Category: Covid-19

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New Location for Community COVID-19 Testing Site in Spokane Valley – Spokane Regional Health

February 26, 2022

SPOKANE, Wash. The Community COVID-19 Testing Site operated by Discovery Health MD with support from Spokane Regional Health District (SRHD), currently located at the Spokane County Fair and Expo Center in Spokane Valley, is closing on Monday, February 28, at 5:30 p.m. in preparation for its move to the new location. The new site is aiming to open Monday, March 7, 2022.

The drive-up testing site, located at 13414 E. Sprague Avenue in Spokane Valley, will be open Monday-Friday from 8 a.m.-5:30 p.m. to conduct PCR (lab-based) testing for those who are experiencing COVID-19-like symptoms or who have confirmed exposure to a positive case. Appointments can be made online. Appointments are recommended, although not required.

Discovery Health MDs Chief Growth Officer Daniel Pulse says theyre pleased to continue offering their services and expertise to the Spokane Valley area. Discovery Health MD is a Northwest company that provides COVID-19 testing and vaccination services to individuals, communities, and companies directly, and through partnership with state and local health organizations.

We have been advocating for testing in various regions around the state. We know that some areas have seen extremely high positivity rates, and our teams are motivated to do what we can to continue offering equitable access, says Pulse.

SRHDs Health Officer Dr. Francisco Velzquez explained testing is an important element in the three-prong approach to decreasing potential disease transmission.

Testing, along with vaccines and public health measures, will continue to play a critical role as we go forward, said Velzquez. COVID-19 transmission is currently on the decline, but we must remain diligent in our mitigation efforts to prevent severe disease, hospitalization and mortality.

Although Omicron rates are seeing a bit of a drop from those immediately following the holidays, local medical experts agree, testing is still the best way to keep you and your family safe. This convenient drive-thru testing facility is available in Spokane Valley if you have any symptoms or think you might have exposure.

For more information visit the testing information page in the COVID-19 section of SRHD.org or call (800) 525-0127, then press #.

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New Location for Community COVID-19 Testing Site in Spokane Valley - Spokane Regional Health

Only about a quarter of Alaskans have received a COVID-19 booster shot – Anchorage Daily News

February 26, 2022

Registered nurse Kadie Hansen, left, and Tom Wilson pass the time waiting for clients at a free COVID-19 vaccine site on Thursday, Feb. 24, 2022 at Shiloh Baptist Church in Anchorage. They said that they had administered one shot in the past three days at that site. (Loren Holmes / ADN)

Getting a vaccine booster shot significantly increases protection against a COVID-19 infection especially from the omicron variant.

Despite that, only about a quarter of the Alaskans 5 and older are both vaccinated and boosted. The rate of shots also has slowed considerably in recent weeks, health providers say.

The CDC currently recommends booster shots for anyone 12 and older, five months after theyve gotten two doses of vaccines from Pfizer-BioNTech and Moderna, or two months after a single dose of the Johnson & Johnson vaccine.

The rise of variants like omicron have translated to waning protection from peoples initial vaccine series and increased the importance of booster shots. Multiple studies have linked booster shots to fewer hospitalizations and a significant increase in protection against an omicron infection from around 30% to up to 75%.

Dr. Lisa Rabinowitz, a staff physician with the state health department, said she thinks the lower booster rate has to do with changing public health guidance, a lack of awareness about how helpful booster shots have been at warding off omicron and general COVID-19 fatigue.

[Alaska reports 1,773 COVID-19 cases over 5 days as steep downward trajectory in new infections continues]

Its been confusing, and guidance has changed often, she said.

There are also people who have had COVID-19, and may believe that they are protected from that and didnt need to get boosted which isnt true, she said. While natural immunity from an infection can give some protection against reinfection, data from the CDC has also shown that getting vaccinated after having COVID-19 significantly improves immune protection and further reduces the risk of reinfection.

Alaskas booster rate has varied by demographics, especially age, Rabinowitz said.

We definitely saw that elderly, more at-risk populations get boosted, whereas the rate has been much lower among younger, healthier people.

Younger people may not believe they need that extra protection, or are unaware of how much extra protection you can get with the booster, she said.

By Thursday, state data showed that about half of all Alaskans 65 and older a more high-risk age group were vaccinated and boosted, while just 15% hadnt received any of the three shots.

