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Tag: covid vaccine

  • Virginia families face hurdles getting updated COVID-19 vaccine amid prescription confusion – WTOP News

    Virginia families are hitting roadblocks getting the new COVID-19 vaccine, as shifting federal rules spark confusion over pharmacy prescription requirements.

    Virginia families are hitting roadblocks while getting the new COVID-19 vaccine, as shifting federal rules spark confusion over pharmacy prescription requirements.

    According to the Virginia Department of Health, pharmacists can give vaccines in two ways: with a prescription from a medical provider, or under statewide protocols that allow vaccinations without a prescription — as long as they follow the immunization schedule from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

    The CDC’s current immunization schedule lists the 2024-25 COVID-19 vaccine, but not the 2025-26 version, which is why a prescription is now required for the newer shots.

    Jim Hardin, a 75-year-old resident of Haymarket, told WTOP he was asked to present a prescription recently when he tried to get a vaccination at a Giant Foods Pharmacy near his home. He said he’s never been asked for a prescription.

    “To me, this is kind of a federal bureaucracy … that’s really useless,” Hardin said. “If you think about it, what doctor is going to say, ‘No, I’m not going to give you a prescription for a COVID shot?’ I mean, they’ll all give it to you.”

    Hardin said he is retired veteran and can get a shot at a local military base. But he said that’s at least 20 miles away and not at all convenient.

    Several states have already acted on similar concerns. In Colorado, Massachusetts, New York and Pennsylvania, pharmacists can give COVID-19 vaccines without a prescription.

    The CDC’s vaccine advisory committee meets Sept. 18 and 19 to vote on updated COVID-19 shots. If approved, pharmacists could give the vaccines without a prescription.

    “I just think the government is trying to dissuade citizens from getting a shot,” Hardin said. “I think that’s wrong.”

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    Alan Etter

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  • Live fact-checking Robert F. Kennedy Jr. in Senate committee over 2026 plans, CDC

    Health and Human Services Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. is expected to testify before the U.S. Senate Finance Committe

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  • COVID surges nationwide with highest rates in Southwest as students return to school

    COVID-19 rates in the Southwestern United States reached 12.5% — the highest in the nation — according to new data from the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention released this week. Meanwhile, Los Angeles County recorded the highest COVID levels in its wastewater since February.

    The spike, thanks to the new highly contagious “Stratus” variant, comes as students across California return to the classroom, now without a CDC recommendation that they receive updated COVID shots. That change in policy, pushed by Health and Human Services Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr., has been criticized by many public health experts.

    The COVID-19 virus, SARS-CoV-2, mutates often, learning to better transmit itself from person to person and evade immunity created by vaccinations and previous infections.

    The Stratus variant, first detected in Asia in January, reached the U.S. in March and became the predominant strain by the end of June. It now accounts for two-thirds of virus variants detected in wastewater in the U.S., according to the CDC.

    The nationwide COVID positivity rate hit 9% in early August, surpassing the January post-holiday surge, but still below last August’s spike to 18%. Weekly deaths, a metric that lags behind positivity rates, has so far remained low.

    In May, RFK Jr. announced the CDC had removed the COVID vaccine from its recommended immunization schedule for healthy children and healthy pregnant women.

    The secretary argued it was the right move to reverse the Biden administration’s policy, which in 2024, “urged healthy children to get yet another COVID shot, despite the lack of any clinical data to support the repeat booster strategy in children.”

    That statement promptly spurred a lawsuit from a group of leading medical organizations — including the American Academy of Pediatrics, the American College of Physicians and the American Public Health Assn. — which argued the “baseless and uninformed” decision violated federal law by failing to ground the policy on the recommendation of the scientific committee that looks at immunization practices in the U.S.

    The Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices has been routinely recommending updated COVID vaccinations alongside the typical yearly flu vaccination schedule. In its update for the fall 2024-spring 2025 season, it noted that in the previous year, a COVID booster decreased the risk of hospitalization by 44% and death by 23%.

    The panel argued the benefit outweighed isolated cases of heart conditions and allergic reactions associated with the vaccine.

    The panel also acknowledged that booster effectiveness decreases as new COVID strains — for which the boosters were not designed — emerge. Nevertheless, it still felt that most Americans should get booster shots.

    The CDC estimates that only about 23% of adults and 13% of children received the 2024-25 COVID booster — even with the vaccine recommendation still in place. That’s compared to roughly half of adults and children who received the updated flu shot in the same time frame.

    Noah Haggerty

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  • US adds another option for fall COVID vaccination with updated Novavax shots | Long Island Business News

    US adds another option for fall COVID vaccination with updated Novavax shots | Long Island Business News

    U.S. regulators on Tuesday authorized another option for fall COVID-19 vaccination, updated shots made by Novavax.

