Category: Vaccine

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‘Only the beginning’: Hundreds protest Western University vaccine mandate – CBC.ca

August 28, 2022

A student organizer behind Saturday's protest against Western University's COVID-19 vaccine mandate says the demonstration is "only the beginning" in the push to overturn the controversial policy.

Hundreds of people gathered on campus to hear speakers denounce the London, Ont., university's decision to mandate at least three vaccine doses for staff, students and some visitors.

Organizer Kendra Hancock says she hopes the demonstration will lead to public negotiations and further student consultation over the university's rules, which also include mandatory masking in classrooms.

Speakers included a former professor at Western-affiliated Huron University College, who says she refused to comply with the school's previous vaccine mandate, as well as the Haldimand-Norfolk health unit's acting chief medical officer of health who has been an outspoken critic of COVID-19 mandates.

Students carrying a banner reading "Enough is Enough" led a march around the university grounds as campus security looked on.

Just as the march neared its end, some demonstrators split from the organizers and briefly took over one lane of traffic for a block along Western Road before dispersing.

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'Only the beginning': Hundreds protest Western University vaccine mandate - CBC.ca

‘Vaccine fatigue’ could hit autumn Covid boosters | News | The Sunday Times – The Times

August 28, 2022

Britain faces a low uptake of the Covid booster jab this autumn amid vaccine fatigue and complacency about the virus, the new Pfizer boss has warned.

The booster campaign starts next week, with care home residents and the housebound the first to be invited. Over-75s and the clinically vulnerable will be able to book appointments from September 12, with a wider rollout for over-50s taking place in phases. Roughly 26 million in England will be eligible.

Susan Rienow, who was appointed UK managing director at Pfizer in February, said: We have to remain vigilant. I recognise there may be some vaccine fatigue in the population. But making sure that people are boosting their immunity, so that we can prevent people from being hospitalised, is going

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'Vaccine fatigue' could hit autumn Covid boosters | News | The Sunday Times - The Times

Bottling the monkeypox vaccine could take until early 2023 – POLITICO

August 11, 2022

However, officials are unsure how long that strategy will work, particularly if cases increase sharply in the weeks ahead and whether the virus spreads outside the community of men who have sex with men.

Nearly 9,500 monkeypox infections have been reported, according to the CDC, up about 50 percent in the last week. Nearly all cases have been reported in men and CDC Director Rochelle Walensky has urged men who have sex with men, including those who are vaccinated, to avoid skin-to-skin contact with infected people.

The administration is trying to shore up more vaccines by striking deals with companies including Grand River Aseptic Manufacturing in Michigan to bottle doses, a process known as fill and finish. The vaccine that needs to be bottled is currently stored by Bavarian Nordic in Denmark, the officials said. There are as many as 12 million doses available in that stockpile, the two people with knowledge of the matter said.

Once the deals are finalized and the vaccines bottled, American regulators will likely have to inspect the doses before they are distributed. Depending on what agreements the Biden administration strikes, the process could stretch into 2023, one of the senior administration officials said.

That timeline is also dependent on how many doses the U.S. pulls from the stockpile in Denmark for fill and finish.

An HHS official said the administration is exploring multiple avenues to accelerate production and distribution of the vaccine. Despite comments made by health officials during Tuesdays briefing, the HHS official said the administration made a decision on the dose-sparing independently of [its]efforts ... to procure and produce additional vaccine.

The CDC is collecting case information from states, but the agency is still working to set up a system to track the transmission of the virus and to model how it could change over the course of the next several months, one of the people with knowledge of the matter said. The CDC did not respond to questions about its monkeypox modeling.

So far, the administration has secured just over 1 million doses from Bavarian Nordic, a Danish vaccine company. The U.S. needs about 3.2 million doses in total to fully inoculate the more than 1.6 million at-risk Americans. More than 600,000 doses have made it out to the public with thousands more rolling out in the coming weeks.

While the dose-sparing strategy announced Tuesday received broad support from top health officials, the data on this approach is limited to one 2015 study first reported by POLITICO. There is no clinical trial or real-world efficacy information available that backs up the administrations recommendation. The NIH is developing a study. The CDC is also working to gather efficacy data from states.

The administration could revert back to recommending providers administer the full dose of the vaccine normally via a subcutaneous administration under the fatty tissue of the skin, one of the senior officials said.

