Category: Covid-19 Vaccine

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AstraZenecas COVID-19 Vaccine, Approved in the UK, Could Have a Huge Impact – Observer

January 1, 2021

Updated on December 30th: The United Kingdom on Wednesday gave emergency authorization to the COVID-19 vaccine developed by AstraZeneca and Oxford University, bringing the medical community closer to a full-powered response to the pandemic that continues to rage across the world.

The U.K. was also the first western country to approve the vaccine from Pfizer. The country, which is being ravaged by the virus in part due to a mutant strand that has made it far more communicable, plans to roll out the distribution of the AstraZeneca vaccine en masse instead of rationing administration and saving doses for a second shot.

This fall, the vaccine hit speed bumps in its development, with a halted Phase III trial, communication issues with the FDA, and uncertain results. Patched-together trial results found an efficacy rate around 62 percent when both doses were administered, though results released earlier this month suggested that a half-dose followed by a full-dose months later had a 90 percent efficacy rate.

This was unplanned, it was unexpected, but it might be a very important serendipitous finding. It is possible, and this is perhaps the most likely explanation, that by giving a low dose of the vaccine early on, the body doesnt mount an immune response against the vector because this is a virus vector delivered vaccine, Dr. Richard Horton, the editor-in-chief ofThe Lancet, told CNBC in early December.

See Also: How Bill Gates Helped Make the COVID-19 Vaccine Possible

The U.K. authorized two full doses and said that in separate limited trials that took place in India and Brazil, a first full dose had a 70 percent efficacy rate. The decision to go with full doses is linked to the longer time that Britons will go between receiving their first and second doses.

The AstraZeneca vaccine holds several distinct advantages over the Pfizer and Moderna vaccines, which have already begun roll-out in the United States. The FDA wont rule on the vaccine before next week, but the US government reached an agreement back in May to buy 300 million doses for $1.2 billion if its approved.

The cost of the vaccine is one of its two game-changing attributes. AstraZeneca plans on selling the vaccine at-cost in perpetuity, which puts it at just $4 a dose. It also does not have to be stored with special deep-freezing refrigeration, which distinguishes it from Pfizers vaccine.

Both the vaccines price and the fact that it can be stored at standard pharmaceutical temperatures and transported without fear of spoiling mean that it will not only help supplement the need for vaccines in the United States and Europe, but it will also be the go-to vaccine for the developing world.

Further, the AstraZeneca vaccine is said to be effective against the mutant strain of COVID-19 that has been responsible for the large spike in infections in the UK over the last month.

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AstraZenecas COVID-19 Vaccine, Approved in the UK, Could Have a Huge Impact - Observer

Ducey issues order to speed up COVID-19 vaccine distribution in Arizona – KTAR.com

January 1, 2021

(AP Photo/Lynne Sladky)

PHOENIX Gov. Doug Ducey issued an executive order Wednesday aimed at speeding up distribution of the coronavirus vaccine in Arizona.

Duceys order requires the Arizona Department of Health Services implement a state-directed allocation model and uniformed approach to vaccinate the states high-risk and high-priority groups.

The order comes as state health director Dr. Cara Christ said only about 20% of eligible individuals in the states top priority group about 57,000 of 275,000 have been vaccinated as of Wednesday.

The state has received about 315,000 doses since distribution began earlier in December.

Any delay in the vaccine getting to Arizonans, any dose that sits in a freezer rather than reaching the arm of a health care worker or long-term care resident, carries too great a cost, Ducey said in a press release.

This is a health emergency, and we need all levels of government and our health system operating as such. Vaccines dont do any good sitting in a freezer.

Currently, each of Arizonas 15 counties have their own plans for how to distribute the vaccine, which typically comes in two doses.

Christ said her team is already beginning to implement Duceys plan for a uniform model, with more progress expected by the start of next week.

Before Ducey issued his order, Christ said more people were expected to receive their first vaccine doses next week than in previous weeks.

