those efforts continue. But the COVID-19 vaccine is a game-changer that can stop the pandemic from endangering the lives and livelihoods of so many Americans. Were urging everyone to get vaccinated, because we know its the only way to end this pandemic.

Samuel L. Stanley Jr. is president of Michigan State University; Mark S. Schlissel is president of the University of Michigan; and M. Roy Wilson is president of Wayne State University. To learn more about the work of the URC universities, see "Confronting COVID-19: Research, Innovation and Leadership: Advances in Medicine, Education & Business to fight COVID-19" at urcmich.org.

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Opinion: COVID-19 vaccine is a game-changer that can stop the pandemic - The Detroit News

CDC reports rare allergic reactions to Moderna’s Covid-19 vaccine – STAT – STAT

January 23, 2021

The Moderna Covid-19 vaccine, like the one made by Pfizer and BioNTech, appears to induce rare anaphylactic reactions in a small number of people who receive the vaccine, new data from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention suggest.

As of Jan. 19, there have been 15 confirmed cases of anaphylaxis after receipt of Modernas vaccine and 45 confirmed cases of anaphylaxis after receipt of the Pfizer vaccine, the CDC said in a statement to STAT. That works out to a rate of 2.1 cases per million doses of the Moderna vaccine and 6.2 cases per million doses of the Pfizer, according to the agency.

Anaphylaxis is a severe allergic reaction that can be life-threatening if not treated quickly.

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Early monitoring of both the Moderna and the Pfizer-BioNTech Covid-19 vaccines indicate that anaphylaxis following vaccination is a rare event, and although anaphylaxis is serious, it occurs shortly after vaccination (usually within minutes), is readily diagnosed, and effective treatments are available, the agency said via email.

It noted that the rates at which anaphylaxis is reported following vaccination is likely to change as more vaccine doses are given. In fact, they already have. The first report on U.S. cases of anaphylaxis following administration of the Pfizer vaccine suggested it occurred at a rate of 11.1 cases per million doses given.

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In a report published Friday on anaphylaxis cases among people who received the Moderna vaccine between Dec. 21 and Jan. 10, the CDC detailed 10 cases, all of which occurred in women. During the period of study, more than 4 million doses of the Moderna vaccine were administered.

In Fridays report, six of the 10 people who developed anaphylaxis were hospitalized and four of them needed to be intubated to assist their breathing. None of the people died, the CDC reported. To date there have been no reports of fatal cases of anaphylaxis associated with Covid vaccines in the United States.

All 10 of the people who developed anaphylaxis were given epinephrine, the drug in EpiPens that is used to combat severe allergic reactions. The CDC has said that those administering Covid vaccines need to be equipped to treat anaphylaxis, including having epinephrine injections on hand.

Anaphylaxis occurred quickly in the people affected, with the median time to the start of symptoms being 7.5 minutes. People who receive Covid-19 vaccines are supposed to be monitored for 15 minutes after the injection, with that period extended to 30 minutes for people with a history of severe allergies or anaphylaxis.

Nine of the 10 people had a history of allergies and five of them had previously experienced an anaphylactic reaction.

This story has been updated with additional data and comment from the CDC.

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CDC reports rare allergic reactions to Moderna's Covid-19 vaccine - STAT - STAT

Why Fights Over The COVID-19 Vaccine Are Everywhere On Facebook – FiveThirtyEight

January 23, 2021

If you took one look at the Facebook group Vaccines Exposed, it seemed clear what it was all about. It was a group opposed to deadly vaccinations, with over 13,000 members on a platform known to harbor anti-vaccination conspiracy theories. Some of its followers recent posts included a video falsely claiming the COVID-19 vaccine will kill people and a post claiming children are having cancer injected into them. #facts. Standard anti-vaxx fare.