A graphic shows the vaccination status of Alaska residents as of Feb. 23, 2022. (State of Alaska)

That compares to 26% of Alaskans 5 and up whove been boosted and a third who hadnt got a shot at all.

Still, while Alaska is in the middle of the pack when it comes to its overall vaccination rate, its booster rate is actually slightly above the national average by a couple of percentage points, Rabinowitz pointed out, attributing that fact to strong public messaging about the importance of boosters.

Nationwide, about 43% of everyone who completed their initial vaccine series is eligible for a booster shot but hasnt gotten one yet, CDC data shows. In Alaska, that number is about 45%.

[US coronavirus vaccination drive bottoms out as omicron subsides]

In recent weeks, Alaskas overall rate of both booster shots and first and second doses has continued to decline. State dashboard data showed a 52% decrease in shots this week compared to the week before.

At a vaccine clinic at the Shiloh Baptist Church in Anchorage this week, nurse Kadie Hansen and her colleague Tom Wilson sat alone in an empty recreation room. The site had just one person show up to get a shot in the last three days, Hansen said.

Hansen said she thinks that stems from the fact that most people who want to get a shot have gotten one already, and that the deadline for most workplace vaccine mandates have come and gone.

Registered nurse Kimberly Wells waits for clients at a free COVID-19 vaccine site on Thursday, Feb. 24, 2022 at a former Mens Warehouse at Tikhatnu Commons in Anchorage. (Loren Holmes / ADN)

On the other side of town, at a vaccine clinic located in Tikahtnu Commons, staff took bets on how many people would show up that day for shots.

Kimberly Wells, a nurse manager at the site, guessed nine. Colleagues guessed six and 16. By noon, just three people had stopped by.

Wells reflected on the stark difference in her work days between now and last year. There was one day last year where shed had to vaccinate 152 people in one day, all by herself.

Time definitely passes more slowly now, she said.

Correction: An earlier version of this story incorrectly characterized the overall population in an examination of Alaska booster shot rates. Twenty-six percent of Alaskans age 5 and older have been boosted, not 26% of the total eligible population.

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Only about a quarter of Alaskans have received a COVID-19 booster shot - Anchorage Daily News

Riverhead Town offers additional free COVID-19 rapid tests to residents – RiverheadLOCAL – RiverheadLOCAL

February 26, 2022

The Town of Riverhead will offer free at-home COVID-19 testing kits to residents throughout next week at Town Hall and at the Riverhead Senior Center.

Residents can obtain free testing kits at the Town Hall front desk and at the Riverhead Senior Center from 8:30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m., according to a press release issued by the town this morning.

Supervisor Yvette Aguiar said yesterday the kits are not limited to a certain number per household.

The town received 1,200 free testing kits from Suffolk County, for distribution to town residents. About half of those were handed out during a distribution on Tuesday, mostly to senior citizens, Aguiar said.

Aguiar said the town will distribute the rest of the initial batch of test kits and has tests in reserve from the county.

Each kit contains two tests.

Theyre like $28 each, Aguiar said. And so if you test two people, or a family of four, thats a substantial amount of money we save for the public.

Riverhead Town Hall is located at 200 Howell Avenue in Riverhead. The senior center is located at 60 Shade Tree Lane in Aquebogue.

The survival of local journalism depends on your support.We are a small family-owned operation. You rely on us to stay informed, and we depend on you to make our work possible. Just a few dollars can help us continue to bring this important service to our community. Support RiverheadLOCAL today.

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Riverhead Town offers additional free COVID-19 rapid tests to residents - RiverheadLOCAL - RiverheadLOCAL

Covid News: Several Parts of U.S. Ease Mask Rules – The New York Times

February 26, 2022

Family members at a mass crematorium ground in East Delhi, India, in April 2021.Credit...Atul Loke for The New York Times

A new study estimates that at least 5.2 million children around the world lost a parent or other caregiver to Covid-19 in the first 19 months of the pandemic.

Children are suffering immensely now and need our help, said Susan Hillis, a senior researcher at the University of Oxford and a lead author of the study, which was published in the medical journal The Lancet on Thursday.

The study was based on data from 20 countries, including India, the United States and Peru, and was completed by an international research team that included experts from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, the World Health Organization and several colleges and universities.

It warns that a child who loses a parent or a caregiver could suffer negative effects including an increased risk of poverty, sexual abuse, mental health challenges and severe stress.