Vaccine distribution began in Arizona two weeks ago for people in phase 1A, which includes front-line health care staff, emergency medical workers and residents and staff at long-term care facilities.

We want it in peoples arms so we are going to continue to work, Christ said during a press conference.

Coronavirus case and hospitalization numbers continue to look grim in Arizona despite the vaccine rollout.

On Wednesday, Arizona health officials reported 5,267 coronavirus cases and 78 additional deaths, bringing the states documented totals to 512,489 COVID-19 infections and 8,718 fatalities.

The number of COVID-19 patients in the states ICU beds increased to 1,076 on Tuesday, the sixth consecutive day with a record high.

Statewide, suspected or confirmed COVID-19 patients took up 53% of all inpatient beds and 61% of all ICU beds, both records.

Overall, inpatient beds were 91% and ICU beds were 90% full.

Banner Health, the states largest hospital system, is pausing all elective surgeries starting Friday to handle the rise in coronavirus patients.

For all articles, information and updates on the coronavirus from KTAR News, visit ktar.com/coronavirus.

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Ducey issues order to speed up COVID-19 vaccine distribution in Arizona - KTAR.com

Will COVID-19 Vaccines Work on the New Coronavirus Variant? – NBC 5 Dallas-Fort Worth

December 29, 2020

Will COVID-19 vaccines work on the new coronavirus variant?

Experts believe so, but they're working to confirm that.

A coronavirus variant in the United Kingdom has caused alarm because of the possibility that it might spread more easily. But even if that turns out to be true, experts say the COVID-19 vaccines being rolled out will likely still work on the variant.

Dr. Anthony Fauci, the top U.S. infectious disease expert, said data coming from Britain indicates the vaccines still will block the virus. But the U.S. also will do tests to be sure.

Viruses often undergo small changes as they reproduce and move through a population. In fact, the slight modifications are how scientists track the spread of a virus from one place to another.

But if a virus mutates significantly enough, one worry is that current vaccines might no longer offer as much protection. And although that's a possibility to watch for over time with the coronavirus, experts say they don't believe it will be the case with the variant in the U.K.

My expectation is, this will not be a problem, said Moncef Slaoui, the chief science adviser for the U.S. governments COVID-19 vaccine push.

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Will COVID-19 Vaccines Work on the New Coronavirus Variant? - NBC 5 Dallas-Fort Worth

Newsom: COVID-19 vaccine line-skipping will be met with sanctions – KCRA Sacramento

December 29, 2020

During reporter questions after his Monday COVID-19 briefing, Gov. Gavin Newsom warned against trying to cut in line for a coronavirus vaccine. Newsom said health care providers who violate the vaccine priority guidelines will be sanctioned and that the state will be putting out details soon on how the COVID-19 vaccine hierarchy will be enforced in California."I just want to make this crystal clear: If you skip the line, or you intend to skip the line, you will be sanctioned, you will lose your license. You will not only lose your license, we will be very aggressive in terms of highlighting the reputational impacts as well," he said.Newsom went on to say that the state will work with counties to monitor the vaccine distribution on a local level. Im not nave to the prospects that there are going to be some issues and were going to have to work, not just as a state, but with our county partners to monitor that behavior at the local level, even at the clinic level," he said. "To make sure that someone isnt passing a few vials over to their cousin or aunt or uncle or, God forbid, making a buck or two on the backs of a vaccine that should be distributed to someone who is at high risk.As of Saturday, more than 261,000 COVID-19 vaccines had been administered in California, a state with a population of about 40 million people. While many health care workers are getting immunized against the virus before the end of the year, large swaths of the U.S. population are going to have to wait for months for their vaccine. California, meanwhile, is getting closer to deciding who will be next in line for the vaccine as more doses become available. "Phase 1B" of the state's vaccine distribution plan could be finalized as early as Wednesday, Newsom said. Phase 1B would be divided into two tiers, with the first group including those over 75 years old as well as workers in education, child care, emergency services and food and agriculture. The second tier in Phase 1B would include those 65 and older with underlying health conditions, transportation workers, inmates and the homeless. The question about vaccine distribution enforcement comes as California is bracing for a surge on top of a surge of COVID-19 cases after Christmas gatherings and expected New Year's events.

