Category: Vaccine

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To understand mRNA vaccine hesitancy, stop calling the public anti-science – Nature.com

February 28, 2024

This study was part of a project labeled as a National Research Priority by the National Orientation Committee for Therapeutic Trials and other research on COVID-19 (CAPNET). The investigators would like to acknowledge ANRS|Emerging infectious diseases for their scientific support and the French Ministry of Health and Prevention and the French Ministry of Higher Education, Research and Innovation for their funding and support. This work was also supported by a grant from the Agence Nationale de la Recherche (ANR-22- CE36-0015-01).

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To understand mRNA vaccine hesitancy, stop calling the public anti-science - Nature.com

Fact Check: No, COVID-Vaccinated People Aren’t Banned From Giving Blood – Medpage Today

February 28, 2024

CLAIM: The American Red Cross banned people who have received a COVID-19 vaccine from donating blood because it is "tainted."

THE FACTS: No potential donors are deemed ineligible solely due to COVID-19 vaccines, a Red Cross spokesperson told the Associated Press. People who know they received a COVID-19 vaccine that is approved by the FDA may immediately donate blood if they are healthy. Those who received vaccines that contain a weakened form of the virus that causes COVID-19 -- or people who aren't sure -- are asked to wait 2 weeks before donating.

Social media users are misrepresenting a question the Red Cross asks potential blood donors to make false claims about donor eligibility and COVID-19 vaccine safety.

Many posts include a screenshot of the question as it appears on the Red Cross's RapidPass system. It asks: "Have you EVER had a Coronavirus (COVID-19) vaccine?" Below the question are instructions for potential donors who answer yes to call the Red Cross "before coming in to donate to determine if this will affect your eligibility."

"UPDATED eligibility requirements from @RedCross now BANS certain covid VACCINATED people from donating blood!" reads one post on X (formerly Twitter) that had received more than 3,200 likes and shares as of Friday. "(Another conspiracy theory proved true!) PURE BLOODS BE PROUD. The rest of you...retweet to warn your tainted friends and family."

Other widespread posts don't make claims about supposed bans but imply that the question is proof COVID-19 vaccines are dangerous.

"I thought the vax was 'safe and effective'?" another X post asks. "What info are they hiding from us?" It had received approximately 42,000 likes and 23,000 shares.

But the additional scrutiny has nothing to do with the safety of the vaccines. It is to assure that the COVID-19 virus is not present in blood being donated, as there is a risk that live attenuated vaccines -- those that contain a weakened form of the virus they protect against -- could pass the virus through blood.

The Red Cross follows FDA eligibility guidelines for blood donation. Its website states that people who received a non-replicating, inactivated, or mRNA-based COVID-19 vaccine manufactured by Pfizer, Moderna, Janssen/Johnson & Johnson, AstraZeneca, or Novavax can donate blood immediately if they are in good health.

Those who received vaccines that don't meet these requirements -- or if they don't know -- are asked to wait 2 weeks before donating. This includes COVID-19 vaccines that are live attenuated, none of which are currently approved for use in the U.S.

"There is no reason why a potential donor would be declared absolutely ineligible solely because they received a COVID vaccine," Daniel Parra, a spokesperson for the Red Cross, told the AP in an email.

The Red Cross's blood donation eligibility guidelines regarding COVID-19 vaccines have appeared on its website in their current form since early 2021. Potential donors who have received other vaccines that contain small amounts of live viruses, such as those for chicken pox, polio, and yellow fever, are also required to wait before donating blood.

"Basically, if you received an FDA-approved COVID vaccine, you remember the name of the vaccine manufacturer, and you are feeling healthy, you won't have a problem," Parra wrote. "If you don't know the name of your vaccine manufacturer, you will be deferred for 2 weeks, because it's not possible to determine with 100% certainty that you received an eligible vaccine."

COVID-19 vaccines are "safe and effective," according to the CDC. Blood donations from vaccinated people are not "tainted," and serious adverse events following vaccination are rare.

"Blood donations from individuals who have received a COVID-19 vaccine approved or authorized for use in the U.S. are safe for transfusion," reads a joint statement written last month by the Red Cross, America's Blood Centers, and the Association for the Advancement of Blood & Biotherapies.

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Fact Check: No, COVID-Vaccinated People Aren't Banned From Giving Blood - Medpage Today

Unintended consequences of NZ’s COVID vaccine mandates must inform future pandemic policy new research – The Conversation Indonesia

February 28, 2024

During the height of the COVID-19 pandemic, policy was being made in crisis management mode. Decisions had to be made faster than usual, and there was limited ability to undertake wider consultation and impact analysis.