An earlier study, focused on the first 13 months of the pandemic, arrived at an estimate of 1.5 million affected children. The new figure is much higher not just because it adds data for six more months, researchers say, but also because the first estimate was a significant undercount. Using updated figures on Covid-related deaths, the researchers now calculate that at least 2.7 million children lost a parent or caregiver during the first 13 months.

The new study covers data through October 2021, and does not include the latest surge in cases from the Omicron variant, which have undoubtedly added to the toll.

It took 10 years for five million children to be orphaned by H.I.V./AIDS, whereas the same number of children have been orphaned by Covid-19 in just two years, Lorraine Sherr, a professor of psychology at University College London and an author of the study, said in a statement.

Davyon Johnson, 11, from Muskogee, Okla., is one of the millions of children to have lost a parent in his case, his father, Willie James Logan, who died two days after being hospitalized with Covid in August 2021.

Its been a rocky road, Ill say it like that, Davyons mother, LaToya Johnson, said in an interview.

Davyon has dealt with the grief as best as he can, she said. His grades are still strong. Hes still eager to see friends. Still, there are days when they are both exhausted.

Up and down up and down, Ms. Johnson said of their emotions. Its him wanting to call his daddy and not being able to.

Darcey Merritt, a professor of child welfare at New York University who was not involved in the study, said the deaths of parents and caregivers would have a long, far-reaching impact on children, especially those in lower-income households.

Children of color in the United States, she added, are particularly at risk of negative consequences.

A study in the journal Pediatrics last year found that in the United States, one in every 168 American Indian or Alaska Native children, one in every 310 Black children, one in every 412 Hispanic children, and one in every 612 Asian children had lost a caregiver, compared with one in 753 white children.

The study in The Lancet found that two out of three children orphaned are between 10 and 17, and a majority of the children who lost a parent lost their father.

Juliette Unwin, a lead author of the study from Imperial College London, said in a statement that as the researchers receive more data, they expected the figures to grow 10 times higher than what is currently being reported.

The pandemic is still raging worldwide, Dr. Unwin said, which means Covid-19-related orphanhood will also continue to surge.

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Covid News: Several Parts of U.S. Ease Mask Rules - The New York Times

Gov. Newsom to lift 95% of COVID-19 related executive actions – ABC10.com KXTV

February 26, 2022

Nineteen of the remaining provisions are terminated immediately, according to a release from the governor's office.

SACRAMENTO, Calif. Gov. Gavin Newsom has lifted a majority of the state's overall emergency declaration set in place during COVID-19, but is keeping measures to continue testing and vaccinating Californians.

Since the start of the pandemic, Newsom has issued about 70 executive orders containing 561 provisions. Now, Newsom's office says just 30 will remain in effect. According to the governor's office, those that will remain are critical to the state's SMARTER plan.

Californias early and decisive measures to combat COVID-19 have saved countless lives throughout the pandemic, and as the recent Omicron surge made clear, we must remain prepared to quickly and effectively respond to changing conditions in real time, said Governor Newsom in a press release. As we move the states recovery forward, well continue to focus on scaling back provisions while maintaining essential testing, vaccination and health care system supports that ensure California has the needed tools and flexibility to strategically adapt our response for what lies ahead.

Under the order signed by the governor Friday, 19 of the remaining provisions are terminated immediately, an additional 18 will be lifted on March 31 and 15 will expire on June 30.

Seventeen of the executive actions still in effect are related to bolstering the states COVID-19 testing and vaccination programs and preventing potential strain on the health care delivery system, according to a press release.

Thirteen other provisions still in place are related to COVID workplace safety.

"(The) remaining provisions ensure COVID workplace safety standards remain aligned with the most current public health guidance and evidence and provide important flexibility to state and local agencies to administer the emergency response while the state of emergency remains open," wrote the governor's office in a press release.

Meanwhile, aside from Newsom lifting "all but 5 percent of COVID-19 related executive order provisions," he signed a proclamation ending a dozen open states of emergency relating to natural disasters dating back to 2015.

To read the governor's full announcement, click here.

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Gov. Newsom to lift 95% of COVID-19 related executive actions - ABC10.com KXTV

COVID-19 UPDATE: Gov. Justice announces third round of P-EBT benefits to be allocated to eligible West Virginia students – Governor Jim Justice

February 26, 2022

GOV. JUSTICE DISCUSSES RUSSIAN INVASION OF UKRAINEGov. Justice also took time out of his remarks on COVID-19 to ask West Virginians for their prayers amid escalating conflict as Russia continues its invasion of Ukraine.