During reporter questions after his Monday COVID-19 briefing, Gov. Gavin Newsom warned against trying to cut in line for a coronavirus vaccine.

Newsom said health care providers who violate the vaccine priority guidelines will be sanctioned and that the state will be putting out details soon on how the COVID-19 vaccine hierarchy will be enforced in California.

"I just want to make this crystal clear: If you skip the line, or you intend to skip the line, you will be sanctioned, you will lose your license. You will not only lose your license, we will be very aggressive in terms of highlighting the reputational impacts as well," he said.

Newsom went on to say that the state will work with counties to monitor the vaccine distribution on a local level.

Im not nave to the prospects that there are going to be some issues and were going to have to work, not just as a state, but with our county partners to monitor that behavior at the local level, even at the clinic level," he said. "To make sure that someone isnt passing a few vials over to their cousin or aunt or uncle or, God forbid, making a buck or two on the backs of a vaccine that should be distributed to someone who is at high risk.

As of Saturday, more than 261,000 COVID-19 vaccines had been administered in California, a state with a population of about 40 million people. While many health care workers are getting immunized against the virus before the end of the year, large swaths of the U.S. population are going to have to wait for months for their vaccine.

California, meanwhile, is getting closer to deciding who will be next in line for the vaccine as more doses become available. "Phase 1B" of the state's vaccine distribution plan could be finalized as early as Wednesday, Newsom said.

Phase 1B would be divided into two tiers, with the first group including those over 75 years old as well as workers in education, child care, emergency services and food and agriculture. The second tier in Phase 1B would include those 65 and older with underlying health conditions, transportation workers, inmates and the homeless.

The question about vaccine distribution enforcement comes as California is bracing for a surge on top of a surge of COVID-19 cases after Christmas gatherings and expected New Year's events.

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Newsom: COVID-19 vaccine line-skipping will be met with sanctions - KCRA Sacramento

Anwar Hadid says he ‘absolutely’ won’t take the COVID-19 Vaccine – Insider – INSIDER

December 29, 2020

Model Anwar Hadid said that he "absolutely" won't take the COVID-19 vaccine.

Hadid, who's the younger brother of Bella and Gigi Hadid, made the revelation while responding to questions asked by some of his 3.1 million followers on his Instagram Stories.

"Will u take the vaccine?" one person asked, according toTMZ.

"Absolutely not," Hadid, 21, said.

When asked "why are you anti-vaxx," the model responded, "Either I just don't get it or I get it, and god willing heal from it and get antibodies rather than do that process unnaturally. Our bodies are made by the creator to do way more than we think."

Contrary to Hadid's response, contracting COVID-19 is very risky, unpredictable, life-threatening particularly for people with weakened immune systems and does not guarantee long-term immunity.

Additionally, the long-term health effects of COVID-19, even after recovery, can be serious and aren't fully understood yet.

Hadid, as well as Bella and their mother Yolanda, were all diagnosed with Lyme disease in 2012.

The CDC has repeatedly said that individuals with underlying medical conditions face an increased risk of "severe illness" if they contract COVID-19.

Insider reached out to Hadid's representatives for comment, but did not immediately hear back.

After word of what Hadid said on his Instagram Story spread, some people voiced their concerns over his comments.

"Anwar Hadid turning down the COVID vaccine when Yolanda and his sisters have serious illnesses that could be impacted if he gets infected," one person wrote.

"Imagine being as privileged as Anwar Hadid to say 'I'd rather just catch the virus and get the antibodies than get the vaccine.' IMAGINE THE PRIVILEGE," wrote one Twitter user.