It was so convincing, Facebook removed the group January 15 for violating the sites community standards. But Vaccines Exposed was really a honeypot group run by vaccine advocates hoping to attract the attention of anti-vaxxers and people on the fence. When those folks posted something that furthered the anti-vaxx cause, pro-vaxx members responded and tried to persuade them to question their beliefs. It wasnt always a gentle exchange.

In this community, there are people whose goal is purely to educate, said David Litton, a pro-vaccine member who used a fake account to participate in Vaccines Exposed, and is a podcaster and Twitch stream host who covers conspiracy theories online. Then theres a spectrum between that and people who are just trying to dunk on anti-vaxxers for being stupid.

For example, in response to that video falsely claiming the COVID-19 vaccine would kill people, one member asked why we arent seeing this in the thousands of trial participants, another queried why the original poster chose to trust individuals with no science background over experts, while yet another asked, referring to the original poster: why do we allow these people to breed?

[Answers To All (Or At Least Some) Of Your COVID-19 Vaccine Questions]

These skirmishes between pro- and anti-vaccine users arent limited to Vaccines Exposed; all of Facebook is a battlefield. And while those confrontations arent unique to Facebook the anti-vaxx movement is as old as vaccines themselves the site has created an ecosystem that, intentionally or not, has allowed this battle to flourish. And while the social media giant has made efforts to curb the spread of misinformation, it hasnt been enough to end the battle for hearts and minds. As the American public attempts the most extensive vaccination campaign in half a century, that battle is all the more relevant.

The recently greenlit COVID-19 vaccines represent our best chance at ending the pandemic, so its particularly jeopardous to have the American public spending time fighting over a basic fact: vaccines are safe, effective and necessary for public health. While the new COVID-19 vaccines dont have the benefit of decades of research demonstrating their safety and efficacy like other vaccines, many of the common narratives being spread about the COVID-19 vaccines come from existing anti-vaxx beliefs that have been debunked. Its true that researchers dont yet know for sure if the vaccines prevent people from spreading the virus, but we do know, for example, that mRNA vaccines dont change your DNA. The latter is an anti-vaxx belief so prevalent, it led one Wisconsin pharmacist to allegedly tamper with vials of the vaccine.

The preexisting conflict between anti-vaxxers and pro-vaxxers has now seeped into the much broader discussions about the COVID-19 vaccine on Facebook, according to a November report from First Draft News, a nonprofit organization that provides investigative research to newsrooms tracking and reporting on mis- and disinformation. (FiveThirtyEight has partnered with First Draft in the past.)

Our research shows how seamlessly old narratives can be repurposed to fit new contexts, said Rory Smith, a research manager at First Draft and a co-author of the report. When demand for information about a topic is high but the supply of credible information is low, you get a data deficit, and that deficit will quickly be filled up with misinformation.

[Does It Matter Which COVID-19 Vaccine You Get?]

The researchers found that familiar tropes about vaccines, such as the idea that they are unnecessary and just a way for big pharma to make money, have been applied to the COVID-19 vaccine as well. But COVID-19 is, naturally, a much more widely discussed topic, so much of the conversations about vaccines online is now about the COVID-19 vaccine specifically, allowing anti-vaxx narratives to reach audiences who might not otherwise come across them. In fact, leaked audio recordings of anti-vaxx leaders, first noted in a report by the U.K.-based Center for Countering Digital Hate, shows that they strategized to use this exact scenario anxiety and confusion about the new COVID-19 vaccines to sow misinformation to a wider audience.

Data from CrowdTangle, a social media tracking tool, reveals examples of anti-vaxx ideas seeping into COVID-19 vaccine conversations across Facebook, including in otherwise unrelated spaces. In a recent search for the word vaccine among Facebook groups, I was able to find dozens of examples of discussions in unrelated groups, many of which inevitably had anti-vaxx misinformation in the comment sections.