We offer up our prayers for those people, Gov. Justice said. Its just really sad.

We dont know the extent of what Putin really wants to do, other than hed like to put everything back together how the Soviet Union was at one time, Gov. Justice continued. We dont know what the repercussions will be yet for us in this country. But we know its not going to be good.

We need to realize we have made one whale of a mistake in this country. The pipeline should be finished in West Virginia; the Keystone Pipeline ought to be up and going. When it boils right down to it, weve got to realize theres some real bad actors out there. The United States of America could be totally energy independent and the bad actors would be minimized.

The Governor added, The Biden administration needs to step back and say this country needs to be totally energy independent. If we were, wed feel stronger today. With where we are, inflation-wise, and all the challenges we have right now, its not going to be good.

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COVID-19 UPDATE: Gov. Justice announces third round of P-EBT benefits to be allocated to eligible West Virginia students - Governor Jim Justice

Iceland to lift all COVID-19 restrictions on Friday – Reuters

February 26, 2022

People walk past artwork on the side of a shop as the outbreak of the coronavirus disease (COVID-19) continues in Reykjavik, Iceland, September 3, 2020. REUTERS/John Sibley

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COPENHAGEN, Feb 23 (Reuters) - Iceland will lift all remaining COVID-19 restrictions on Friday, including a 200-person indoor gathering limit and restricted opening hours for bars, the Ministry of Health said on Wednesday.

"Widespread societal resistance to COVID-19 is the main route out of the epidemic," the ministry said in a statement, citing infectious disease authorities.

"To achieve this, as many people as possible need to be infected with the virus as the vaccines are not enough, even though they provide good protection against serious illness," it added.

All border restrictions would also be lifted, it said.

Iceland, with a population of some 368,000 people, has registered between 2,100 and 2,800 daily infections recently. More than 115,000 infections have been logged throughout the epidemic and 60 have died due to COVID-19.

Register

Reporting by Nikolaj Skydsgaard and Stine Jacobsen; Editing by Alex Richardson

Our Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.

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Iceland to lift all COVID-19 restrictions on Friday - Reuters

CDC Isn’t Publishing Large Portions of the COVID-19 Data It Collects – Good Times Weekly

February 22, 2022

By Apoorva Mandavilli, The New York Times

For more than a year, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention has collected data on hospitalizations for COVID-19 in the United States and broken it down by age, race and vaccination status. But it has not made most of the information public.

When the CDC published the first significant data two weeks ago on the effectiveness of boosters in adults younger than 65, it left out the numbers for a huge portion of that population: 18- to 49-year-olds, the group the data showed was least likely to benefit from extra shots, because the first two doses already left them well-protected.

The agency recently debuted a dashboard of wastewater data on its website that will be updated daily and might provide early signals of an oncoming surge of COVID-19 cases. Some states and localities had been sharing wastewater information with the agency since the start of the pandemic, but it had never before released those findings.

Two full years into the pandemic, the agency leading the countrys response to the public health emergency has published only a tiny fraction of the data it has collected, several people familiar with the data said.

Much of the withheld information could help state and local health officials better target their efforts to bring the virus under control. Detailed, timely data on hospitalizations by age and race would help health officials identify and help the populations at highest risk. Information on hospitalizations and death by age and vaccination status would have helped inform whether healthy adults needed booster shots. And wastewater surveillance across the nation would spot outbreaks and emerging variants early.

Without the booster data for 18- to 49-year-olds, the outside experts whom federal health agencies look to for advice had to rely on numbers from Israel to make their recommendations on the shots.

Kristen Nordlund, a spokesperson for the CDC, said the agency has been slow to release the different streams of data because basically, at the end of the day, its not yet ready for prime time. She said the agencys priority when gathering any data is to ensure that its accurate and actionable.

Another reason is fear that the information might be misinterpreted, Nordlund said.

Dr. Daniel Jernigan, the agencys deputy director for public health science and surveillance said the pandemic exposed the fact that data systems at the CDC, and at the state levels, are outmoded and not up to handling large volumes of data. CDC scientists are trying to modernize the systems, he said.

We want better, faster data that can lead to decision making and actions at all levels of public health, that can help us eliminate the lag in data that has held us back, he added.