    Updated vaccines from Pfizer and Moderna began rolling out last month, intended for adults and children as young as age 6 months. Now the Food and Drug Administration has added another choice –- reformulated Novavax shots open to anyone age 12 and older.

    The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention already has urged most Americans to get a fall COVID-19 vaccination, shots tweaked to protect against a newer coronavirus strain. Novavax said shots will be available “in the coming days.”

    Protection against COVID-19, whether from vaccination or from an earlier infection, wanes over time. There’s already been a late-summer increase in infections, and health officials hope enough people get the new shots to blunt a winter wave.

    Novavax makes a protein-based vaccine mixed with an immune-boosting chemical, a different technology than the so-called mRNA vaccines made by Pfizer and Moderna.

    While Pfizer and Moderna have shipped millions of doses, the fall rollout so far has been messy since, for the first time, the government isn’t buying and distributing the COVID-19 shots. Ordering confusion from drugstores and doctors’ offices, distribution delays and even bungled paperwork by insurance companies snarled early appointments.

    The updated vaccine versions are supposed to be free through private insurance or Medicare, and the CDC has a program to temporarily provide free shots to the uninsured or underinsured.

    The Associated Press

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  • We Can Finally Do Something About the Third ‘Tripledemic’ Virus

    We Can Finally Do Something About the Third ‘Tripledemic’ Virus

    Every fall, when the air turns chilly and the leaves red, pediatric ICUs begin preparing for the onslaught of the virus known as RSV. Not flu, not COVID, but RSV, or respiratory syncytial virus, is the No. 1 reason babies are hospitalized, year after year. Their tiny airways can become inflamed, and the sickest ones struggle to breathe. RSV is deadly on the other end of the age spectrum too, killing 6,000 to 10,000 elderly Americans every year.

    For decades though, there was no way to stop the virus’s seasonal tide. The quest for a vaccine always came up short. And then suddenly, the vaccines started working.

    This year, doctors have not just one but multiple new shots to prevent RSV. Three gained FDA approval in rapid succession in recent months: an antibody shot for infants called nirsevimab, a form of passive immunization for babies too young to get proper vaccines; a vaccine from Pfizer for both adults over 60 and pregnant mothers, who can pass the immunity on to their babies; and finally, a vaccine from GlaxoSmithKline also aimed at adults older than 60. Together, these herald a new era for RSV.

    That these three new RSV shots are coming out at once is no coincidence. They succeed where others failed because they all target a specific weak spot in the virus, first identified in 2013. This strategy of finding a virus’s most vulnerable points applies to other pathogens too, and experts say it can revolutionize the design of vaccines for other diseases. In fact, it was quietly used to make the COVID vaccines from Pfizer and Moderna. Scientists had originally perfected the idea with RSV, only to repurpose it for the COVID vaccine, which raced ahead, given the urgency of the pandemic. This year, though, the shots are coming for RSV.

    “We’re in a really good position, finally, after more than 65 years,” says Asunción Mejías, an infectious-diseases doctor at St. Jude Children’s Research Hospital.


    The first attempts to make an RSV vaccine began not long after the virus’s discovery, in 1956, but an early trial ended so catastrophically that it had a chilling effect for decades.

    It had started off with promise. The early vaccine was modeled after a successful one for polio, in which the virus is inactivated with a chemical called formalin. But when infants given the early RSV vaccine later caught the virus, a whopping 80 percent had to be hospitalized—compared with only 5 percent in the control group. Two of the babies died, their lungs ravaged. The vaccine did worse than offer no protection; it made the disease more severe. “It was such a disaster,” says Ann Falsey, an infectious-diseases doctor at the University of Rochester. Scientists spent years piecing together why—the vaccine riled up the wrong part of the immune system in very young babies—but they got no closer to making a vaccine that worked. The field was stuck.

    Then, in 2008, a serendipitous meeting led to an eventual breakthrough. A young, freshly minted Ph.D. named Jason McLellan, who studies the structure of proteins, began a new job at the National Institutes of Health to work on HIV vaccines. The lab he had joined, on the fourth floor, had run out of room, though, so he got put in another, on the second. There, he ran into Barney Graham, a virologist who had been trying to solve the puzzle of RSV since the 1980s. He convinced McLellan that this virus was worth a look too.

    By then, scientists had at least homed in on a plausible vaccine target. Much as COVID uses spike protein to infect cells, RSV uses a protein—called F for “fusion”—to physically fuse the virus particle to a human cell. F comes in two forms, though: an extremely unstable prefusion state and a far more stable postfusion state. And once it switches to the postfusion state—which can also happen spontaneously— “it can’t come back,” McLellan told me.