Now the worst of the pandemic is over, we have the luxury of being able to reflect on what worked well and what didnt.

One of the more controversial policies implemented during the height of the pandemic was the vaccine mandates. Thousands of workers across a range of professions had to get vaccinated to keep their jobs.

This mandate presented a trade-off between public health considerations and the right of individuals to refuse medical treatment and earn a living in their chosen profession.

Our research looked at whether these vaccine mandates increased COVID-19 vaccination rates among these workers, and what their employment, earnings and workplace experiences were.

The stated purpose of the mandates was to increase vaccination rates among these workers to ensure the continuity of public services.

Read more: COVID vaccines don't violate the Nuremberg Code. Here's how to convince the doubters

In reality, the mandates had limited effect on increasing vaccine uptake. But they had a substantive negative effect on the employment, earnings and wellbeing of unvaccinated health workers.

Vaccination rates among healthcare, education and corrections workers were already high when the government announced the mandates in October 2021.

Almost 90% of healthcare workers and 86% of corrections workers had already received two doses of the vaccine. The share among education workers was somewhat lower (82%), but they also did not have early access to the vaccine. There were only six weeks between the vaccine becoming available to everyone over 12 years and the mandates being announced.

While vaccination rates among these mandated workers did increase after the mandates were announced, the data shows a continuation of an upward trend rather than a jump in uptake.

It wont surprise anyone that people dont like being told what to do. And this appears to have some bearing on mandatory vaccine uptake.

One German survey found just over 3% of people said they would not want the COVID-19 vaccination if it was voluntary. But more than 16% said they would not want to get vaccinated if it was mandatory.

A consequence of vaccine mandates is that they can erode trust in government and provoke more resistance. This erosion of trust could potentially strengthen anti-vaccination sentiment generally and reduce uptake, not just of COVID-19 vaccinations, but also other vaccines.

This outcome is especially concerning given research has found New Zealands routine childhood immunisation rates have decreased since the pandemic.

In addition to not causing a noticeable increase in vaccination rates, the mandates also had negative consequences for the employment and earnings of unvaccinated health workers.

Their employment rate fell by 15% and their earnings fell by 19%, compared with vaccinated health workers and those not subject to the mandates.

Read more: Parents were fine with sweeping school vaccination mandates five decades ago but COVID-19 may be a different story

Even after the health worker mandates were lifted in September 2022, the employment and earnings of unvaccinated workers never fully recovered.

This exacerbated existing health worker shortages. Closed borders and a global shortage of healthcare workers meant fewer moved into the health sector compared with the number leaving.

The effect of the mandates on health workers also went beyond financial consequences.

Affected health workers talked to us about the loss and ongoing trauma they have experienced. Those opposed to mandates are often incorrectly labelled as anti-vaxxers, or even conspiracy theorists.

All health workers we spoke to were pro-vaccination, but had legitimate reasons for not completing, or struggling to complete, the required vaccinations. They had researched the vaccine and made informed decisions based on their circumstances.

Some health workers pointed out that the case for mandates was not strong based on available evidence. While the vaccine reduces symptom severity, its ability to prevent transmission is currently limited.

As one health worker said:

I looked at the Australian data and couldnt see the logic of me potentially being exposed to another vaccine where my potential benefit was so low [] the evidence wasnt really strong.

Some workers had health conditions that put them at elevated risk from the vaccine. Or they had a history of adverse reactions to vaccines. But the mandates meant they either had to get vaccinated, sometimes against their doctors advice, or lose their jobs. While some medical exemptions were available, the threshold for these was very high.

In addition, even those with medical exemptions faced stigma. One health worker who got an exemption after suffering a stroke following their vaccination, described peoples reaction upon showing them the exemption.

That look on peoples faces, it was disgust [] it was really, really awful.

As another health worker explained:

Were supposed to be a caring profession. Nothing about this is caring [] Due to no fault of my own, I have now been labelled an anti-vaxxer and anti-science, and in some peoples opinion, not worthy of calling myself a nurse. This hurts me immensely. This is what mandates have done. There is no room for individual circumstances.

The people we spoke with said they lost their sense of control, and it eroded their trust in the health system and government.

What does this tell us about the use of vaccine mandates during future pandemics?