The anti-vaxx movement has done so well on Facebook in part because it is controversial, and controversy helps make Facebook a lot of money. In 2019, 98 percent of Facebooks revenue was from advertising $20 billion in all. Facebooks advertising is so valuable because it can be microtargeted, based on the data Facebook collects on its users. To collect more and better data (and to expose users to more ads), Facebook needs its users to be active and engaged: liking posts, sharing links, joining groups and commenting. One surefire way to keep people engaged is to expose them to content that provokes an emotional response, like a post claiming the vaccine youre planning to give your toddler will cause him or her to develop autism.

What we saw at Reddit was that conflict and controversy generated the most attention, said Ellen Pao, the former CEO of Reddit and a Silicon Valley vet who now runs Project Include, a nonprofit diversity consulting organization. These networks are rewarded for engagement. And when people get heated over something, they stay either to engage or to watch.

A Wall Street Journal investigation last year uncovered how teams within Facebook tasked with addressing the sites disinformation crisis cited the platforms design as the root of the problem. An internal company presentation from 2018 included slides that said Facebooks algorithms exploit the human brains attraction to divisiveness, and, if not altered, would surface more and more divisive content in an effort to gain user attention and increase time on the platform.

And at a congressional hearing in September, Facebooks former director of monetization, Tim Kendall, made similar observations.

Social media preys on the most primal parts of your brain. The algorithm maximizes your attention by hitting you repeatedly with content that triggers your strongest emotions it aims to provoke, shock and enrage, Kendall said in his opening statement. This is not by accident. Its an algorithmically optimized playbook to maximize user attention and profits.

[What Kicking Trump Off Twitter Can And Cant Do]

More recently, Facebook has made public statements and efforts to tamp down on the spread of anti-vaxx misinformation specifically.

We are committed to reaching as many people as possible with accurate information about vaccines, and launched partnerships with WHO and UNICEF to do just that, said Andrea Vallone, a spokesperson for Facebook. Weve banned ads that discourage people from getting vaccines and reduced the number of people who see vaccine hoaxes verified by the WHO and the CDC. We also label Pages and Groups that repeatedly share vaccine hoaxes, lower all of their posts in News Feed, and do not recommend them to anyone.

Still, misinformation finds a way. You can do these takedowns but that hasnt necessarily stopped the flow of misinformation, and we cant forget about the long tail of misinformation, said First Drafts Smith. There are all of these hundreds of thousands or millions of posts that might not get that many interactions but collectively make up a lot of misinformation.

COLLEEN TIGHE

A typical post in the Facebook group Whats Happening In Aurora, IL? garners a handful of reactions. Its an 81,000-member community group about, well, whats happening in Aurora, Illinois. Posts often resemble classifieds: someone looking for bakers in the area to make a cake, someone posting a job opening, someone offering second-hand maternity clothes. But a recent post showing the first local health care worker to receive the COVID-19 vaccine drew more than 1,200 reactions and nearly 900 comments, including this one:

Anti-vaxx theories were prominent among the responses, suggesting the vaccine is dangerous and questioning the speed with which it was produced. Both of those doubts were common threads First Draft found in its report. Its just one example of anti-vaxx beliefs bleeding into otherwise neutral spaces on Facebook.

Theyre the same claims pro-vaxx advocates have been battling for years. But the battles dont all play out the same way. In one private Facebook group called Vaccine Talk, nearly 50,000 pro-vaxxers, anti-vaxxers and people on the fence are encouraged to pursue carefully controlled, civil and evidence-based dialogue though even in this group, some anti-vaxx and on-the-fence members told me they felt attacked or condescended to by pro-vaccine members. C.I.C.A.D.A. (which stands for Community Immunity Champions and Defenders Association), meanwhile, deploys pro-vaccine users to comment sections overrun with anti-vaxxers.