    When RSV vaccines are manufactured, all the F protein eventually switches to the postfusion state. But the antibodies against postfusion F weren’t very effective. McLellan soon figured out why. He found that extremely potent neutralizing antibodies bind to a specific site—the very tip of the prefusion F—that is lost when the protein rearranges into its postfusion form. With that, Graham told me, “you lose ten- to 1,000-fold potency.” An effective RSV vaccine would need to target the prefusion F.

    The team knew what to do, but had a practical dilemma: How to stabilize F in its prefusion form, so the team could put it in a vaccine? McLellan rejiggered the protein slightly, adding molecular “staples” and filling a hole in the protein structure. These changes froze F in its prefusion shape. When the team tested this version of the vaccine in mice, the results could not have been clearer. The vaccine induced the highest levels of neutralizing antibodies Graham had ever seen in his three decades of studying RSV. “This is it,” McLellan remembers thinking.

    Soon, pharmaceutical companies came calling, and the race was on. (The experts in this article—like nearly everyone who works on RSV vaccines—have all received research grants, consulted for, or worked in some other way with one or more of the companies developing shots for RSV.) Today, Pfizer’s and GlaxoSmithKline’s newly approved RSV vaccines target the prefusion F protein, as does nirsevimab, the antibody shot for infants from AstraZeneca and Sanofi. Both the vaccines and the antibody shot trigger immunity against RSV: Vaccines stimulate the immune system to make its own antibodies, and nirsevimab is a direct infusion of antibodies.

    Trials for all three shots were already under way when the coronavirus pandemic hit. But because RSV nearly disappeared during social distancing, the trials got delayed. Meanwhile, McLellan and Graham devised a similar molecular trick to stabilize COVID’s spike protein, which Pfizer and Moderna later used in their vaccines. (The stabilization wasn’t make-or-break for COVID, as it was for RSV, though—AstraZeneca’s COVID vaccine was effective despite not having this modification.) But unstable fusion proteins are found in many different classes of viruses beyond RSV. McLellan, now at the University of Texas at Austin, is working on shots against the prefusion structure of other stubborn viruses such as cytomegalovirus and Crimean-Congo hemorrhagic fever. (Graham is now a professor at Morehouse School of Medicine.) This approach—called structure-based vaccine design—could unlock new ways of targeting once-elusive viruses.


    For RSV, this fall and winter will be a test of how well the shots fare in the real world. As the adage goes, vaccines don’t save lives; vaccinations do. Falsey, the University of Rochester doctor, specializes in studying RSV in the elderly, and she worries that too few Americans over 60 will get the new vaccines this year. A CDC advisory panel decided that elderly Americans can get the vaccines through “shared clinical decision-making” with their doctors but did not go as far as to fully recommend vaccination, which would have triggered private insurers to cover the shots under the Affordable Care Act. Out of pocket, they can cost more than $300. The vaccine for pregnant women, meanwhile, has FDA approval, but the same CDC panel is voting today on whether to recommend it. The panel will likely scrutinize a possible link to premature births, which has shown up before with RSV vaccines.

    Nirsevimab, the antibody shot for infants, has gotten a full-throated endorsement, though, and it’s poised to have the biggest impact this season. It replaces an existing RSV-antibody shot called palivizumab, which is not widely used. Palivizumab targets a less potent site that is on both the pre- and postfusion F, and it needs to be administered up to five times a season (compared with once for nirsevimab), at a cost of some $1,500 a dose. For these reasons, it’s been reserved for the highest-risk babies, such as preemies with underdeveloped lungs. But most babies who end up hospitalized were healthy to begin with, says St. Jude’s Mejías, so the older shot didn’t put much of a dent in overall hospitalizations.

    Nirsevimab is meant to be more widely used: The shot is approved for all infants in their first RSV season. “It’s going to change the way we manage and treat RSV,” Mejías told me. It should be available for babies starting in October. And if all goes according to plan, pediatric ICUs could be a little quieter this winter.

    Sarah Zhang

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  • Doctor’s Checklist for Treating Long COVID Patients

    Doctor’s Checklist for Treating Long COVID Patients

    April 4, 2023 – Lisa McCorkell had a mild bout of COVID-19 in March 2020. Young and healthy, she assumed that she would bounce back quickly. But when her fatigue, shortness of breath, and brain fog persisted, she realized that she most likely had long COVID. 

    “Back then, we as patients basically coined the term,” she said. While her first primary care provider was sympathetic, they were unsure how to treat her. After her insurance changed, she ended up with a second primary care provider who didn’t take her symptoms seriously. “They dismissed my complaints and told me they were all in my head. I didn’t seek care for a while after that.”

    McCorkell’s symptoms improved after her first COVID vaccine in the spring of 2021. She also finally found a new primary care doctor she could trust. But as one of the founders of the Patient-Led Research Collaborative, a group of researchers who study long COVID, she says many doctors still don’t know the hallmark symptoms of the condition or how to treat it. 