In the context of high voluntary compliance, mandates should be used judiciously. Mandating something is not always the most effective way to get people to do something for the greater good.

During the COVID-19 pandemic, a strong motivator for vaccination was the feel-good factor of knowing you were protecting yourself and others.

Ironically, the increase in distrust that resulted from the use of mandates in the COVID-19 pandemic may actually lower voluntary vaccine uptake in future pandemics.

As one health worker summed it up:

Someone whos been vaccinated badly, the trauma of that its not just them, its their entire social circle, its their entire whnau. Youre seeding distrust in the health system, not just for COVID vaccinations, but the whole system, everything to do with medicine and the whole immunisation programme [] if theres a policy thats as big as a mandate for a whole population or health professionals, you really need to think about what are the unintended consequences.

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Unintended consequences of NZ's COVID vaccine mandates must inform future pandemic policy new research - The Conversation Indonesia

Huckster Behind Willy Wonka Event Also Sells AI-Written Vaccine Conspiracy Books – Rolling Stone

February 28, 2024

Victoria Jones/PA Images/Getty Images

Parents are furious at a man who charged them as much as 35 (around $44) per ticket for a Willy Wonka-themed family event in Glasgow, Scotland this weekend. Thats because the immersive experience sold to them by a sketchy company called House of Illuminati turned out to be little more than a few set props and unprepared actors in a mostly barren warehouse with no chocolate whatsoever.

Customers, some of whom traveled from afar and waited in a long line with their children, were incensed enough to call the police after Willys Chocolate Experience turned out to be a ripoff and the organizer, Billy Coull, hastily closed it down on Saturday afternoon. Pictures from the botched tour went viral, in part because of the contrast between the lavish, colorful AI-generated artwork used in promotional materials and the depressing, laughably slapdash reality that greeted young fans of Roald Dahls fanciful novel and its various film adaptations.

Those taken in by the misleading promotion mobilized for refunds and press coverage in a Facebook group this week, alternately griping and joking about the candy-coated catastrophe and referring to Coull by crude nicknames like Willy Wanker in memes. But while Coulls attempt to cash in on a beloved childrens book is already the stuff of local legend, the rest of his digital footprint reveals a new kind of aspiring entrepreneur that may become all too common: the AI abuser.

Coull, who did not return a request for comment, seems to be the sole employee of House of Illuminati, one of several companies he has registered. (It wasincorporated in November; the company did not respond to a request for comment.) The House of Illuminati website, like the Willys Chocolate Experience website, is packed with AI-generated art advertising unparalleled immersive experiences such as Mystique Galas and Enchanted Retreats. The descriptions of the company and its supposed events are themselves almost certainly written by an AI chatbot, according to analysis by the detection tool GPTZero. (The text on the Willys Chocolate Experience page is also likely AI-written.)

Since the Wonka fiasco, Coull has taken steps to scrub various social accounts, taking down both a LinkedIn profile and a YouTube channel where it appears he presented himself as something of a business guru and life coach. His personal site, also deleted, touted a number of dubious academic degrees and said he worked as a consultant for a brand called Empowerity, which is now defunct. As of 2021, he was co-directing a Glasgow foodbank that he claimed fed thousands of families a month that, too, no longer exists, and some Glaswegians suspect it was not entirely above board.

While deleting much of the material that would lead internet sleuths from the Wonka incident to these earlier projects, Coull has, perhaps surprisingly, not shut down the entirely AI-spawned House of Illuminati business. The companys Facebook page continues to promise refunds, and some customers say theyve gotten their money back. Neither has he pulled down his Instagram account, which contains only a few posts hyping independently published books available on Amazon. These include titles such as Selling Innocence, a novel about a human trafficking survivor who navigates a treacherous landscape filled with politicians, clergymen, celebrities, and billionaires. The language hints at themes of the QAnon conspiracist movement and misinformation about the late sex offender Jeffrey Epstein.

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The 16 books on Coulls Amazon author page were all published in the summer of 2023 some of them on the very same day. The synopsis for each is AI-generated, according to GPTZero analysis, and so is the text between the covers, as one irate reviewer has complained. Coull couldnt even be bothered to pen his own author bio, which declares him a rising star in the literary world who weaves spellbinding tales that delve into the mysterious realms of fictional thrillers and gripping conspiracies. While some of the stories are generic puzzle-driven plots in the vein of The DaVinci Code, others like Selling Innocence are geared toward paranoid right-wing politics. Operation Inoculation, for example, promises a conspiratorial journey into vaccination truth related to the so-called deep state, in which the carefully constructed facade of the vaccination campaign begins to crumble.