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Bottling the monkeypox vaccine could take until early 2023 - POLITICO

The Brazilian Scientists Inventing An mRNA Vaccine And Sharing The Recipe : Short Wave – NPR

August 11, 2022

Patricia Neves (left) and Ana Paula Ano Bom helped launch a global project to revolutionize access to mRNA technology. Ian Cheibub for NPR hide caption

Patricia Neves (left) and Ana Paula Ano Bom helped launch a global project to revolutionize access to mRNA technology.

When Moderna and Pfizer first came out with their mRNA vaccines for COVID-19, supply was limited to rich countries and they did not share the details of how to create it. That left middle income countries like Brazil in the lurch. But for Brazilian scientists Patricia Neves and Ana Paula Ano Bom, that wasn't the end. They decided to invent their own mRNA vaccine.

Their story, today: Aaron talks to global health correspondent Nurith Aizenman about the effort and how it has helped launch a wider global project to revolutionize access to mRNA vaccine technology.

Further reading:

This episode was produced for Short Wave by Margaret Cirino and edited by Rebecca Ramirez. It was edited for broadcast by Vikki Valentine. Fact-checking by Rachel Carlson and audio engineering by Brian Jarboe.

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The Brazilian Scientists Inventing An mRNA Vaccine And Sharing The Recipe : Short Wave - NPR

2,000 Monkeypox Vaccine Appointments Are Available in Chicago This Weekend. Here’s How to Get One – NBC Chicago

August 11, 2022

More than 2,000 appointments are available this weekend to receive the JYNNEOS monkeypox vaccine in Chicago, the city's department of public health announced Wednesday.

The following locations will offer the vaccine by appointment:

9 a.m.-4 p.m. Aug. 13 at CDPH MPV Vaccination Clinics at City College locations:

Aug. 14 at the MPV Vaccination Clinic hosted by RUSH and UIC at the College of Nursing

In addition, MPV vaccine appointments are now available up to six days per week at three CDPH STI Clinics around the city by visiting getvaxchi.chicago.gov.

To access remaining available appointments this week at CDPH STI Clinics, use the following codes:

"Our MPV vaccine supply continues to increase, and we are pleased to be opening up larger clinics to serve even more Chicagoans, while still working to vaccinate those at highest risk to help stop the spread, said CDPH Commissioner Dr. Allison Arwady in a statement. "CDPH has been working closely with healthcare providers, clinics, and community-based organizations who work with individuals disconnected from medical services to schedule vaccination appointments."

Close contacts, including household members with close physical contact or intimate partners, of someone diagnosed with MPV are prioritized for vaccination regardless of sex, gender or sexual orientation, Arwady said. In addition, the vaccine is available to gay or bisexual men and transgender persons 18 years of age and older who:

For more information about monkeypox, head here Chicago.gov/MPV.

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2,000 Monkeypox Vaccine Appointments Are Available in Chicago This Weekend. Here's How to Get One - NBC Chicago

Phillys monkeypox vaccine shortages arent solved yet as feds make move to increase access to the shots – The Philadelphia Inquirer

August 11, 2022

Federal authorities are permitting health providers to administer much smaller doses of monkeypox vaccine to stretch the limited supply of the shots, but the Philadelphia Public Health Department is holding off on committing to the new approach, saying it wants more information.

The Food and Drug Administration on Wednesday issued an emergency use authorization that increases the availability of vaccine fivefold by shrinking the amount administered with each dose. The new rules are in response to an increase in new cases that outpaces vaccine supply. Monkeypox cases in the United States topped 9,000 this week, up from 40 two months ago. In Philadelphia, providers are keeping waiting lists of people seeking doses, and a health department hotline to direct people to vaccines has been swamped with calls.

READ MORE: U.S. will stretch monkeypox vaccine supply with smaller doses

The city health department, though, wants more information before committing to the smaller doses. Philadelphia health officials said the FDA update leaves unanswered questions about the safety and efficacy of the smaller doses, and doesnt specify whether patients can choose between the original vaccine amount or smaller doses.

While we continue to work to ensure that as many at risk Philadelphians are protected as possible while we wait for those answers, the Health Department is beginning to plan for implementation of this new vaccine strategy, if its required, the department said in its statement.

In an interview last week, Philadelphia Health Commissioner Cheryl Bettigole estimated the city could use at least double the approximately 5,000 doses it has been shipped so far to cover people at high risk from the virus.