    “There’s still a lack of education on what long COVID is, and the symptoms associated with it,” she said. “Many of the symptoms that occur in long COVID are symptoms of other chronic conditions, such as chronic fatigue syndrome, that are often dismissed. And even if providers believe patients and send them for a workup, many of the routine blood and imaging tests come back normal.”

    The term “long COVID” emerged in May 2020. And though the condition was recognized within a few months of the start of the pandemic, doctors weren’t sure how to screen or treat it. 

    While knowledge has developed since then, primary care doctors are still in a tough spot. They’re often the first providers that patients turn to when they have symptoms of long COVID. But with no standard diagnostic tests, treatment guidelines, standard care recommendations, and a large range of symptoms the condition can produce, doctors may not know what to look for, nor how to help patients.

    “There’s no clear algorithm to pick up long COVID – there are no definite blood tests or biomarkers, or specific things to look for on a physical exam,” said Lawrence Purpura, MD, an infectious disease specialist and director of the long COVID clinic at Columbia University Medical Center in New York City. “It’s a complicated disease that can impact every organ system of the body.”

    Even so, emerging research has identified a checklist of sorts that doctors should consider when a patient seeks care for what appears to be long COVID. Among them:

    • The key systems and organs impacted by the disease
    • The most common symptoms
    • Useful therapeutic options for symptom management that have been found to help people with long COVID
    • The best heathy lifestyle choices that doctors can recommend to help their patients 

    Here’s a closer look at each of these aspects, based on research and interviews with experts, patients, and doctors. 

    Key Systems, Organs Impacted                                                                                                 

    About 10% of people who are infected with COVID-19 go on to have long COVID, according to a recent study that McCorkell helped co-author. But more than 3 years into the pandemic, much about the condition is still a mystery. 

    COVID is a unique virus because it can spread far and wide in a patient’s body. A December 2022 study, published in the journal Nature, autopsied 44 people who died of COVID and found that the virus could spread throughout the body and persist, in one case as long as 230 days after symptoms started

    “We know that there are dozens of symptoms across multiple organ systems,” said McCorkell. “That makes it harder for a primary care physician to connect the dots and associate it with COVID.”

    A paper published last December in Nature Medicine proposed one way to help guide diagnosis. It divided symptoms into four groups: 

    • Cardiac and renal issues such as heart palpitations, chest pain, and kidney damage
    • Sleep and anxiety problems like insomnia, waking up in the middle of the night, and anxiety
    • In the musculoskeletal and nervous systems: musculoskeletal pain, osteoarthritis, and problems with mental skills
    • In the digestive and respiratory systems: trouble breathing, asthma, stomach pain, nausea, and vomiting

    There were also specific patterns in these groups. People in the first group were more likely to be older, male, have other conditions and to have been infected during the first wave of the COVID pandemic. People in the second group were over 60% female, and were more likely to have had previous allergies or asthma. The third group was also about 60% female, and many of them already had autoimmune conditions such as rheumatoid arthritis. Members of the fourth group – also 60% female – were the least likely of all the groups to have another condition.

    This research is helpful, because it gives doctors a better sense of what conditions might make a patient more likely to get long COVID, as well as specific symptoms to look out for, said Steven Flanagan, MD, a physical medicine and rehabilitation specialist at NYU Langone Medical Center who also specializes in treating patients with long COVID. 

    But the “challenge there, though, for health care providers is that not everyone will fall neatly into one of these categories,” he stressed.

    Checklist of Symptoms 

    Although long COVID can be confusing, doctors say there are several symptoms that appear consistently that primary care providers should look out for, that could flag long COVID. They include:

    Post-exertional malaise (PEM). This is different from simply feeling tired. “This term is often conflated with fatigue, but it’s very different,” said David Putrino, PhD, director of rehabilitation innovation at the Mount Sinai Health System in New York City, who says that he sees it in about 90% of patients who come to his long COVID clinic. 

    PEM is the worsening of symptoms after physical or mental exertion. This usually occurs a day or two after the activity, but it can last for days, and sometimes weeks. 

    “It’s very different from fatigue, which is just a generalized tiredness, and exercise intolerance, where someone complains of not being able to do their usual workout on the treadmill,” he noted. “People with PEM are able to push through and do what they need to do, and then are hit with symptoms anywhere from 12 to 72 hours later.”

    Dysautonomia. This is an umbrella term used to describe a dysfunction of the autonomic nervous system, which regulates bodily functions that you can’t control, like your blood pressure, heart rate, and breathing. This can cause symptoms such as heart palpitations, along with orthostatic intolerance, which means you can’t stand up for long without feeling faint or dizzy. 

    “In my practice, about 80% of patients meet criteria for dysautonomia,” said Putrino. Other research has found that it’s present in about two-thirds of long COVID patients.