All in all, then, it looks as if Coull leaves a long trail of fishy schemes dating back many years but has lately used chatbots and AI image generators to expand the scope and ambition of his flimsy ventures. While its not clear how many Amazon shoppers have fallen for the bogus novels, the Wonka affair demonstrated what can happen when a corner-cutting huckster gets carried away with his AI-enhanced pitch. This time, it just meant an inconvenience and some confused kids, and if Coull compensates the families, he will probably avoid more serious repercussions. The next person to sell a purely AI fantasy for top dollar? They could make Fyre Festival look like a well-planned weekend in the Bahamas.

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Huckster Behind Willy Wonka Event Also Sells AI-Written Vaccine Conspiracy Books - Rolling Stone

Measles? So on-brand for Florida’s descent into the 1950s. – Tampa Bay Times

February 28, 2024

Ooh, we love to regress around here. If there is a way to slip socially backward into the pages of an Archies Double Digest, Florida will sip happily from that malted milkshake.

For instance, the average Floridian might assume lately that they had inadvertently time-traveled and woken up in 1952. Saddle shoes! Oppenheimer! Vaccine-preventable communicable diseases!

Thats right. Today we are taking a break from fretting over the Jell-O molding of Florida education and pivoting to measles. Measles. This disease that most commonly harms children was eradicated in 2000. Yet, thanks to nationwide vaccine skepticism inflated during the COVID-19 crisis, the infection is making a dreadful comeback. Childhood immunization rates have hit a 10-year low.

Nine new measles cases have been reported in Broward County, followed by another Monday in Polk County cue cringe as measles creeps closer to Tampa Bay. Only two cases were reported in Florida last year, linked to international travel. As of this February, a total of 35 measles cases were reported nationwide. Thats too many instances of an illness with a vaccine introduced around the time Don Draper discovered meditation.

Now, I have not had measles; in the 1980s, my parents let a doctor stick me with a needle and fork over a lollipop. Thanks, Mom and Dad! But to recap, getting measles sounds miserable. Measles comes with a full-body rash; red, watery, swollen eyes; cold symptoms; fever; aches; pains and bumps inside the mouth. About one in five children with measles ends up in the hospital, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Patients can suffer brain swelling, long-term complications and death.

What to do? Well, lets lead with the official advice, not the Florida Vibes Advice:

The CDC urges vaccinations, of course. It also says school officials should keep unvaccinated children who have not had the disease home for three weeks. States do not have to heed this advice, though.

Enter Florida, where leaders are thirsty for any chance to challenge the federal government to a greaser brawl. Surgeon general Joseph Ladapo has no track record of being surgeon-general-y, dragging Floridians through the pandemic with unsubstantiated scientific theories and fringe rhetoric. As a noted vaccine skeptic deployed by chaos agent Gov. Ron DeSantis, Ladapos reaction to measles is no shocker.

Rather than encouraging the CDCs simple, life-saving measures, he sent a letter to parents at Manatee Bay Elementary, site of the outbreak. It is normally recommended to keep vulnerable kids out of school, he wrote. But in Florida, its up to parents to do whatever feels neato.

The message is clear time and time again: Parents, when it comes to public health, you are on your own. Our leaders are so inconsistently fetishistic about parental rights that they will confoundingly put children in harms way to win political clout. This state, with its roster of Riverdale High misfits, is never going to lead with clear and accurate control.

Please, if at all possible, get your kids vaccinated. Get yourself vaccinated. Seek medical advice from doctors, not websites with animated gifs. Keep your sick kids home. Time away from the classroom is inconvenient, yes, but a few weeks of remote learning is not the same as the never-ending social isolation of the pandemic.

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I fear in 2024 we have become spoiled. Americans have lived without so many diseases for so long that we have no context for the holy mess they stand to create. Lets interrogate our privilege as a developed nation and once again embrace medical advancements. Lets keep iron lungs out of style. Lets cancel whooping cough. Polio is a no-lio. Diphtheria, get out of here-ia! And, uh, something called Hib? Does anyone remember Hib? No, didnt think so. Can we keep it that way?

