From News Nation:
“Half of US adults have
received at least one COVID-19 shot”
Half of all adults in the U.S.
have received at least one COVID-19 shot, the government announced Sunday,
marking another milestone in the nation’s largest-ever vaccination campaign but
leaving more work to do to convince skeptical Americans to roll up their
sleeves.
Almost 130 million people 18 or
older have received at least one dose of a vaccine, or 50.4% of the total adult
population, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention reported. Almost 84
million adults, or about 32.5% of the population, have been fully vaccinated. The
U.S. cleared the 50% mark just a day after the reported global death toll from
the coronavirus topped a staggering 3 million, according to totals compiled by
Johns Hopkins University, though the actual number is believed to be
significantly higher. The country’s vaccination rate, at 61.6 doses
administered per 100 people, currently falls behind Israel, which leads among
countries with at least 5 million people with a rate of 119.2. The U.S. also
trails the United Arab Emirates, Chile and the United Kingdom, which is
vaccinating at a rate of 62 doses per 100 people, according to Our World in
Data, an online research site. The vaccine campaign offered hope in places like
Nashville, Tennessee, where the Music City Center bustled Sunday with vaccine
seekers. High demand for appointment-only shots at the convention center has
leveled off enough that walk-ins will be welcome starting this week. Amanda
Grimsley, who received her second shot, said she’s ready to see her 96-year-old
grandmother, who lives in Alabama and has been nervous about getting the
vaccine after having a bad reaction to a flu shot. “It’s a little emotional. I
haven’t been able to see my grandmother in a year and a half almost,” said
Grimsley, 35. “And that’s the longest my entire family has ever gone without
seeing her. And we’ll be seeing her in mid-May now.”
The states with the highest
vaccination rates have a history of voting Democratic and supporting President
Joe Biden in the 2020 election: New Hampshire at the top, with 71.1%, followed
by New Mexico, Connecticut, Massachusetts and Maine, CDC data show. The demand
has not been the same in many areas of Tennessee — particularly, rural ones. Tennessee
sits in the bottom four states for rates of adults getting at least one shot,
at 40.8%. It’s trailed only by Louisiana, Alabama and Mississippi — three other
Southern states that lean Republican and voted for Donald Trump last fall. Vaccination
rates do not always align with how states vote. But polling from The Associated
Press-NORC Center for Public Affairs Research has shown trends that link
political leanings and attitudes about the vaccines and other pandemic-related
issues. or definitely not get vaccinated, compared with 12% of Democrats.
Similarly, a third of rural Americans said they were leaning against getting
shots, while fewer than a fourth of people living in cities and suburbs shared
that hesitancy.
Overall, willingness to get
vaccinated has risen, polling shows. In January, 67% of adult Americans were
willing to get vaccinated or had already received at least one shot. The figure
has climbed to 75%, according to the latest AP-NORC poll. Nationwide, 24% of
Black Americans and 22% of Hispanic Americans say they will probably or
definitely not get vaccinated, down from 41% and 34% in January, respectively.
Among white Americans, 26% now say they will not get vaccinated. In January,
that number was 31%.
Dr. Anthony Fauci, the nation’s
top infectious disease expert, said the goal is to get community figures, from
athletes to clergy, to encourage vaccinations, particularly as the seven-day national
average of cases remains over 60,000 new infections per day. “What we are doing
is we’re trying to get, by a community core, trusted messages that anyone would
feel comfortable with listening to, whether you’re a Republican, a Democrat, an
independent or whomever you are, that you’re comfortable,” Fauci said Sunday on
ABC’s “This Week.” Fauci also indicated Sunday that the government will likely
move to resume use of Johnson & Johnson’s COVID-19 vaccine this week,
possibly with restrictions or broader warnings after reports of some very rare
blood clot cases. In a series of news show interviews, Fauci said he expects a
decision when advisers to the CDC meet Friday to discuss the pause in J&J’s
single-dose vaccine. “I would be very surprised if we don’t have a resumption
in some form by Friday,” he said. “I don’t really anticipate that they’re going
to want it stretch it out a bit longer.” Fauci, who is President Joe Biden’s
chief medical adviser, said he believed federal regulators could bring the
shots back with limits based on age or gender, or with a blanket warning, so
the vaccine is administered in a way “a little bit different than we were
before the pause.” The J&J vaccine was thrown into limbo after the CDC and
the Food and Drug Administration said last week that they needed more evidence
to decide if a handful of unusual blood clots were linked to the shot — and if
so, how big the risk is. The reports are rare — six cases out of more than 7
million U.S. inoculations with the J&J vaccine. The clots were found in
women between the ages of 18 and 48. One person died. Authorities stressed that
they have found no sign of clot problems with the most widely used COVID-19
vaccines in the U.S. — from Moderna and Pfizer.
^ It’s great to see 130 Million
Americans (out of 330 Million) have received at least one Covid Vaccine Shot
and that 84 Million Americans are fully vaccinated. We have come a long way from where we were a few months ago. ^
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