[Even After Getting Vaccinated, You Could Still Infect Others]

Take this Facebook post from a childrens hospital in Rochester, New York, showing one of its doctors receiving the COVID-19 vaccine. The post began to attract anti-vaxx comments, such as people questioning the ingredients of the vaccine (in reality, the ingredients are minimal, common and safe) and claiming doctors are only advocating for vaccination to make money (profits are not the motivation for recommending the COVID-19 vaccine). So a C.I.C.A.D.A. member posted in the group, sending up a flare, saying the hospitals social media team was overwhelmed. Now, the post is flooded with supportive messages, photos of other health care workers getting their shot, and praise for the good example set, burying the anti-vaxx comments and attacks.

Support doesnt necessarily mean engaging with the anti-vaccine people; in fact, we encourage people not to do that, said Dorit Rubinstein Reiss, a law professor who specializes in vaccine law at UC Hastings College of the Law, and a member of C.I.C.A.D.A. It can mean coming in and providing positive comments. [The group is] there to prevent people from being intimidated into not posting about vaccines.

Vaccines Exposed, the honeypot group, took a more radical approach, luring anti-vaxxers into an ostensible safe space, only to pull back the curtain on a less sympathetic crowd. One administrator, who asked not to be named, told me she hoped the group might reveal to the anti-vaxx-curious the flaws in many of the claims against vaccination. But the interactions in the group werent always constructive, with pro-vaxxers sometimes mocking or ridiculing the anti-vaxx posters.

Group member Litton defended the more combative method, noting the people he affiliates with avoid explicit trolling (things like doxxing or threatening), and that humor even at someones expense can be an effective strategy in battling misinformation.

But the deception required to draw in members in the first place makes it unlikely the honeypot group will persuade anti-vaxxers, according to Rachel Alter, a research affiliate at the Vaccine Confidence Project at the London School of Hygiene & Tropical Medicine.

If your goal is to change peoples minds, you dont want to start out by tricking them right off the bat, Alter said. People arent going to stick around long enough. Theyre going to see whats going on and get defensive or leave.

[How To Know When You Can Trust A COVID-19 Vaccine]

Research on how people form and change beliefs suggests that a gentler approach is more effective. People tend to see attacks on their beliefs as attacks on them personally, and we are all biased against information that challenges our existing worldview. Asking questions, sharing stories and lowering the temperature by avoiding insults can make people more susceptible to new ideas, according to Karin Tamerius, a former psychiatrist who founded Smart Politics, a program that trains people on how to have productive conversations with people they disagree with. Tamerius based her program on existing research into beliefs and persuasion and said changing views is a long, difficult process that is unlikely to occur through a single Facebook interaction.

This is ultimately the problem at hand. Best intentions and science-backed strategies are great, but the battle continues to spread because Facebook is designed for just that.

Industry researchers believe there are other efforts Facebook could make to reduce the impact of the anti-vaxx movement on the site. Last year, nonprofit research group Ranking Digital Rights released a report on how algorithmically driven advertising structures have exacerbated the disinformation epidemic by increasing its spread, and recommended social media sites look at changing these systems rather than moderating content to curb the spread. People will always post nonsense on the internet. The platforms we use dont need to be designed to lead people to it.

And despite all of Facebooks efforts, many users are still being exposed to misinformation at precisely the moment in time we need them to be well-informed.

CORRECTION (Jan. 22, 10:52 a.m.): An earlier version of this article included the incorrect name for Ellen Paos nonprofit. It is Project Include, not Project Inclusive. Separately, an earlier version described Karin Tamerius as a former political psychologist. She is a former psychiatrist with training in political psychology.

Excerpt from:

Why Fights Over The COVID-19 Vaccine Are Everywhere On Facebook - FiveThirtyEight

Phishing scams use the promise of COVID-19 vaccines to trick you – CNET

January 23, 2021

Vaccines offered through unexpected texts, emails or phone calls? Don't fall for it.

As we all hope for an end to the coronavirus pandemic, many people are understandably focused on the COVID-19 vaccine. Scammers know that. And while you're dreaming about hugging loved ones, going to concerts or just feeling safe inside a grocery store, they're busy crafting vaccine-related phishing campaigns to trick you into handing over personal information, money or access to your device.