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Measles? So on-brand for Florida's descent into the 1950s. - Tampa Bay Times

Elusive immune cells dwelling in ‘hidden niches’ of the bone marrow may be key to SARS-CoV-2 vaccination – Medical Xpress

February 28, 2024

This article has been reviewed according to ScienceX's editorial process and policies. Editors have highlighted the following attributes while ensuring the content's credibility:

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Although immunologists have developed a deep reservoir of knowledge illuminating how antibodies respond to vaccination against SARS-CoV-2, little is known about the elusive cells that produce infection-fighting antibodies.

Despite antibodies being among the first responders when infectious agents invade the body, they're produced by mystifying cells that are complicated by two things: residence in a hidden niche and possessing a convoluted namelong-lived plasma cells, or simply LLPCs.

The trouble with developing a more intimate knowledge of LLPCs is that they dwell deep in the bone marrow in specialized compartments and are difficult to study in humans. A plasma cell develops from an immune system B cell and is a type of white blood cell.

Having a better understanding of these cells would not only aid the development of better vaccines but would bolster scientific understanding of the immune system itself. Now, a new round of research has both dispelled some of the mystery about LLPCs, and at the same time, has opened a new window of understanding into vaccination against SARS-CoV-2.

What scientists wanted to know is how these mystifying cells respond to SARS-CoV-2 vaccination and whether the team could develop a technique to trace and document the inoculation response. In so doing, researchers would have firsthand evidence of the cascade of molecular events occurring deep within the bone marrow in response to SARS-CoV-2 immunization.

The team of researchers hailed from several centers in the United States and was led by scientists at the Vaccine Research Center of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases in Bethesda, Maryland.

"We believe that [our technique] provides the technical knowledge required to study this extremely critical yet sparsely studied immunological compartment that mediates long-term serological immunity," lead author Madhu Prabhakaran wrote in Science Translational Medicine.

LLPCs originate in the body's germinal centers, which are highly specialized sites in lymphoid tissue. But these LLPCs literally pack up and leaverelocating to "survival niches" in the bone marrow where they take up residence, persisting in these hideaways for decades. From their survival niches, LLPCs secrete antibodies and help guard against infection over long periods of time.

It is because of their persistence that long-lived plasma cells can offer insights into how well any given vaccine is inducing antibodies and immunity. Yet, it is also because LLPCs migrate to tucked away sites that it has been extraordinarily difficult to study them.

With a newly devised technique that they developed, Vaccine Research Center scientists and their collaborators report being able to detect and capture LLPCs that produced antibodies against a specific pathogen, in this case, SARS-CoV-2.

Writing in Science Translational Medicine, Prabhakaran and collaborators report that they used "an antigen-specific LLPC isolation technique," a way of capturing the elusive cells. The team then purified SARS-CoV-2 spike protein and receptor binding domain-specific LLPCs "from the bone marrow of lab animals and determined that their antibody repertoires matched those of memory B cells in the peripheral blood."

Prior to the research by Prabhakaran and colleagues said it was unclear whether SARS-CoV-2 spike protein vaccination was able to elicit and maintain LLPCs. But with a highly sensitive method to identify and isolate antigen-specific LLPCs by tethering antibodies secreted by these cells onto the cell surface, Prabhakaran and colleagues made a tantalizing discovery: The team found that it takes more than one dose of adjuvanted SARS-CoV-2 spike protein vaccine to induce spike protein-specific LLPC reservoirs. The study was conducted in nonhuman primates.

"Using this method, we found that two doses of adjuvanted SARS-CoV-2 spike protein vaccination are able to induce spike protein-specific LLPC reservoirs enriched for receptor binding domain specificities in the bone marrow of nonhuman primates that are detectable for several months after vaccination," Prabhakaran wrote. "Many of the antibodies secreted by these LLPCs also exhibited improved neutralization and cross-reactivity."

The technique devised by Prabhakaran and colleagues demonstrated that antibodies produced by LLPCs can be readily detected in the laboratory. The nonhuman primate in the research that helped the team develop and hone their technique was rhesus macaques.

The animals received an adjuvanted vaccine based on the spike protein of SARS-CoV-2. Over an eight-month longitudinal study, the team discovered how doses of the vaccine-induced reservoirs of LLPCs specific to the spike protein, which produced powerful neutralizing antibodies.

In their paper, the team said that questions remain about how precisely LLPCs are seeded and maintained, hence the need for further studies, they said.

"These findings establish our method as a means to sensitively and reliably detect rare antigen-specific LLPCs and additionally demonstrate that adjuvanted SARS-CoV-2 spike protein vaccination establishes spike protein-specific LLPC reservoirs," Prabhakaran concluded.