The Pennsylvania Department of Health said in a statement Wednesday that access to intradermal injections may depend on the provider.

While there are providers prepared to begin administering intradermal injections right away, other providers will need additional supplies, training or technical assistance, a department spokesperson said.

The New Jersey Department of Health credited the FDAs decision Tuesday with expanding vaccine access.

The state health department is working with vaccine providers to be able to implement the new recommendations as soon as they are able, a statement from the department said.

READ MORE: Monkeypox vaccine limits cause frustration and fear in Philly

The FDA announcement changes not just dose amounts but how theyre injected. Monkeypox shots have been administered subcutaneously, into the fatty tissue beneath the skin. The smaller doses approved by the FDA would be given intradermally, directly into the patients skin. The same dose amount that has been administered to one person can now be expanded to five while providing for each a similar immune response, the FDA reported in a statement Tuesday, citing a 2015 study that evaluated both kinds of injections.

Switching to smaller doses isnt something that can be done immediately, though, because the approach requires more precision, said Jay Kostman, a doctor at Philadelphia FIGHT, a city health center focused on LGBTQ patients.

I think its going to require training for the people who administer the vaccine because people arent used to doing intradermal vaccines, he said. If you dont do it right and you do it with a smaller dose, youre less likely to get the immune benefit.

READ MORE: Exposed to monkeypox? Heres how to get a vaccination appointment in Philly.

Philadelphia FIGHT has been going through doses quickly, Kostman said. The health center went through its initial shipment of 100 doses, he said, with people left on the waiting list. Those people are getting vaccinated now with another shipment received this week.

The decision to allow smaller doses was prompted by case counts that continue to outstrip the availability of vaccine doses.

In recent weeks the monkeypox virus has continued to spread at a rate that has made it clear our current vaccine supply will not meet the current demand, said FDA Commissioner Robert M. Califf in a statement Tuesday. By increasing the number of available doses, more individuals who want to be vaccinated against monkeypox will now have the opportunity to do so.

So far, the federal Department of Health and Human Services has shipped almost 618,000 doses of vaccine, with 11,329 going to New Jersey, 10,311 to Pennsylvania, and 4,790 to Philadelphia, with a small number of additional doses coming to the city through the state Health Department. Pennsylvania reported 251 cases as of Tuesday, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, and New Jersey reported 251.

READ MORE: Many people dont know basic facts about monkeypox, making them susceptible to public health messaging but also to conspiracy theories

Monkeypox is typically not fatal but causes painful rashes and lesions that can last up to a month. Extended physical contact with those blemishes, which at some stages of the virus are barely noticeable, is the most common mode of transmission, and sex has proven to be particularly effective at spreading it, though the virus does not require sexual contact to infect a person.

The virus is overwhelmingly infecting men who have sex with men, and health officials have said men who have recently had multiple sex partners or anonymous sex are at the highest risk of infection. There hasnt been enough vaccine to reach that entire population, though. Other groups, including health-care workers who treat people with monkeypox and sex workers, are not yet eligible for doses.

Even among those who are eligible, many cant get the shot. Health officials have had to prioritize vaccinating people who have already been exposed to the virus. If the shot is given quickly after exposure, the vaccine does a good job of preventing the person from getting sick, but focusing only on those who have already been exposed isnt a strategy that will contain the virus, health experts have said.

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Phillys monkeypox vaccine shortages arent solved yet as feds make move to increase access to the shots - The Philadelphia Inquirer

Vaccines are now approved for children aged six months to five years, but what about newborn babies? – ABC News

August 11, 2022

COVID-19 vaccines are now approved for children aged from six months up to five years of age, and are already being rolled out to about 70,000 at-risk youngsters.

But what about babies even younger than that? Will there be a vaccine for them? And what role does the vaccination of pregnant people play in the process?

Let's take a closer look at the issues.

Children of all ages can get COVID-19 and experience its complications.

However,asnoted by an infectious diseases physician at Monash and Melbourne universities,Michelle Giles, young infants aren't at risk of the severe disease that has been seen with older Australians.

Research published this week in the Medical Journal of Australia lookedat children under 16 years of age with COVID-19 between June 1 and October 31, 2021, and found most infections in children were either asymptomatic or associated with mild disease.