    One relatively easy way primary care providers can diagnose dysautonomia is to do the tilt table test. This helps check for postural orthostatic tachycardia syndrome (POTS), one of the most common forms of dysautonomia. During this exam, the patient lies flat on a table. As the head of the table is raised to an almost upright position, their heart rate and blood pressure are measured. Signs of POTS include an abnormal heart rate when you’re upright, as well as a worsening of symptoms.

    Exercise intolerance. A 2022 review published in the journal JAMA Network Open analyzed 38 studies on long COVID and exercise and found that patients with the condition had a much harder time doing physical activity. Exercise capacity was reduced to levels that would be expected about a decade later in life, according to study authors

    “This is especially important because it can’t be explained just by deconditioning,” said Purpura. “Sometimes these patients are encouraged to ramp up exercise as a way to help with symptoms, but in these cases, encouraging them to push through can cause post-exertional malaise, which sets patients back and delays recovery.”

    While long COVID can cause dozens of symptoms, a paper McCorkell co-authored zeroed in on some of the most common ones:

    • Chest pain
    • Heart palpitations
    • Coughing
    • Shortness of breath
    • Belly pain
    • Nausea
    • Problems with mental skills
    • Fatigue
    • Disordered sleep
    • Memory loss
    • Ringing in the ears (tinnitus)
    • Erectile dysfunction
    • Irregular menstruation
    • Worsened premenstrual syndrome

    While most primary care providers are familiar with some of these long COVID symptoms, they may not be aware of others. 

    “COVID itself seems to cause hormonal changes that can lead to erection and menstrual cycle problems,” explained Putrino. “But these may not be picked up in a visit if the patient is complaining of other signs of long COVID.” 

    It’s not just what symptoms are, but when they began to occur, he added. 

    “Usually, these symptoms either start with the initial COVID infection, or begin sometime within 3 months after the acute COVID infection. That’s why it’s important for people with COVID to take notice of anything unusual that crops up within a month or two after getting sick.”

    Can You Prevent Long COVID?

    You can’t, but one of the best ways to reduce your risk is to get vaccinated. Getting at least one dose of a COVID vaccine before you test positive for COVID lowers your risk of long COVID by about 35% according to a 2022 study published in Antimicrobial Stewardship & Healthcare Epidemiology. Unvaccinated people who recovered from COVID, and then got a vaccine, lowered their own long COVID risk by 27%

    In addition, a February study published in JAMA Internal Medicine found that women who were infected with COVID were less likely to go on to get long COVID and/or have less debilitating symptoms if they had a healthy lifestyle, which included the following: 

    • Healthy weight (a BMI between 18.5 and 24.7)
    • Never smoker
    • Moderate alcohol consumption
    • A high-quality diet
    • Seven to 9 hours of sleep a night
    • At least 150 minutes per week of physical activity

    But McCorkell noted that she herself had a healthy pre-infection lifestyle but got long COVID anyway, suggesting these approaches don’t work for everyone.

    “I think one reason my symptoms weren’t addressed by primary care physicians for so long is because they looked at me and saw that I was young and healthy, so they dismissed my reports as being all in my head,” she explained. “But we know now anyone can get long COVID, regardless of age, health status, or disease severity. That’s why it’s so important that primary care physicians be able to recognize symptoms.”

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  • WebMD Poll: Another Year of Tough COVID Questions

    WebMD Poll: Another Year of Tough COVID Questions

    March 15, 2023 — Last year, on the second anniversary of the COVID-19 pandemic, we asked our audience questions about their pandemic experiences. A year later – and 3 years into living with COVID – we followed up with some more. 

    In total, our poll received 696 responses. Nearly 66% of those who answered identified as female, and 76% reported that they are older than 45. The confidence level used for editorial polls is 95%. 

    The fall of 2022 started out with President Joe Biden claiming that “the pandemic is over” on CBS’s 60 MinutesSince then, he has ordered an end to the COVID-19 emergency orders issued in 2020, causing people to wonder if this really might be the beginning of the end of the pandemic.

     In 2022, WebMD readers, for the most part (84%) did not see an end in sight. But a year later, attitudes seem to be shifting. Our current poll found that nearly a third – 30% – of our audience thinks the pandemic has  come to an end. However, 42% of men said the pandemic is over, compared to just 25% of women. 

    The data, however, says differently. While daily life may have returned to its normal pace and we’re no longer in the midst of a state of emergency, many experts agree that we shouldn’t let our guard down. New cases and the number of deaths per week have indeed leveled off since January 2022, but data shows that there are still thousands of new cases reported daily. And given the evolution of the virus’s many variants, doctors and public health officials continue to urge caution. 

    The availability of vaccines and boosters is a big part of why we all feel more comfortable doing the everyday tasks that we may have taken for granted during the pandemic’s first couple of years. How many people, though, are actually protected against the virus? According to our poll, 7 in 10 respondents have been fully vaccinated against COVID-19; nearly 6 in 10 of those fully vaccinated have received at least two boosters (57%).