More information: Madhu Prabhakaran et al, Adjuvanted SARS-CoV-2 spike protein vaccination elicits long-lived plasma cells in nonhuman primates, Science Translational Medicine (2024). DOI: 10.1126/scitranslmed.add5960

Journal information: Science Translational Medicine

2024 Science X Network

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Elusive immune cells dwelling in 'hidden niches' of the bone marrow may be key to SARS-CoV-2 vaccination - Medical Xpress

What is ‘immune amnesia?’ This long-term side effect of measles is newly relevant. – National Geographic

February 28, 2024

As the United States sees an increase in measles casesincluding 23 confirmed cases between December 1, 2023 and January 23, 2024, and seven more in Floridathe Centers for Disease Control and Prevention cautions that these outbreaks reflect a growing global threat.

Measles, known for its characteristic red rash, is caused by the morbillivirus virus, and is spread through the air. For every10 unvaccinated people who are exposed to the virus, nine of them will get sick, making it one of the most contagious viruses in existence. Although most measles cases are mild, an infection can cause several potentially serious complications, including conditions that emerge months to years after the initial infection.

Before the introduction of the measles vaccine in 1963, the U.S. had an estimatedthree-four million cases every year, which resulted in roughly 48,000 hospitalizations, 400-500 deaths, and 1,000 cases of encephalitis. After the introduction of the vaccine, these numbers dropped by more than 99 percent.

In a sense, we are victims of our own success, because when its out of sight and out of mind, its not considered a problem, says Luis Ostrosky, an infectious disease physician and epidemiologist at UTHealth Houston.

One of the major issues is that given how contagious measles is, preventing outbreaks requires that a very high percentage of people need to be vaccinated. As Camille Sabella, an infectious disease physician at the Cleveland Clinic, explains, unless a community has a very high rate of vaccination, you are going to have outbreaks, he says. It really has a way of finding the people who are susceptible.

Susceptible people include children who are too young to have received their first dose of the vaccine, immunocompromised people, who are ineligible for the vaccine, as well as children who have only received one dose; two doses are needed for maximum effectiveness.

Measles is characterized by a fever, cough, runny nose, red, watery eyes, and a bright red rash. People who are infected are contagious for up to four days before the onset of the rash, and for about four days after.

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Although most people who get measles will make a full recovery, the disease has significant morbidity associated with it, and significant mortality as well, Sabella says.

According to the CDC, one out of five unvaccinated people who get measles will need to be hospitalized. One out of every 20 children who get measles will develop pneumonia, which is the leading cause of death from measles in children. The other major risk is encephalitisbrain swellingwhich affects an estimated one out of 1,000 children within a week of being infected with measles.

A small number of people infected with the measles virus, may later develop a condition called subacute sclerosing panencephalitis (SSPE), which occurs when the virus infects the brain, where it remains dormant until it progresses to SSPE years later. SSPE is characterized by cognitive decline, behavior changes, issues with motor functioningsuch as uncontrollable movements and seizuresand blindness.

In the later stages of the disease, patients may lose their ability to walk, or go into a coma. There is no cure for SSPE. It is 100 percent fatal, says Rik de Swart, a virologist at Erasmus University Rotterdam, in the Netherlands. It is really a terrible disease. For every 100,000 cases of measles, there will be between four and 11 cases of SSPE, with these case numbers rising to 18 for children who get measles before the age of one.

In the decades following the introduction of the measles vaccine, the risk of dying in childhood dropped between 30 to 86 percent (depending on the country), far more than could be attributed to a decline in measles-related deaths.

Scientists discovered that the vaccine saved lives because in addition to measles protection, children were no longer dying from other common childhood infections, such asdiarrhea or respiratory illnesses.

It has been known for decades that those who recover from measles become immunosuppressed, says Mansour Haeryfar, a professor of immunology at Western University in London, Ontario, and are much more vulnerable to dying from other unrelated infections.

Researchers figured out that although considered a respiratory virusbecause it is spread through the airthe measles virus infects and kills the memory cells of the immune system, explains de Swart, who co-authored the paper which was published in Nature Communications in 2018.

These memory cells are responsible for recognizing and destroying pathogens it has encountered in the past. Once the virus destroys them, they are replaced with cells that predominantly recognize the measles virus. This enables the body to fight off another measles infection, but impairs its ability to recognize other common pathogens, such as the common cold or the influenza virus.