Some people said Hadid was spreading misinformation with his remarks.

"Anwar Hadid. Stop. Can we stop celebrities with huge platforms from spreading misinformation about vaccines? It's just so irresponsible," they wrote.

Hadid, who's currently dating Dua Lipa, responded to the backlash with another post shared to his Stories.

"I'm not 'anti-vaxx," Hadid wrote on his Instagram Stories Monday, the New York Daily News reports. "I think everyone has to be careful with each vaccine, individually looking at positive and possible negative effects."

He continued, "I have taken vaccines before but as someone who has had a compromised immune system, I want to continue to learn about the many ways I can protest myself and others."

The CDC has stated that anyone with a weakened immune system can receive the vaccine as long as they "have not had a severe allergic reaction to any of the ingredients in the vaccine."

Hadid also said that his remarks weren't intended to be offensive and that he was "grateful" for all the medical workers who've served during the pandemic.

"My response was not to make a stance. It was honestly just a thought, but I can't expect you all to know where my heart and head is at. And that's where I went wrong. I will be more aware," Hadid wrote.

Yolanda and Bella Hadid were both diagnosed with Lyme disease in 2012, along with Anwar. David M. Benett/Dave Benett/Getty Images

According to theCDC, Lyme disease is a bacterial infection that can be spread to humans by infected ticks and causes more than 300,000 infections per year.

In August, Bella was candid about her struggles in a series of posts on Instagram Stories, adding a list of symptoms she experiences each day.

"Everyday I feel at least 10 of these attributes without fail ... since I was probably 14, but more aggressively when I turned 18," Bella wrote.

The list included headaches, brain fog, insomnia, fatigue, anxiety, confusion, nausea, joint pain, and other common symptoms of Lyme disease.

She called Lyme disease an "invisible disease," adding that "we suffer daily with no cure."

Yolanda kept viewers updated on her battle with Lyme disease during episodes of "The Real Housewives of Beverly Hills."

Yolanda toldABC Newsin 2017 that the pain she experienced with Lyme disease was so severe that she considered taking her own life.

"I think in that moment I was so desperate, and in so much pain, like sweating on the bathroom floor in some hotel in Florida, trying to please other people," she said. "I remember laying in the ocean and going, 'Just take me, I just cannot live one more day,'" she told the publication.

She told ABC News that Anwar was doing "okay," but Bella often dealt with intense symptoms.

"It didn't just happen to me, it happens to everyone who suffers from Lyme," Yolanda told ABC News.

"Including my own daughter, who's on the cover of magazines, yet people don't know how much she really struggles behind the scenes," she added, referring to Bella.

While some people have expressed caution about taking the COVID-19 vaccine,health officials strongly urged people to receive it once it becomes available to them.

Vaccines give theimmune system an added boost to recognize bad pathogens without actually infecting the individual.

In an article debunking coronavirus vaccine myths, Business Insider's Andrea Michelson and Anna Medaris Miller wrote that the vaccine won't give you COVID-19: The coronavirus vaccines on the market do not contain the virus itself, justtiny pieces of its genetic material that are not capable of infecting you.

Last week, the CDC issued new guidance laying out why the COVID-19 vaccine is a safer way to build protection against the disease than getting sick.

"Getting COVID-19 may offer some natural protection, known as immunity. But experts don't know how long this protection lasts, and the risk of severe illness and death from COVID-19 far outweighs any benefits of natural immunity," the CDC wrote.

As such, the CDC said, the COVID-19 vaccine is likely the only clear route we have to end the pandemic.

"Wearing masks and social distancing help reduce your chance of being exposed to the virus or spreading it to others, but these measures are not enough. Vaccines will work with your immune system so it will be ready to fight the virus if you are exposed," the CDC said.