The paper foundthe likelihood of admission to hospital with the Delta variant for medical reasons declined for younger children.

However, that doesn't mean that babies are completely immune from infection.

A study published in July in the New England Journal of Medicine and funded by the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention looked at 537 cases among babies under six months who had been admitted to hospital with COVID-19, and found more than 20 per cent had been placed in intensive care, with 12 per cent needing mechanical ventilation.

Professor Giles notes thatstudy was done in the US, across the Delta and Omicron waves, and looked at children who were already in hospital as opposed to ones who may have caught COVID-19 and not needed serious medical intervention.

"Some young infants can get very sick from COVID but that is much more the exception," Professor Giles said.

"By far and away, the majority of infants do not get severe disease from COVID."

The benefits of maternal vaccination to the infant they are carrying have been known for a long time.

As far back as the 1870s, babies born to mothers who had received the smallpox vaccination were found unlikely to have smallpox early in life.

"When we give a vaccine to the mother, her immune system responds to that vaccine by making antibodies," Professor Giles explained.

"And these antibodies are able to cross the placenta so that the baby has them in its system when its born, so it can be protected straightaway if it gets exposed to that virus."

It's typically a two-for-one deal, with vaccines benefiting both the pregnant person and their unborn baby.

Take the flu vaccine for example.It stops pregnant women from getting severe illness that might require admission to hospital, while offering babies protection.

It's a new and evolving area, but some research has suggested that giving vaccines to pregnant people can reduce the risk of hospital admissions and severe illness from COVID-19 for infants under six months.

Remember that study in the New England Journal of Medicine we spoke about earlier?

It found maternal vaccination with two doses of an mRNA vaccine was associated with reduced risk of hospitalisation including critical illness among infants younger than six months of age.

That researchalso found effectiveness was higher when the vaccination occurred after 20 weeks of pregnancy.

"It is promising that it might afford some protection to young infants that can't yet be vaccinated," Professor Giles said.

"And it wouldn't be surprising if this was the casebecause, as mentioned, we know that this happens with other vaccines that we give pregnant women where they protect the child in the first six months of life."

The simple answer is no, they shouldn't.

Professor Giles says it isimportant women don't delay vaccination, because they themselves need to be protected.

"The risk with delaying vaccination is that whilethey remain unvaccinated, they're at a higher risk of severe disease, and that is not good for their pregnancy or for their baby," she said.

Not in the foreseeable future, if ever.

There aren't any clinical trials running yet for babies under six months of age.

Australia is one of the first countries to roll out the vaccine for children aged six months to five years and, even then, the vaccines are not yet being given to all children, with the vaccine advisory body ATAGI noting there was a low likelihood of severe illness from COVID-19.

So, for the time being, there is one main way to protect babies, according to Professor Giles.

"If we want to give any protection to infants under six months of age from COVID-19, at this stage, there are no vaccines available. So the only way of protecting them is through maternal antibodies," she said.

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Vaccines are now approved for children aged six months to five years, but what about newborn babies? - ABC News

New method of nasal vaccine delivery could lead to better vaccines for HIV and COVID-19 – UMN News

August 11, 2022

A new study, published in Science Translational Medicine, showcases a new way to effectively deliver vaccines through mucosal tissues in the nose that could lead to better protection against pathogens like human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) and SARS-CoV-2, the virus that causes COVID-19.

Historically, nasal vaccines have been difficult to make successfully. The mucus in the nose typically clears out or breaks down the vaccines components, such as protein antigens, before they can access underlying tissues to activate the bodys immune cells.

The researchers found a way to help vaccine antigens bypass the mucosal barriers in the nose by engineering them to bind onto a protein called albumin, which naturally occurs in the human body and has the ability to get around these roadblocks. The antigens could then effectively hitchhike on albumin to get to their destination to start activating an immune response.

Nasal vaccines have the potential to generate even more immunity than current vaccines, because for many diseases that are transmitted through the upper respiratory system, such as COVID-19, nasal vaccines have the potential to trigger immune responses in the exact areas of infection the nose, mouth and lungs.

Traditional vaccines that are injected are not usually geared toward establishing immunity in these mucosal tissues, explained Brittany Hartwell, first author on the paper and an assistant professor in the U of M Department of Biomedical Engineering. They're more geared toward establishing immunity in the blood sort of like a backup defense. But the idea of establishing immunity in the mucosal areas, like the nose, is that it establishes more of a frontline defense that can better protect against transmission of these diseases.