However, as de Swart notes, the good news is that this effect is not permanent. Its not like you lose everything, de Swart says. If you are given time, and you are not, at the wrong moment, exposed to the wrong pathogen, your system will restore to its normal self.

This immune amnesia is most pronounced in the months following a measles infection but can persist for years.

Given how measles can suppress the immune response, experts fear that an increase in cases will make future pandemics more severe.

In a 2021 study, researchers modeled the impact of lower measles vaccination rates on pandemics and found that relatively small drops in vaccination rates can make it harder to contain another pandemic due to immune amnesia.

You can believe you have herd immunity, but because of a small effect of a lack of measles vaccination, you dont, says Miguel Muoz, a professor at the University of Granada, and one of the authors of the 2021 paper. The results can be dramatic.

The measles vaccine, which is administered in two dosesthe first between the ages of 12 and 15 months and the second between years four and sixoffers long-lasting protection against infection.

One dose of the vaccine is about 93 percent effective at preventing infection; two doses provide 97 percent protection, which lasts a lifetime.

It is one of the most effective vaccines that we have available to us, Ostrosky says. We only very rarely need to revaccinate someone. For those people who arent sure about their vaccination status, their immunity against measles can be confirmed through laboratory testing, or in lieu of testing, they can receive another dose of the vaccine.

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What is 'immune amnesia?' This long-term side effect of measles is newly relevant. - National Geographic

Takeda taps Biological E to ramp up Qdenga manufacturing capacity on quest to make 100M doses a year – FiercePharma

February 28, 2024

With a new manufacturing partnership in India, Takeda has added newfirepower to its stated goal of producing 100 million doses ofdengue fever vaccine Qdengaannuallyby the end of the decade.

Takeda linked up with Indias Biological E. Limited (BE) to speed up access to Qdenga. The new partner will producemulti-dose vials that will be ready for endemic countries to buy by 2030 at the latest, the Japanese drugmaker saidin arelease.

The multi-dose vials offer several advantages for national vaccine programs, Takeda explained, including cutting packaging and storage expenses.

Under the deal, BE will scale up to a manufacturing capacity of 50 million doses a year, helping Takeda move toward its effort to produce 100 million doses annually. Takeda, for its part, manufactures the vaccine at its Singen, Germany, facility and through its long-time partnership with CDMO IDT Biologika GmbH.

The India-based manufacturer has deep expertise in vaccine manufacturing and longstanding support of public health programs around the world, the head of Takedas global vaccine business unit, Gary Dubin, M.D., said in the release.

So far, the company has launched Qdenga in private markets inEurope, Indonesia and Thailand as well as in private and some public programs inArgentina and Brazil. There has also been strong initial demand in private markets, Takeda said in an earnings presentation earlier this month.

The vaccine has made it onto some government immunization programs, including in Brazil. The company has engaged in productive discussions with governments in other endemic regions to add the shot to their national immunization programs, Takeda added in its presentation.

Meanwhile, Takeda pulled its FDA bid last year after the agency requested additional data that the drugmaker figured it couldnt produce within the review cycle.

At the time, the company said its future plan for the U.S. would be further evaluated given the need for travelers and those in dengue-endemic areas of the U.S. such as Puerto Rico.

The company has pegged its peak Qdenga sales projection at $1.6 billion to $2 billion.After generics hit Takeda'spopular attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) drug Vyvanse last year, Takeda will rely more on Qdenga and other recent launches to pick up the slack.

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Takeda taps Biological E to ramp up Qdenga manufacturing capacity on quest to make 100M doses a year - FiercePharma

Massive study finds links between COVID-19 vaccination and very rare medical conditions – Cosmos

February 28, 2024

Researchers have found a link between COVID-19 vaccinations and very rare neurological, heart and blood related medical conditions.

An international study was conducted on 99 million COVID-19 vaccine recipients and offers new data on vaccine benefits and possible side effects.

Nevertheless, the researchers on this study and immunology experts still unequivocally support the COVID-19 vaccination program, with the findings translating to an extremely small risk.

COVID is less severe, but elderly still at high risk

Getting COVID disease increases the risk of these conditions much more than a vaccine, says Julie Leask a social scientist specialising in immunisation at the University of Sydney.

That is why, like with many medicines, we weigh up risks against benefits, she says.

