From Yahoo/USA Today:
“More than 20M Americans are
eligible for Pfizer-BioNTech booster shots. Should you get one?”
More than 20 million Americans
are now eligible for COVID-19 booster shots from Pfizer-BioNTech, with 40
million more to have access once they're six months past their second shot. Although
those who got other vaccines are not yet eligible, boosters may soon be
extended to those who received the Moderna and Johnson & Johnson shots. So,
who is eligible? And if the initial shots were extremely protective, why should
they choose a booster?
The answer is clearest for people
ages 65 and older, and for people living in long-term care facilities. Two
government agencies that just reviewed the data on boosters found protection
may be fading for those groups, many of whom got their initial shots early this
year. The agencies also recommend boosters for younger people at risk for
serious disease, which covers everyone with diabetes or obesity – the majority
of Americans. In addition, people whose jobs put them at increased risk of
being exposed to the virus and who are 18 to 64 years of age can also get the
booster. That includes health care workers, teachers, grocery workers and those
who work in homeless shelters or prisons, said FDA acting commissioner Dr.
Janet Woodcock last week.
For people in these categories,
boosters are now available – and free – but not mandatory. A two-dose series of
the Pfizer or Moderna vaccines, or one dose of the Johnson & Johnson
vaccine, still counts as fully immunized. On Friday, President Joe Biden urged
eligible Americans to get the boosters. "If you got the Pfizer vaccine in
January, February and March of this year and you're over 65 years of age, go
get the booster," he said. "Or if you have a medical condition like
diabetes or you're a front-line worker, like a health care worker or a teacher,
you can get a free booster now." Boosters raise the level of protection
but even those who don't get a booster are still well-protected against
COVID-19. "The bottom line is if you're fully vaccinated, you're highly
protected from severe illness, even if you get COVID-19," Biden said
Friday morning. "In fact, recent data indicates there's only one confirmed
positive case for every 5,000 fully vaccinated Americans per day." Boosters
offer an additional push of protection. The recommendations mean many will have
to make their own decisions about whether to get a booster, in consultation
with their health care professionals.
The Centers for Diseases Control
committee that reviewed the data wanted to make sure even people who don’t have
access to health care can get a booster if they fit the categories, said Dr.
Camille Kotton, a committee member and infectious disease expert at
Massachusetts General Hospital. The booster shots will only be for recipients
of certain vaccines and after a certain time period. Kotton said that she
doesn’t feel she’s at risk for serious disease so will not get a booster yet
herself, nor will she encourage her two teenaged sons, fully vaccinated with
Pfizer-BioNTech, to get one. They are in the group at highest risk for a
serious vaccine side effect: myocarditis which has caused swelling around the
heart for about 13 out of every million men under 30 who received a second
Pfizer-BioNTech vaccine dose. Since their initial shots will keep them from
getting myocarditis from COVID-19, she said, she doesn’t think they need a
booster. Someone who lives or works with an immunocompromised person might come
to a different conclusion about the need for a booster, she said, although it’s
not yet clear whether a third Pfizer-BioNTech dose cuts down on transmission of
COVID-19.
What we know: Who is
considered 'high risk' and eligible for Pfizer-BioNTech's booster shots? Another
member of the CDC’s Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices, which
reviewed data for more than 11 hours this week, agreed. “I think
everybody’s going to have to weigh their decision – it depends a lot on where
you live, how much disease there is and also your family, who am I taking care
of?” said Dr. Katherine Poehling, a pediatrician and vaccine expert at Wake Forest
School of Medicine in North Carolina. Poehling acknowledged that the
data is confusing and that it can be hard to figure out what makes the most
sense for each individual. Hopefully, she said, over time, more information
will make the decision easier. “These are interim recommendations and
we’ll continue to follow the science,” she said. “It’s not always clean and
easy.” Many Americans might be happy with the high level of protection
offered by having had the two-dose vaccine series. Others might want a little
extra protection, depending on their own levels of risk and exposure and the
risk and exposures of family members. "I felt it was important for people
who were reviewing their own risks and benefits to have access to the
booster," said Dr. Grace Lee, a professor of pediatric infectious disease
at Stanford University School of Medicine. Lee chaired the Centers for Disease
Control and Prevention's Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices, which
met Wednesday and Thursday.
Underlying conditions that can
put people at higher risk for COVID-19 Some of the underlying conditions
that can put people at higher risk for COVID-19 include cancer, chronic kidney
disease, chronic lung disease, heart conditions, HIV infection, liver disease,
sickle cell disease, smoking, solid organ transplant and stroke. Getting
a booster will be on the honor system. No one will need to show a doctor's note
at their clinic or pharmacy.
Boosters could be useful for
people whose jobs put them at higher risk For people whose jobs put them at
higher risk of being exposed to COVID-19, a booster could be useful because it
might lower their chance of getting sick at all, not just of becoming severely
ill. Not everyone needs a booster shot right now, emphasized Dr. Joshua
Sharfstein, a public health professor at the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of
Public Health. They are not required, just available. “Does this
mean every teacher has to get a booster? I don’t think that’s the right
conclusion from that – right now,” he said. Others noted that protecting
important workers even from mild cases could help in areas where COVID-19 is
wreaking havoc. "During a pandemic emergency, we also must address
how we keep society functioning," said Dr. Kelly Moore, president and
chief executive officer of Immunize.org, which educates health care
professionals about U.S. vaccine recommendations. "In some parts of
the country, schools are closed and hospitals are at the breaking point because
teachers and nurses and doctors cannot work if they are infected, regardless of
how serious their illness is," she said. Booster doses could allow
them to keep doing their vital jobs, she said.
^ 20 Million Americans who got
their 2 Pfizer Vaccine Shots can now get their 3rd Shot or their
Booster. ^
https://news.yahoo.com/more-20m-americans-eligible-pfizer-163904546.html?fr=sycsrp_catchall
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