From Yahoo/ABC:
“More Americans getting
vaccinated following full FDA approval of Pfizer COVID vaccine”
Thousands of Americans were
finally persuaded to get their first shot in the week following the Food and
Drug Administration's full approval of the Pfizer-BioNtech coronavirus vaccine,
new data reveals. A new ABC News analysis found that initial data, stemming
from the last seven days, indicates that since the FDA's announcement of the
approval, the U.S. has indeed seen a slight uptick in the average number of
Americans getting their first COVID-19 vaccine dose. Just prior to the
announcement, the U.S. rate of first doses had stagnated. Although the country
experienced an increase in people initiating vaccination in July as new
coronavirus cases surged across the country, the average number of Americans
getting their first dose had then declined.
However, following Pfizer's full
approval, the U.S. saw a 17% increase in the number of Americans getting
vaccinated with their first dose. In the week prior to the full approval, an
average of about 404,000 Americans were initiating vaccination each day. As of
Monday, approximately 473,000 Americans were getting their first shot each day.
"As expected, full approval was enough to convince at least some to
finally get immunized," said Dr. John Brownstein, an epidemiologist at
Boston Children's Hospital and an ABC News contributor. Although there does not
appear to have been a mad rush of people getting vaccinated in the days
immediately following approval, the uptick was significant enough to shift the
country's vaccination trend upward. "While surveys initially had estimated
a far greater segment of the population who pegged full approval as their
reason for holding off, we have yet to see a large wave of newly convinced
people to roll up their sleeves," Brownstein added. Experts caution that
although the uptick is encouraging, there is still much work to do in
convincing millions more hesitant Americans to get the shot. However, according
to a newly released Axios-Ipsos poll, vaccine hesitancy among Americans has hit
a record low, with only 2 in 10 Americans saying they are unlikely to get the
COVID-19 vaccine, and 14% saying they are not likely at all. The poll, which
was conducted prior to full FDA approval, found that about a third of
unvaccinated Americans said they would be likely to get vaccinated if it was
formally approved for use by the FDA. However, about 6 in 10 said they would
still not get vaccinated even if it were approved by the FDA.
In another move that officials
hope will encourage Americans to get the shot, the Advisory Committee on
Immunization Practices, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention
independent advisory panel, took the approval a step further on Monday,
unanimously endorsing Pfizer's vaccine for use in people 16 years of age and
older "We now have a fully approved COVID-19 vaccine and ACIP has added
its recommendation. If you have been waiting for this approval before getting
the vaccine, now is the time to get vaccinated and join the more than 173
million Americans who are already fully vaccinated," CDC Director Dr.
Rochelle Walensky said in a statement Monday. It is difficult to know for sure
if this increasing trend will continue. On Tuesday, for example, the U.S.
reported a single-day total of approximately 283,000 first shots administered,
well below the current seven-day average. Vaccination trends also remain
unsteady, and highly susceptible to mandates imposed by jurisdiction. "While
FDA approval has many positive implications for the vaccine rollout, this is
not a replacement for the constant need for basic education on the individual
and community benefits of immunization," Brownstein said.
Full approval has rendered it
easier for employers to mandate vaccines, which could also be one of the
drivers of rising vaccination rates, experts have suggested. In the last week
alone, an increasing number of companies and government entities have moved to
require proof of vaccination or risk termination. Just hours after the full
approval was announced, for example, the Pentagon announced that they would
begin preparations to make the vaccine mandatory. "I'm calling on more
companies in the private sector to step up with vaccine requirements that will
reach millions more people," President Joe Biden said in remarks at the
White House last week. "If you're a business leader, a nonprofit leader, a
state or local leader, who has been waiting for full FDA approval to require
vaccinations, I call on you now to do that -- require it. It only makes sense
to require a vaccine to stop the spread of COVID-19." The push for more
companies to require employees get vaccinated comes as the U.S. continues to
struggle through its latest surge in COVID-19 infections. With more than
101,000 patients now hospitalized across the country with COVID-19, the U.S. is
steadily approaching its hospitalization peak from early January, when more
than 125,000 patients were hospitalized at one time. A little over two months
ago, there were under 12,000 patients receiving care. And nationally, nearly
94% of U.S. counties are now reporting high community transmission. "With
only 53% of the population fully vaccinated, we are going to need a much more
significant increase in vaccinations if we are going to limit the impact of a
fall surge and get to the other side of this pandemic," Brownstein said. More
Americans getting vaccinated following full FDA approval of Pfizer COVID
vaccine originally appeared on abcnews.go.com
^ Better later than never. ^
https://www.yahoo.com/gma/more-americans-getting-vaccinated-following-204017028.html
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