    However, these numbers don’t totally reflect the reality of vaccine and booster uptake in the U.S. According to CDC data, Americans on the whole – quite similar to our findings – have completed their initial vaccination series at a rate of nearly 70%. But of those who have gotten fully vaccinated, only a little more than 23% have gotten at least one dose of the bivalent booster. 

    Sixty percent of respondents to our poll said that they have had COVID-19 at least once, which is notable when compared to an exhaustive nationwide survey that found that about half of Americans have had COVID. Within that study, however, researchers said there is a large chunk of positive at-home tests that have gone unreported. 

    Whether you had COVID-19 or not, the pandemic has undoubtedly changed the way we see and interact with the world around us. Last year, an overwhelming 88% of respondents agreed on this; this year, about half of our readers agreed with this statement – possibly indicating a growing acceptance of the changes happening around us.

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  • 3 Years On, Why Don’t We Know the Extent of Long COVID?

    3 Years On, Why Don’t We Know the Extent of Long COVID?

    SOURCES:

    Amesh Adalja, MD, senior scholar, Johns Hopkins University Center for Health Security.

    Manali Mukherjee, PhD, immunologist, assistant professor, Division of Respirology, Department of Medicine, McMaster University.

    Sarah Wulf Hanson, PhD, research scientist, Institute for Health Metrics and Evaluation, University of Washington.

    Lisa McCorkell, co-founder, Patient-Led Research Collaborative.

    Julia Moore Vogel, PhD, program director, Participant Center, All of Us Research Program, Scripps Research Translational Institute.

    The BMJ: “Long COVID outcomes at one year after mild SARS-CoV-2 infection: nationwide cohort study.” 

    Nature Reviews Microbiology: “Long COVID: Major findings, mechanisms and recommendations.” 

    CDC National Center for Health Statistics: “Long COVID Household Pulse Survey.”

    Nature Medicine: “Unexplained post-acute infection syndromes.”

    Patient-Led Research Collaborative.

    World Health Organization: “Post COVID-19 condition (Long COVID).”

    CDC: “Post-COVID Conditions: CDC Science.”

    The European Respiratory Journal: “Circulating anti-nuclear autoantibodies in COVID-19 survivors predict long COVID symptoms.”

    Emerging Infectious Diseases: “Postacute Sequelae of SARS-CoV-2 in University Setting.”

    International Severe Acute Respiratory and emerging Infection Consortium (ISARIC): “Clinical Characterisation Protocol (CCP).”

     

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  • Future COVID Vaccines Must Be Better; Science Races to Respond

    Future COVID Vaccines Must Be Better; Science Races to Respond

    SOURCES 

    David L. Hoey, president and CEO of Vaxxas, Cambridge, MA, and Brisbane, Australia.

    Pablo Penaloza-MacMaster, PhD, assistant professor of microbiology and immunology, Feinberg School of Medicine, Northwestern University, Chicago.

    Jasdave Chahal, PhD, co-founder and chief scientist, Tiba Biotech, Cambridge, MA, and Brisbane, Australia.

    Vaxart news release: “Vaxart Announced Positive Top-line Phase II clinical Study Data Demonstrating Safaety and Immunogenicity of Its Wuhan S-Only COVID-19 Pill Vaccine Candidate.”

    Mark Herr, spokesperson, Vaxart Inc. 

    The Commonwealth Fund: “Two Years of  U.S. COVID-19 Vaccines Have Prevented Millions of Hospitalizations and Deaths.”

    The Lancet Infectious Diseases: “Global impact of the first year of COVID-19 vaccination: a mathematical modelling study.” 

    CDC: COVID Data Tracker, “Needle Fears and Phobias—Find Ways to Manage.”

    U.S. Specialty Formulations news release: “Research Demonstrates Benefits of Oral COVID-19 Vaccine.”

    CanSino Biologics Inc. statement: “Inside Information.” 

    Coalition for Epidemic Preparedness Innovations:  Email statement; News releases: “The Race to Future-Proof Coronavirus Vaccines;.”  “Coming in from the cold: needle-free patch technology for mRNA vaccines aims to end need for frozen storage and improve access.” 

    Executive Office of  the President: “Statement of Administration Policy.”

    Science: “Mosaic RBD nanoparticles protect against challenge by diverse sarbecoviruses in animal models.”

    Caltech news release: “Nanoparticle Vaccine Protects Against a Spectrum of COVID-19-causing Variants and Related Viruses.”   

     

    U.S. Government Accountability Office. “Operation Warp Speed.”

    Bharat Biotech International Limited news release: “Bharat biotech launches iNCOVACC: World’s 1st intranasal COVID vaccine for Primary series and Heterologous booster.” 