The new vaccine proved effective at generating immunity not just in the nose, but in other mucosal tissues of the body as well, which include the upper respiratory system, lungs and genitourinary tract. The latter is especially relevant for vaccinating against a virus like HIV, which is transmitted through those sites.

This is really significant for the field of mucosal vaccination, Hartwell said. It shows something new, that weve designed a vaccine capable of overcoming barriers to delivery that have historically plagued the development of other mucosal vaccines. Its particularly relevant right now because were all living in the midst of the COVID pandemic. And as long as theres spread and transmission, the virus has a chance to evolve into new variants with the potential to be harmful. This research shows the development of a different kind of vaccine that could provide even better protection than what we currently have by blocking transmission, preventing us from catching and passing the virus onto others.

Hartwell is continuing to study and develop this new vaccine technology in her lab at the U of M and hopes to adapt it to other diseases and illnesses in the future.

The research was funded by the National Institutes of Healths National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases; the National Cancer Institute; the Marble Center for Cancer Nanomedicine; the U. S. Army Research Office through the Institute for Soldier Nanotechnologies at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology; the Ragon Institute of MIT, Massachusetts General Hospital, and Harvard University; and the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation.

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About the College of Science and EngineeringThe University of Minnesota College of Science and Engineering brings together the Universitys programs in engineering, physical sciences, mathematics and computer science into one college. The college is ranked among the top academic programs in the country and includes 12 academic departments offering a wide range of degree programs at the baccalaureate, master's, and doctoral levels. Learn more at cse.umn.edu.

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New method of nasal vaccine delivery could lead to better vaccines for HIV and COVID-19 - UMN News

Why Monkeypox Vaccine Shortage May Threaten the Immunocompromised – The New York Times

August 11, 2022

The shortfall of monkeypox vaccine doses in the United States, expected to last for months, is raising urgent questions about how well and for how long a single shot may protect against the virus.

The vaccine, called Jynneos, is approved as a two-dose regimen, but most people at risk of infection have been receiving one dose if they can find it. Now the shortage has led federal officials to consider a rarely used approach: a so-called dose-sparing strategy, which gives shots that each contain just one-fifth of a single dose.

For most recipients, one shot should be enough to ward off serious illness, and there is some evidence that even smaller doses can be effective. But preliminary research suggests that people with H.I.V. or other conditions that weaken the immune system may be less protected than people who dont have such illnesses, according to some experts.

One dose is better than none, said Dr. Alexandra Yonts, an infectious diseases physician at Childrens National Hospital in Washington, D.C. But people with H.I.V. and other immunocompromised individuals need to be aware that they may not have an adequate level of protection from infection, even with vaccination, she added.

Even two weeks after the shot, when the antibody response is underway, immunocompromised people still may need to use all other precautions to prevent being exposed, per public health guidance, she said.

The findings also suggest that some men should be prioritized for full vaccination. Given the supply constraints, that may be difficult.

Federal officials have ordered nearly seven million doses of Jynneos, but the shots will not arrive for months. So far, the Biden administration has shipped about 600,000 doses to states. It said last week that 800,000 additional doses were being allocated to states, but the distribution could take weeks.

Faced with shortages, some cities, including Washington and New York, are restricting second doses to stretch their supplies. Officials at the Food and Drug Administration and the C.D.C. have disagreed with that strategy, noting that Jynneos is approved as a vaccine to be given in two doses spaced 28 days apart.

What to Know About the Monkeypox Virus

What to Know About the Monkeypox Virus

What is monkeypox? Monkeypox is a virus similar to smallpox,but symptoms are less severe. It was discovered in 1958, after outbreaks occurred in monkeys kept for research. The viruswas primarily found in parts of Central and West Africa, butrecently it has spread to dozens of countries and infected tens of thousands of people, overwhelmingly men who have sex with men.

What to Know About the Monkeypox Virus

How does it spread? The monkeypox virus can spread from person to person through close physical contactwith infectious lesions or pustules, by touching items like clothing or bedding that previously touched the rash, or via the respiratory droplets produced by coughing or sneezing. Monkeypox can also be transmitted from mother to fetus via the placenta or through close contact during and after birth.