The CDC also has multiple bureaucratic divisions that must sign off on important publications, and its officials must alert the Department of Health and Human Services which oversees the agency and the White House of their plans. The agency often shares data with states and partners before making data public. Those steps can add delays.

The CDC is a political organization as much as it is a public health organization, said Samuel Scarpino, managing director of pathogen surveillance at the Rockefeller Foundations Pandemic Prevention Institute. The steps that it takes to get something like this released are often well outside of the control of many of the scientists that work at the CDC.

The performance of vaccines and boosters, particularly in younger adults, is among the most glaring omissions in data the CDC has made public.

Last year, the agency repeatedly came under fire for not tracking so-called breakthrough infections in vaccinated Americans, and focusing only on individuals who became ill enough to be hospitalized or die. The agency presented that information as risk comparisons with unvaccinated adults, rather than provide timely snapshots of hospitalized patients stratified by age, sex, race and vaccination status.

But the CDC has been routinely collecting information since the COVID-19 vaccines were first rolled out last year, according to a federal official familiar with the effort. The agency has been reluctant to make those figures public, the official said, because they might be misinterpreted as the vaccines being ineffective.

Nordlund confirmed that as one of the reasons. Another reason, she said, is that the data represents only 10% of the population of the U.S. But the CDC has relied on the same level of sampling to track influenza for years.

Some outside public health experts were stunned to hear that information exists.

We have been begging for that sort of granularity of data for two years, said Jessica Malaty Rivera, a public health researcher and part of the team that ran the COVID Tracking Project, an independent effort that compiled data on the pandemic until March 2021.

A detailed analysis, she said, builds public trust, and it paints a much clearer picture of whats actually going on.

Concern about the misinterpretation of hospitalization data broken down by vaccination status is not unique to the CDC. On Thursday, public health officials in Scotland said they would stop releasing data on COVID-19 hospitalizations and deaths by vaccination status because of similar fears that the figures would be misrepresented by anti-vaccine groups.

But the experts dismissed the potential misuse or misinterpretation of data as an acceptable reason for not releasing it.

We are at a much greater risk of misinterpreting the data with data vacuums, than sharing the data with proper science, communication and caveats, Rivera said.

When the delta variant caused an outbreak in Massachusetts last summer, the fact that three-quarters of those infected were vaccinated led people to mistakenly conclude that the vaccines were powerless against the virus validating the CDCs concerns.

But that could have been avoided if the agency had educated the public from the start that as more people are vaccinated, the percentage of vaccinated people who are infected or hospitalized would also rise, public health experts said.

Tell the truth, present the data, said Dr. Paul Offit, a vaccine expert and adviser to the Food and Drug Administration. I have to believe that there is a way to explain these things so people can understand it.

Knowing which groups of people were being hospitalized in the U.S., which other conditions those patients may have had and how vaccines changed the picture over time would have been invaluable, Offit said.

Relying on Israeli data to make booster recommendations for Americans was less than ideal, Offit noted. Israel defines severe disease differently than the U.S., among other factors.

Theres no reason that they should be better at collecting and putting forth data than we were, Offit said of Israeli scientists. The CDC is the principal epidemiological agency in this country, and so you would like to think the data came from them.

It has also been difficult to find CDC data on the proportion of children hospitalized for COVID-19 who have other medical conditions, said Dr. Yvonne Maldonado, chair of the American Academy of Pediatrics Committee on Infectious Diseases.

The academys staff asked their partners at the CDC for that information on a call in December, according to a spokesperson for the AAP, and were told it was unavailable.

Nordlund pointed to data on the agencys website that includes this information, and to multiple published reports on pediatric hospitalizations with information on children who have other health conditions.

The pediatrics academy has repeatedly asked the CDC for an estimate on the contagiousness of a person infected with the coronavirus five days after symptoms begin but Maldonado finally got the answer from an article in The New York Times in December.

Theyve known this for over a year and a half, right, and they havent told us, she said. I mean, you cant find out anything from them.

Experts in wastewater analysis were more understanding of the CDCs slow pace of making that data public. The CDC has been building the wastewater system since September 2020, and the capacity to present the data over the past few months, Nordlund said. In the meantime, the CDCs state partners have had access to the data, she said.

Despite the cautious preparation, the CDC released the wastewater data a week later than planned. The COVID Data Tracker is updated only on Thursdays, and the day before the original release date, the scientists who manage the tracker realized they needed more time to integrate the data.