Last month, the FBI issued a warning urging people to be cautious when opening emails and texts from unknown senders who promise information on getting a vaccine. So did theFinancial Crimes Enforcement Network, a division of the US Treasury Department. Police in Florida, the UK and other jurisdictions say they're seeing the scams pop up, too. In the English county of Derbyshire, law enforcement officials say scammers sent out texts with links to a site that painstakinglyimitated the look of UK's National Health Service. The goal was to steal personal and financial information, authorities said.

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Scammers are also buying ads offering to sell vaccines directly to internet users. They likely just want to steal your credit card information, but even if they did send out something purporting to be a vaccine, it would be extremely dangerous.

Online scammers have for years used crises and major events to con people. The pandemic has created an appealing situation because the entire world is aware of the disease and the hardship it's caused in everyone's lives. From a criminal's perspective, it's a great opportunity to get lots of people to act against their better judgment. Scammers seized on this opportunity as soon as the pandemic took hold, offering snake oil cures that never materialized in exchange for credit card numbers or hacking their target's computers.

Now vaccines give scammers another lure for their targets.

"These attacks prey on our desire for information in times of uncertainty," said Tony Pepper, CEO of cybersecurity firm Egress. The scams, Egress says, can be "incredibly convincing," particularly to older people, who are at the top of lists for getting vaccines and may be waiting to hear from medical authorities.

As early as November, researchers at cybersecurity firm Check Point noticed a significant increase in website domain names that reference vaccines. Scammers typically register a new domain name related to their con when setting up a phishing campaign, to serve as a place to lure their targets.

The websites may contain legitimate-looking web forms meant to steal payment or health care information, or they might host malicious software that installs on your device when you visit. Malicious software, or malware, can leave you vulnerable to ransomware attacks, pop-up ads that make your device unusable and other intrusive attacks from hackers.

You'll typically encounter a vaccine scam by way of a compelling message designed to get you to respond. The Check Point researchers have found emails with subject lines including "pfizer's Covid vaccine: 11 things you need to know." That message contained a malicious file that would've infected recipients' computers with malware if opened.

If you search online for information about vaccines, you might later see ads on various websites for vaccine doses you can order online. Scammers buy these ads because they know you're interested in vaccines, just as legitimate retailers might show you rain-boot ads for days after you search for wet-weather gear.

The vaccine ads are another scam meant to collect your financial information. Researchers at fraud detection firm Bolster found an ad claiming to sell the Sinovac vaccine from China, but the business was clearly fraudulent. Registered in Panama, the website listed phone numbers shared by other businesses, including a waterless car wash service and a talent management agency.

Even if the company sent something claiming to be a vaccine, direct sales of the real COVID-19 vaccine are nearly impossible because of how costly it is to maintain the right cold temperature range for the package at all times.

The FBI urges people to be wary of any email, text message or phone call that comes from a sender you don't recognize and offers information about the coronavirus vaccine. As with any message from an unknown sender, don't click, download or share your password. Get your information about vaccines from official sources, like state and local health departments, the Food and Drug Administration and your doctor.

Next, be mindful that your health information can also be used for medical identity theft. Give out your insurance or health information only to professionals you know and trust, and monitor your insurance claims to make sure no one else is using your health insurance. What's more, don't trust strangers who send unsolicited messages offering Medicare benefits, coronavirus tests or vaccines in exchange for your personal data, including your Medicare information. According to the US Department of Health and Human Services, that's another scam that's become common in the pandemic.

Finally, whatever you do, don't inject vaccines bought on the internet.

The information contained in this article is for educational and informational purposes only and is not intended as health or medical advice. Always consult a physician or other qualified health provider regarding any questions you may have about a medical condition or health objectives.

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Phishing scams use the promise of COVID-19 vaccines to trick you - CNET

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