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Anwar Hadid says he 'absolutely' won't take the COVID-19 Vaccine - Insider - INSIDER

Covid-19 Vaccine Outlook Prompts Businesses to Dust Off Return-to-Office Plans – The Wall Street Journal

December 29, 2020

Office-building landlords are hoping that the massive Covid-19 vaccination campaign launched in the U.S. this month will lead to millions of people returning to workplaces in 2021 after spending most of the pandemic working from home.

But it isnt going to be soon. Rather, a widespread return probably wont take place until the late spring or early summer of 2021 when enough people have been vaccinated in the U.S. for the population to come close to achieving herd immunity, according to public-health professionals and executives in the real-estate industry.

Moreover, the office world that will be reinhabited next year will look a lot different from the one that was hurriedly vacated in mid-March when the fear of Covid-19 sent much of the U.S. labor force into lockdown. During an initial transition period, office density likely will be low, workers will wear masks and a range of other safety precautions will be followed.

Long-term changes in the workplace will continue for years. Working from home and other remote locations, which became a necessity during the pandemic, will likely remain a major part of the workplace, employers and real-estate executives say.

Businesses that are highly competitive for top talent will likely begin opening small satellite offices in metropolitan areas and offering employees the option of working there, at home or in centralized headquartersor a combination of the three.Design firm Gensler already is working with a half dozen Fortune 100 companies on such hub-and-spoke strategies, as they are becoming known in the office industry, said Joseph Brancato, co-chairman of the firm.

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Covid-19 Vaccine Outlook Prompts Businesses to Dust Off Return-to-Office Plans - The Wall Street Journal

Where Do I Stand in the COVID-19 Vaccination Line? – NBC Southern California

December 29, 2020

COVID-19 vaccinations are well underway in Southern California, but there's a specific distribution strategy in place to make sure those with the highest risk are vaccinated as quickly as possible.

Wondering when it's your turn to get a vaccine? Use the interactive tool below to figure out where you stand in the vaccination line.

When Could I Get the Vaccine?

Answer the questions to calculate your risk profile and see where you fall in your county's and state's vaccine lineup. This estimate is based on a combination of vaccine rollout recommendations from the CDC and the National Academies of Sciences, Engineering, and Medicine.

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Where Do I Stand in the COVID-19 Vaccination Line? - NBC Southern California

Where Do I Stand in COVID-19 Vaccination Line? – NBC Bay Area

December 29, 2020

COVID-19 vaccinations are well underway in the Bay Area, but there's a specific distribution strategy in place to make sure those with the highest risk are vaccinated as quickly as possible.

Wondering when it's your turn to get a vaccine? Use the interactive tool below to figure out where you stand in the vaccination line.

When Could I Get the Vaccine?

Answer the questions to calculate your risk profile and see where you fall in your county's and state's vaccine lineup. This estimate is based on a combination of vaccine rollout recommendations from the CDC and the National Academies of Sciences, Engineering, and Medicine.

See the original post here:

Where Do I Stand in COVID-19 Vaccination Line? - NBC Bay Area

Incidental side effects threaten to give Covid-19 vaccines a bad rap – STAT

December 28, 2020

As Covid-19 vaccines go into broad use, some rare side effects of vaccination will almost certainly emerge, like the reports of small numbers of people developing anaphylaxis. But so will medical events whose timing just comes down to random chance and the potential ripple effects of those reports already have experts concerned.

Every single day, people die unexpectedly. They have strokes and heart attacks and seizures. On an average day, 110 people in this country may develop Bells palsy, a temporary facial paralysis, and another 274 will develop Guillain-Barr syndrome, a form of paralysis that usually resolves over time. The trigger for these medical events often isnt known. But when they happen shortly after someone gets a vaccine especially a new one well, conclusions will be drawn.

It is logical for people to say: That person had something done to them and something bad happened in the hours or days after that, said Art Reingold, chair of the division of epidemiology and biostatistics at UC Berkeleys School of Public Health. And if it was you or your family member, you would be inconvincible that that wasnt true.