It wasnt because the data wasnt ready, it was because the systems and how it physically displayed on the page wasnt working the way that they wanted it to, Nordlund said.

The CDC has received more than $1 billion to modernize its systems, which may help pick up the pace, Nordlund said. Were working on that, she said.

The agencys public dashboard now has data from 31 states. Eight of those states, including Utah, began sending their figures to the CDC in the fall of 2020. Some relied on scientists volunteering their expertise; others paid private companies. But many others, such as Mississippi, New Mexico and North Dakota, have yet to begin tracking wastewater.

Utahs fledgling program in April 2020 has now grown to cover 88% of the states population, with samples being collected twice a week, according to Nathan LaCross, who manages Utahs wastewater surveillance program.

Wastewater data reflects the presence of the virus in an entire community, so it is not plagued by the privacy concerns attached to medical information that would normally complicate data release, experts said.

There are a bunch of very important and substantive legal and ethical challenges that dont exist for wastewater data, Scarpino said. That lowered bar should certainly mean that data could flow faster.

Tracking wastewater can help identify areas experiencing a high burden of cases early, LaCross said. That allows officials to better allocate resources like mobile testing teams and testing sites.

Wastewater is also a much faster and more reliable barometer of the spread of the virus than the number of cases or positive tests. Well before the nation became aware of the delta variant, for example, scientists who track wastewater had seen its rise and alerted the CDC, Scarpino said. They did so in early May, just before the agency famously said vaccinated people could take off their masks.

Even now, the agency is relying on a technique that captures the amount of virus, but not the different variants in the mix, said Mariana Matus, CEO of BioBot Analytics, which specializes in wastewater analysis. That will make it difficult for the agency to spot and respond to outbreaks of new variants in a timely manner, she said.

It gets really exhausting when you see the private sector working faster than the premier public health agency of the world, Rivera said.

This article originally appeared inThe New York Times.

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CDC Isn't Publishing Large Portions of the COVID-19 Data It Collects - Good Times Weekly

A fourth Covid-19 shot might be recommended this fall, as officials ‘continually’ look at emerging data – CNN

February 22, 2022

CNN

As the world approaches the second anniversary of the declaration of the Covid-19 pandemic by the World Health Organization, on March 11, more nations are rolling out or are discussing the possibility of fourth doses of coronavirus vaccine for their most vulnerable. In the United States, leading public health officials say they are very carefully monitoring if or when fourth doses might be needed.

Israel was the first nation to roll out fourth doses, announcing in December that adults 60 and older, medical workers and people with suppressed immune systems were eligible to receive the extra shot if at least four months have passed since their third dose.

More recently, the Public Health Agency of Sweden announced last week that second booster doses are recommended for everyone 80 and older in the country. The United Kingdoms Department of Health and Social Care announced Monday that an extra booster dose of coronavirus vaccine will be offered in the spring to adults 75 and older, residents in care homes for older adults and immunosuppressed people 12 and older.

In the United States, health officials emphasized late last year that fourth doses were not yet needed and said it was too premature to be discussing a potential fourth dose of coronavirus vaccine for most people.

Now, the US Food and Drug Administration is indeed continually looking at the emerging data on the pandemic and variants in the United States and overseas in order to evaluate the potential utility and composition of booster doses, FDA spokesperson Alison Hunt wrote in an email to CNN on Friday.

She confirmed that although Dr. Peter Marks, director of the FDAs Center for Biologics Evaluation and Research, has noted that there is still much uncertainty as to how the pandemic may further evolve, he also has said it is possible that a fourth dose might be recommended as we move into fall.

A fall timeline coincides with the administration of flu shots, which could be convenient for people and makes sense scientifically because respiratory viruses like the coronavirus and influenza tend to peak in the winter months that follow.

As more data become available about the safety and effectiveness of COVID-19 vaccines, including the use of a booster dose, we will continue to evaluate the rapidly changing science and keep the public informed, Hunt wrote. Any determination that additional booster doses are needed will be based on data available to the agency.

If or when the FDA authorizes a fourth dose for the public, the next step would be for the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention to review the data before making a recommendation for use, as the agency has done for other coronavirus vaccine recommendations.