    The Lancet preprints: “Immunogenicity and Tolerability of BBV154 (iNCOVACC®), an Intranasal SARS-CoV-2 Vaccine, Compared with Intramuscular Covaxin® in Healthy Adults: A Randomised, Open-Label, Phase 3 Clinical Trial.”

    Cell: “Intranasal pediatric parainfluenza virus-vectored SARS-CoV-2 vaccine is protective in monkeys.”

    National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases news release: “NIAID Issues Further Awards to Support Pan-Coronavirus Vaccine Development.”

    CEPI news release: “CEPI and DIOSynVax partner in quest to develop broadly protective Betacoronavirus vaccine.” 

    CDC: “Understanding How COVID-19 Vaccines Work.” 

    Nature Immunology: “The T-cell immune response against SARS-CoV-2.”

    National Institutes of Health: “T cells protect against COVID-19 in absence of antibody response.”

    PNAS: “Vaccine-induced systemic and mucosal T cell immunity to SARS-CoV-2 viral variants.”

    Cell Reports: “Pre-existing immunity modulates responses to mRNA boosters.”

    University of Minnesota Center for Infectious Disease Research and Policy: “Coronavirus Vaccines R&D Roadmap.”

    NIH news release: “2NIAID Studies Highlight COVID-10 Natal Vaccine Potential.”

    U.S. Specialty Formulations news release: “Research demonstrates benefits of oral COVID-19 vaccine.” 

     

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  • COVID at 3 Years: Where Are We Headed?

    COVID at 3 Years: Where Are We Headed?

    March 15, 2023 – Three years after COVID-19 rocked the world, the pandemic has evolved into a steady state of commonplace infections, less frequent hospitalization and death, and continued anxiety and isolation for older people and those with weakened immune systems.

    After about 2½ years of requiring masks in health care settings,  the CDC lifted its recommendation for universal, mandatory masking in hospitals in September 2022,. 

    Some statistics tell the story of how far we have come. COVID-19 weekly cases dropped to nearly 171,000 on March 8, a huge dip from the 5.6 million weekly cases reported in January 2022. COVID-19 deaths, which peaked in January 2021 at more than 23,000 a week, stood at 1,862 per week on March 8.

    Where We Are Now

    Since Omicron is so infectious, “we believe that most people have been infected with Omicron in the world,” says Christopher J.L. Murray, MD, a professor and chair of health metrics sciences at the University of Washington and director of the Institute for Health Metrics and Evaluation in Seattle. Sero-prevalence surveys — or the percentage of people in a population who have antibodies for an infectious disease, or the Omicron variant in this case — support this rationale, he says.

    “Vaccination was higher in the developed world but we see in the data that Omicron infected most individuals in low income countries,” says Murray. For now, he says, the pandemic has entered a “steady state.”

    At New York University Langone Health System, clinical testing is all trending downward, and hospitalizations are low, says Michael S. Phillips, MD, an infectious disease doctor and chief epidemiologist at the health system. 

    In New York City, there has been a shift from pandemic to “respiratory viral season/surge,” he says. 

    The shift is also away from universal source control – where every patient encounter in the system involves masking, distancing, and more – to a focus on the most vulnerable patients “to ensure they’re well-protected,” Phillips says. 

    Johns Hopkins Hospital in Baltimore has seen a “marked reduction” of the number of people coming to the intensive care unit because of COVID, says Brian Thomas Garibaldi, MD, a critical care doctor and director of the Johns Hopkins Biocontainment Unit.

    “That is a testament to the amazing power of vaccines,” he says. 

    The respiratory failures that marked many critical cases of COVID in 2020 and 2021 are much rarer now, a shift that Garibaldi calls “refreshing.”

    “In the past 4 or 5 weeks, I’ve only seen a handful of COVID patients. In March and April of 2020, our entire intensive care unit – in fact, six intensive care units – were filled with COVID patients.”

    Garibaldi sees his own risk differently now as well. 

    “I am not now personally worried about getting COVID, getting seriously ill, and dying from it. But if I have an ICU shift coming up next week, I am worried about getting sick, potentially having to miss work, and put that burden on my colleagues. Everyone is really tired now,” says Garibaldi, who is also an associate professor of medicine and physiology in the Division of Pulmonary and Critical Care Medicine at Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine. 

    What Keeps Experts Up at Night?

    The potential for a stronger SARS-CoV-2 variant to emerge concerns some experts.  

    A new Omicron  subvariant could emerge, or a new variant altogether could arise.  

    One of the main concerns is not just a variant with a different name, but one that can escape current immune protections. If that happens, the new variant could infect people with immunity against Omicron. 

    If we do return to a more severe variant than Omicron, Murray says, “then suddenly we’re in a very different position. 