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Except, of course, it often isnt. Heart attacks occur most commonly in the morning, yet we dont blame breakfast for causing them. A heart attack on the morning after a Covid-19 vaccine, though? That might be another matter.

But the public doesnt have a great grasp of the concept that many problems that occur after vaccination probably arent tied to immunization itself. In part, thats because that context has been missing from public health messaging about Covid-19 vaccinations.

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I think the lay public is fully, fully unprepared for understanding this, said Kate OBrien, director of the WHOs immunization, vaccines, and biologics program.

Quickly distinguishing a true side effect signal from an abundance of noise will be critical to ease the alarm of a public already skittish about vaccines developed at warp speed, experts warned.

The risk of the public misinterpreting such anecdotal reports may be especially acute early on in the rollout, when elderly adults and people with health conditions have been prioritized to get the vaccine. Nursing home residents are in Phase 1a currently ongoing and seniors 75 and older are in Phase 1b. People aged 65 to 74 and those with medical conditions that increase the risk of severe Covid disease are in Phase 1c. These are people to whom medical events occur most commonly.

Things are going to happen to them, said OBrien, though she noted that more medical misfortune would befall people in these groups if they were not vaccinated.

Helen Keipp Talbot, who is on the expert panel that devised the vaccine distribution priority lists for the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, actually voted against putting nursing home residents at the front of the line, in part because vaccinating people who are in frail health first could inadvertently undermine confidence in the vaccine, given how common heart attacks, strokes and even deaths are in this population.

All of the events are going to be temporally associated. But how do you explain that to the nurses aide whos been taking care of that patient and loves her like her own grandmother? Who then decides that shes not going to get vaccinated and tells everyone else not to get vaccinated? Talbot told STAT.

I fear a loss of confidence in the vaccine. That the vaccine will actually truly be safe, but there will be temporally associated events and people will be scared to use the vaccine, said Talbot, an associate professor of infectious diseases at Vanderbilt University.

In some cases, theres reason to believe reports of adverse events are likely due to the vaccine. Anaphylaxis a potentially life-threatening allergic reaction has been linked to multiple types of vaccines in the past.

Britain has reported several cases of anaphylaxis among people who have received the Pfizer vaccine. In the U.S., about 11 cases have been reported since the vaccine rollout began earlier this month, according to the CDC. Most followed receipt of the Pfizer vaccine, but a Boston doctor with a shellfish allergy developed a severe allergic reaction after receiving the Moderna vaccine. If and when other Covid vaccines are authorized for use, health authorities will be watching closely to see whether anaphylaxis is linked to all Covid vaccines, or merely those like the Pfizer and Moderna vaccines which are made using messenger RNA.

A three-year review of adverse reports logged into a U.S. national vaccine database found that anaphylaxis after vaccination is rare, occurring at a rate of about 1.31 per million doses of vaccine administered. Of those cases, 85% were in people with a history of allergies. None of the 33 cases out of 25 million vaccinations died. Some needed epinephrine, the drug in EpiPens, but others recovered after treatment with antihistamines.

Bells palsy, too, has been linked in at least one circumstance to a vaccine, an intranasally administered flu vaccine that was briefly brought to market in Switzerland.

Eight people in the Pfizer and Moderna trials, which enrolled nearly 74,000 participants in total, were diagnosed with the condition seven in the vaccine arms and one in the placebo arm of the Moderna trial. The jury is still out on whether Bells palsy, which afflicts about 40,000 people a year in the U.S., is an occasional side effect of taking a Covid-19 vaccine.

As vaccinations begin on a larger scale, reports of other potential side effects will likely pop up. A few cases of something are anecdotes, not data, and definitely not proof of a causal relationship. While they must and will be studied, investigations of this sort take time.