The United States has seen significant improvements recently in Covid-19 cases, hospitalizations and deaths. As of Friday, cases were down 44% from the prior week, hospitalizations dropped 26%, and deaths were 13% lower, according to Johns Hopkins University data.

Vaccination and boosting will be critical in maintaining that downward trajectory, particularly when youre talking about the red curve of severe disease leading to hospitalization, Dr. Anthony Fauci, director of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, said during a White House Covid-19 Task Force briefing Wednesday.

The potential future requirement for an additional boost or a fourth shot of the Pfizer/BioNTech or Moderna mRNA vaccines or a third dose of the Johnson & Johnson vaccine is being very carefully monitored in real time, Fauci said. And recommendations, if needed, will be updated according to the data as it evolves.

The CDC has no recommendation of fourth doses of coronavirus vaccine for the general public, but the agency updated its guidelines in October to note that certain people who are moderately or severely immunocompromised may receive a fourth dose of the Moderna or Pfizer/BioNTech vaccines.

For the immunocompetent people, a single booster shot continues to provide high levels of protection against severe disease caused by Omicron, Fauci said Wednesday. This should not be confused with the fact that for many immunocompromised people, already a second booster shot namely a fourth dose of an mRNA is recommended because of what we know about their poor response to the initial regimen.

Meanwhile, vaccine makers continue to study fourth doses in broader populations.

Pfizer announced in January that it has been studying the safety and efficacy of a fourth dose as part of its ongoing study of an Omicron-specific coronavirus vaccine among healthy adults ages 18 to 55.

For that study, participants have been separated into three cohorts. One includes 600 people who got three doses of the current Pfizer/BioNTech coronavirus vaccine before enrolling in the study. As part of the research, they will receive either a fourth dose of the current vaccine or a dose of the Omicron-based vaccine.

While current research and real-world data show that boosters continue to provide a high level of protection against severe disease and hospitalization with Omicron, we recognize the need to be prepared in the event this protection wanes over time and to potentially help address Omicron and new variants in the future, Kathrin Jansen, senior vice president and head of vaccine research and development at Pfizer, said in the companys announcement of the study.

A study published by the CDC last week showed that protection against Covid-19 hospitalization and emergency department or urgent care visits is much higher after a third vaccine dose than a second dose but that protection wanes with time.

With the Omicron variant dominant in the United States, vaccine effectiveness was 87% against Covid-19 emergency department or urgent care visits and 91% against hospitalizations in the two months after a third dose. Effectiveness fell to 66% and 78%, respectively, by the fourth month, the data showed.

Nonetheless, the level of 78 is still a good protective area, Fauci said Wednesday.

Dr. Christopher Murray, director of the University of Washingtons Institute for Health Metrics and Evaluation, told CNN on Friday that he thinks having a fourth dose makes very little sense right now but possibly makes more sense this upcoming fall or winter.

Because Omicron is going away, he said, third dose immunity wanes, and so fourth dose will probably wane as well. So we would want to time a fourth-dose push for when either theres a new variant or for next winter. So I think right now, unless youre immunocompromised or youre older, unless you have some personal risk, it doesnt make a lot of sense.

The research showing some waning immunity after a third dose has led to more discussion around if or when fourth doses could be needed.

Just like with everything else, the health departments look at this data thats coming out and wait for guidance from the CDC and from the drug manufacturers. The drug manufacturers have been monitoring vaccine effectiveness, Lori Tremmel Freeman, chief executive officer of the National Association of County and City Health Officials, told CNN on Friday.

The timing for fourth doses not only depends on waning immunity but also depends on whether we see any more variants emerge and what we discover in terms of additional vaccine effectiveness for any emerging new infections, Freeman said.

If fourth doses are needed, health departments would go into the mode of preparing to administer the fourth dose in the way they have done previous doses, Freeman said. However, of greater concern among local public health officers is the slow and declining pace of people completing their third doses, she said.

About 65% of the US population is fully vaccinated with at least their initial series, and about 28% of the population has received a booster dose, according to the CDC, as of Friday. But the pace of booster doses being administered has dropped to one of the slowest rates yet.

As time goes on, if there is the necessity of a fourth dose, were already behind with people getting the third dose, Freeman said. So all of a sudden, we could have a fairly large segment of the population that is not up to date on vaccines because theyre behind by two doses, potentially, and more people could get sick.

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A fourth Covid-19 shot might be recommended this fall, as officials 'continually' look at emerging data - CNN

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