What to Know About the Monkeypox Virus

I fear I might have monkeypox. What should I do? There is no way to test for monkeypox if you have only flulikesymptoms. But if you start to notice red lesions, you should contact an urgent care center or your primary care physician, who can order a monkeypox test. Isolate at home as soon as you develop symptoms, and wear high-qualitymasks if you must come in contact with others for medical care.

What to Know About the Monkeypox Virus

I live in New York. Can I get the vaccine? Adult men who have sex with men and who have had multiple sexual partners in the past 14 days are eligible for a vaccine in New York City, as well as close contacts of infected people. Eligible people who have conditions that weaken the immune system or who have a history of dermatitis or eczema are also strongly encouraged to get vaccinated. People can book an appointment through this website.

But as federal health officials declared a public health emergency on Thursday, Dr. Robert Califf, the commissioner of the F.D.A., said the agency was now considering authorizing shots that contain just one-fifth of the regular dose, delivered between layers of the skin instead of under it.

The F.D.A. would need to grant Jynneos an emergency use authorization in order for it to be administered this way.

The dose-sparing approach has been used when supplies of other vaccines are scarce. But giving intradermal shots requires more skill than is needed for more traditional immunizations.

One shot is probably enough to forestall severe symptoms in most people, and the dose-sparing strategy may work just as well. But its unclear whether a scaled-back regimen is enough to prevent infection, and if so, how long that immunity may last, federal health officials said.

Were in a data-free zone, said Dr. Emily Erbelding, an infectious diseases expert at the National Institutes of Health, who oversaw testing of Covid vaccines in special populations.

One oft-cited statistic says that the vaccine is 85 percent effective against monkeypox. That data derives not from trials of Jynneos, but from a small 1988 study that looked at the incidence of monkeypox among people who had been inoculated for smallpox earlier in their lives.

No large clinical trial of Jynneos as a monkeypox vaccine was conducted in humans before its approval. Instead, the F.D.A. relied on measures of antibody responses in small groups of people after immunization with Jynneos compared with those produced by ACAM2000, an earlier vaccine for smallpox.

In studies led by its manufacturer, Bavarian Nordic, two doses of Jynneos yielded antibody levels in humans that were about the same as those after one shot of ACAM2000.

Antibody levels after the first shot of Jynneos initially rose for two weeks and then remained flat until the second dose four weeks later, when they soared to very high levels higher than those recorded with ACAM2000.

Scientists read that to mean if the first dose is not followed by a second, the protection may not be long-lasting.

Ideally, a second dose would be administered if protection for more than that four-week period is desired, Dr. Yonts, who reviewed the data for the F.D.A. as a staff scientist, said.

She added that delaying the second dose to eight weeks might be reasonable. But if its going to be like six months, then I think that prioritization would lean more toward those that are more severely immunocompromised, she said.

Injecting one-fifth of a regular dose of Jynneos between skin layers, as the F.D.A. suggested on Thursday, may be effective, according to limited research. The skin has many more of the immune cells that respond to vaccines.

But the research is very limited. Scientists at the N.I.H. had planned to test the dose-sparing strategy in a clinical trial set to begin in a few weeks. It is unclear whether those plans will be shelved or sped up.

Information about how Jynneos performs in people with H.I.V., particularly in those with severe immune problems, was already scant. In one study conducted by Bavarian Nordic, antibody response to vaccination tended to be diminished: At 28 days after the first shot, 67 percent of those with H.I.V. produced antibodies, compared with 84 percent of uninfected people.

While Dr. Yonts said the data from that trial was not conclusive, reduced antibody response is often seen among immunocompromised people given other vaccines. While evaluating Covid vaccines, for example, researchers found that patients with H.I.V. were more likely to have breakthrough infections.

Individuals with severe or moderate immune suppression are recommended for additional doses of common vaccines, said Keri Althoff, an epidemiologist at the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health, who led the Covid vaccine study. As immune suppression increases, the response to the vaccines does decrease.

The C.D.C. and the New York City Department of Health say Jynneos is safe for people with H.I.V., but the agencies have not addressed its effectiveness in that population.

By contrast, health officials in Britain say that for people who are H.I.V. positive or have any other condition or treatment leading to a weakened immune system, the vaccine may not protect you as well.

The vaccines package insert also notes that immunocompromised people may have a diminished immune response.

Two shots may be very important in this population, which is something that is not actually happening in the public health response, said Dr. Chloe Orkin, an infectious disease physician at Queen Mary University of London, referring to immunocompromised people.