The CDC and the Food and Drug Administration have a number of surveillance systems set up to monitor for potential side effects, as do some other countries. But its going to be important to look for, and be ready to react to, vaccine safety rumors anywhere they start to swirl, said Steven Black, a professor emeritus at the University of Cincinnati Childrens Hospital whose career has focused on vaccine safety.

The reason I think you need to think globally is that vaccine scares are global, said Black, who is also co-director of the Global Vaccine Data Network, a 17-country collaboration that studies vaccine safety and effectiveness. We know very well that misinformation spreads much more quickly than information, so that a couple deaths in Brazil or a death in Indonesia or whatever, the public outcry could cause lack of confidence and undermine the whole vaccine program.

Reingold agreed.

Once theres a news report people have read, it doesnt matter what we prove categorically two years later in a study, that perception will remain, and its hard to combat, he said.

Thats why its so crucial to set expectations before and during a vaccination campaign. But public literacy about vaccination the benefits, the risks, and how to balance the two is poor, said OBrien, who points to how often people insist they contracted flu from a flu shot, even though that is biologically impossible.

One of the ways vaccine experts try to combat the rise of rumors and unfounded claims is by knowing background rates of medical events, so that when things arise, one can get a sense of whether the number of cases is abnormal, or what might be expected to occur, whether or not a vaccination program was underway.

If we know that Guillain Barr occurs in 1 in 100,000 people and a million people have been vaccinated, you would expect 10 cases, maybe, Black explained. But if you have 30, you begin to wonder: Maybe theres an issue here? So, knowing background rates as a frame of reference is something thats being promoted.

Differentiating between whats relevant from what isnt is going to be tough, especially with multiple new vaccines (hopefully) starting to be used within a short period of time. When suspect medical events occur, it will be important to know which vaccine the individual in question received though that may be a bigger challenge than you would expect. Record keeping for immunizations especially adult immunizations isnt close to where it ought to be, OBrien said.

Should it become clear that one, some, or all of the vaccines pose rare risks of some side effect, how will the public take the news?

At some point, if events are occurring one in 100 million [vaccinations], people may be willing to accept that risk if it allows the world to get rid of Covid and go back to normal life, Black said. Because you have to remember, hundreds of thousands of people are dying of the disease.

How that risk is communicated, though, will be critical, because many people cant easily understand how to assess the significance of a rare risk. Theyre wary about very rare events and then they text while theyre crossing the street where theyre much more likely to get killed. Yeah, people do that very poorly, Black said.

Giving people a comparison that makes sense to them can help, said Alison Buttenheim, an associate professor of nursing and health policy at the University of Pennsylvania, who works on vaccine acceptance.

The idea that 1 in 500,000 people who are inoculated with a Covid vaccine might have a serious side effect this is a hypothetical example might seem too risky to some people. Explaining to them that they run the same risk of being hit by lightning in a given year can put a different spin on that piece of information.

Likewise, pointing out that 1 in 500 New Jersey residents have already died from Covid-19 can remind people that the risk of not being vaccinated far exceeds the rare risks the vaccines may possibly pose, Buttenheim said.

At the end of the day, helping the public understand these issues requires communication and that isnt happening on a national level, said Bruce Gellin, president of global immunization at the Sabin Vaccine Institute, which promotes access to vaccinations.

The Department of Health and Human Services, not the CDC, has taken the lead on Covid vaccine communications efforts. But its output to date has been limited.

It would have been nice if they could come up with a communications strategy at the same warp speed as they came up with vaccines, said Gellin, a former director of HHSs National Vaccine Program Office.

My mantra is theres a vaccine world and theres a vaccination world, and theyre not necessarily connected by an arrow. [Operation] Warp Speed was largely about the vaccine world and about logistics, Gellin said. Warp Speed, unfortunately, was not about a vaccination program. And now what were seeing is that were now facing the vaccination program and are under-prepared.

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Incidental side effects threaten to give Covid-19 vaccines a bad rap - STAT

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