The research, published inVaccine, has identified vaccine safety signals for myocarditis (inflammation of the heart muscle), pericarditis (swelling of the thin sac covering the heart), Guillain-Barr syndrome (where the immune system attacks the nerves) and cerebral venous sinus thrombosis (a type of blood clot in the brain). A potential new acute disseminated encephalomyelitis (inflammation and swelling in the brain and spinal cord) signal was also detected but requires further investigation.

Based on comprehensive data and numerous publications, I firmly advocate that the risk of adverse events remains substantially lower with vaccination compared to contracting SARS-CoV-2 (COVID-19), says Vinod Balasubramaniam a Molecular Virologist at Monash University Malaysia.

Considering the scale of vaccination efforts, with 13 billion doses administered and approximately 2,000 reported cases of adverse events, COVID-19 vaccines have contributed significantly to preventing over 19 million deaths globally, including three million in the United States alone.

Thus, vaccination remains the vastly safer choice for protecting against COVID-19, says Balasubramaniam.

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Massive study finds links between COVID-19 vaccination and very rare medical conditions - Cosmos

British mom who lost 6-year-old son urges vaccinations as measles outbreak spreads to Tampa Bay Area – FOX 13 Tampa

February 28, 2024

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A grieving mother brings her message about measles all the way from England to Tampa Bay. FOX 13's Aaron Mesmer reports.

TAMPA, Fla. - As a small measles outbreak spreads across Florida, with state health officials confirming a case in Polk County Monday, a grieving mother is bringing her message about vaccinations all the way from England to Tampa Bay.

The measles case in Polk County marked at least the ninth case in Florida this month, following eight cases at an elementary school in Broward County.

"It's a disease that shouldn't still be here," said Gemma Larkman-Jones, a mom who lost her 6-year-old son following a measles infection.

READ: Long COVID is more prevalent in these states, CDC data shows

Larkman-Jones spoke to FOX 13 from her home in London, England and said she wanted to get her son, Samuel, vaccinated for the measles, but was advised by doctors to briefly delay his measles, mumps and rubella, or MMR, vaccine. During that delay, Samuel caught measles when he was two years old.

Samuel recovered after a couple weeks and seemed to be fine. But four years later, Larkman-Jones said her son suddenly began having trouble with his balance and memory. A few months after that, he was admitted into the hospital and lost the ability to walk, talk and eat. Doctors determined he had a rare form of measles that slowly attacks the brain.

Pictured: Gemma Larkman-Jones with her son, Samuel.

A few days after he was hospitalized, Samuel passed away.

"I knew that you could go blind, and I knew that you could go deaf, but I didn't know it had other complications," Larkman-Jones said. "I don't want one other family to have to go through this unnecessarily."

READ: After child lead poisonings, FDA asked to require testing for heavy metals in baby food

That's why she gets so concerned about measles outbreaks, even ones happening halfway around the world, in Florida.

Following the first confirmed measles cases in Broward County, Florida Surgeon General Dr. Joseph Ladapo released a letter acknowledging unvaccinated students are commonly advised to stay home for 21 days during an outbreak because 90 percent of unvaccinated people who are exposed to measles will catch the virus.

Ladapo, however, is leaving it up to parents to decide whether to keep their kids home from school because of "the high immunity rate in the community, as well as the burden on families and educational cost of healthy children missing school."

Some Florida doctors consider Ladapo's advice reckless.

"He is once again doing a real disservice to the population here in Florida and probably that population in the country as a whole for spreading misinformation," said USF Health Dr. Thomas Unnasch. "It's never too late to get them vaccinated and to protect them. And you're rolling the dice if you [leave them] unprotected."

The Florida Department of Health has not responded to an email request for comment about the measles cases.

Pictured: Florida Surgeon General Dr. Joseph Ladapo

Gemma, who wishes she had the chance to vaccinate Samuel, has turned her grief into action and has become a vaccine advocate, urging others to protect their children to avoid the same type of situation she's experienced.

"To vaccinate or not to vaccinate, you need to look at every single piece of information. Don't ask people on the internet. Look to your health care provider, your doctor," she told FOX 13, adding she wishes her son was still around to see the impact he's having around the world. "I always knew he would change the world, I just kind of thought he'd be here while doing it."

Health experts said concerns about the MMR vaccine contributing to autism were debunked years ago, with a British doctor charged with professional misconduct after promoting false research on the topic.

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British mom who lost 6-year-old son urges vaccinations as measles outbreak spreads to Tampa Bay Area - FOX 13 Tampa

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