But until more doses are available, state and local health departments may not have much of a choice other than to stick with scaled-back regimens.

In an environment of scarcity, we have to do everything we can to get the benefits of vaccine to the city as quickly as possible, said Patrick Gallahue, a spokesman for New York Citys health department, in a statement.

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Why Monkeypox Vaccine Shortage May Threaten the Immunocompromised - The New York Times

UK will run out of monkeypox vaccine in 10 to 20 days – The Guardian

August 11, 2022

The UK will run out of the monkeypox vaccine despite having one of the biggest number of cases worldwide, triggering warnings that the illness could become endemic.

The country looks likely to exhaust stocks of the vaccine in the next two to three weeks, and then face a delay of almost a month before the next supplies arrive in late September.

An internal NHS England letter has disclosed that there are just 8,300 doses of vaccine left. That has prompted fears among sexual health doctors that the NHS will be unable to inoculate people, including those at highest risk of getting the disease.

Dr Claire Dewsnap, the president of the British Association for Sexual Health and HIV (BASHH), said the letter accurately portrayed the looming unavailability of the vaccine, called Imvanex.

By current estimates, only 8,300 vaccines remain available, with 5,000 earmarked for London, where demand has been the greatest, making it likely that the remaining number of vaccines will run out in approximately 10 to 20 days, leaving a gap in supply until the next shipment arrives in September.

Without urgent action to procure more vaccines and avoid a gap in supply, we risk the disease spreading further throughout the UK and becoming an endemic public health challenge, Dewsnap said.

She praised the Department of Health and Social Care (DHSC) for ordering the vaccine early on in the outbreak, but warned that there is an insufficient supply of vaccines to meet demand and that a significant number of people eligible for vaccination against monkeypox are yet to be vaccinated.

The BASHH estimates that 250,000 doses of vaccine must be procured in order to vaccinate approximately 125,000 eligible people, yet the government has only procured over 100,000 to date.

Dewsnap criticised the DHSC, NHS bosses and the UK Health Security Agency (UKHSA), which has been monitoring the outbreak, for what she said were key failings in their response so far.

In addition to supply challenges, the current vaccination rollout is too slow; with vaccine access hampered by a lack of centralised leadership to coordinate across the various responsible agencies and providers, alongside poor communication about the vaccine to affected communities, she added.

The NHS England letter, which was obtained by the Financial Times, urged the health service to urgently draw up a plan to address the looming three to four-week shortage, bearing in mind these acute supply constraints and the urgency of reaching those at highest risk.

It added: This is clearly all very difficult and very sensitive, and not a position that any of us would like to be in.

One sexual health doctor in London told the Guardian their clinic was likely to run out of the vaccine next week.

My understanding is that there are about 5,100 doses of vaccine left in London for all patients until likely the end of September when 100,000 doses are due to arrive in the country, they said.

Our clinic has only a few doses left that we are having to give out opportunistically and we have been told we are unlikely to get any more doses, so we will likely run out next week.

Britain had recorded 2,859 cases of monkeypox by last Thursday, mainly in men who have sex with men. Worldwide there have been about 30,000 cases and nine deaths.

Clinics are having to shelve plans for vaccination drives as they cannot get the vaccine, the doctor added. At one point the aim was to be vaccinating 10,000 patients a week. Clinics have waiting lists of patients who have been identified as at high risk of infection who have not been vaccinated yet. They are trying to honour appointments for people who have already been booked for the vaccine but are unable to book in new patients.

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The NHS in London has been given the bulk of the vaccine supplies received so far from the manufacturer Bavarian Nordic, as it was the initial centre of the outbreak. However, doctors in Brighton, which has a large gay population, are understood to be concerned that they have been given too few doses, given the demand they are facing.

Dr Mary Ramsay, director of clinical programmes at the UKHSA, told the FT: The thousands of vaccines administered by the NHS to date among those at highest risk of exposure should have a significant impact on the transmission of the virus.

But the London sexual health specialist said: The feeling is that vaccination is the only way we will contain the outbreak long-term. Clearly the longer that it takes to vaccinate the people at risk the more chance the outbreak has to grow and extend.

The DHSC and UKHSA have been approached for comment.

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UK will run out of monkeypox vaccine in 10 to 20 days - The Guardian

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