    Keeping an Eye on COVID-19, Other Viral Illnesses

    We have better genomic surveillance for circulating strains of SARS-CoV-2 than earlier in the pandemic, Phillips says. More reliable, day-to-day data also helped recently with the respiratory syncytial virus (RSV) outbreak and for tracking flu cases.

     Wastewater surveillance as an early warning system for COVID-19 or other respiratory virus surges can be helpful, but more research is needed, Garibaldi says. And with more people testing at home, test positivity rates are likely an undercount. So, hospitalization rates for COVID and other respiratory illnesses remain one of the more reliable community-based measures, for now, at least. 

    One caveat is that sometimes, it is unclear if COVID-19 is the main reason someone is admitted to the hospital vs. someone who comes in for another reason and happens to test positive upon admission. 

    Phillips suggests that using more than one measure might be the best approach, especially to reduce the likelihood of bias associated with any single strategy. “You need to look at a whole variety of tests in order for us to get a good sense of how it’s affecting all communities,” he says. In addition, if a consensus emerges among different measures – wastewater surveillance, hospitalization and test positivity all trending up – “that’s clearly a sign that things are afoot and that we would need to modify our approach accordingly.”

    Where We Could Be Heading

    Murray predicts a steady pace of infection with “no big changes.” But waning immunity remains a concern. 

    That means if you have not had a recent infection – in the last 6 to 10 months – you might want to think about getting a booster, Murray says “The most important thing for people, for themselves, for their families, is to really think about keeping their immunity up.” 

    Phillips hopes the improved surveillance systems will help public health officials make more precise recommendations based on community levels of respiratory illness. 

    When asked to predict what might happen with COVID moving forward, “I can’t tell you how many times I’ve been wrong answering that question,” Garibaldi says.

     Rather than making a prediction, he prefers to focus on hope. 

    “We weathered the winter storm we worried about in terms of RSV, flu, and COVID at the same time. Some places were hit harder than others, especially with pediatric RSV cases, but we haven’t seen anywhere near the level we saw last year and before that,” he says. “So, I hope that continues.”

    “We’ve come very far in just 3 years. When I think about where we were in March 2020 taking care of our first round of COVID patients in our first unit called a biocontainment unit,” Garibaldi says. 

    Murray addresses whether the term “pandemic” still applies at this point. 

    “In my mind, the pandemic is over,” he says, because we are no longer in an emergency response phase. But COVID in some form is likely to be around for a long time, if not forever.  

    “So, it depends on how you define pandemic. If you mean an emergency response, I think we’re out of it. If you mean the formal definition you know of an infection that goes all over the place, then we’re going to be in it for a very long time.”

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  • In a First, COVID Vaccine Is Added to Adult Immunization Schedule

    In a First, COVID Vaccine Is Added to Adult Immunization Schedule

    By Amy Norton 

    HealthDay Reporter

    THURSDAY, Feb. 9, 2023 (HealthDay News) — For the first time, COVID-19 vaccines have been added to the list of routine immunizations recommended for adults — a further sign the virus is here to stay.

    The addition is being made to the 2023 Recommended Adult Immunization Schedule, released Thursday by the Advisory Committee on Immunization Practice (ACIP), an expert panel that advises the U.S. federal government on vaccination recommendations for all Americans.

    COVID vaccination has, of course, been recommended ever since the vaccines became available.

    But its inclusion on the recommended vaccine schedule underscores the fact that COVID-19 is not going away, said Dr. Sandra Adamson Fryhofer, an Atlanta-based physician who serves as an ACIP liaison.

    “This reiterates that COVID has gone from pandemic to endemic,” Fryhofer said. “For now, it looks like it’s here to stay.”

    “Endemic” means that a disease is spreading at a more stable frequency, versus the exponential growth seen during a pandemic.

    At this point, most Americans have received the primary series of vaccines against COVID. However, few have gotten the updated “bivalent” boosters that target both the original strain of the virus that causes COVID and two Omicron subvariants.

    It has been available since September, but only about 16% of Americans have gotten it, according to the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

    That rate is higher among people age 65 and older, who are at increased risk of severe COVID. But at around 40%, it’s still much lower than public health experts want to see.

    Fryhofer put it bluntly: “Booster uptake has been sad.”

    It’s not entirely clear why, but Fryhofer pointed to vaccine “fatigue” as one possible reason, along with the way COVID vaccination has been politicized.

    Meanwhile, a CDC report released last month found signs of an education problem: Over 40% of Americans the agency surveyed were either unaware the updated COVID booster shots exist, or did not know they were eligible for them.

    The CDC recommends one dose of the updated booster for everyone ages 5 and older, if they are at least two months out since their last dose.

    Dr. Aaron Glatt is chief of infectious diseases at Mount Sinai South Nassau in Oceanside, N.Y. He agreed that the ACIP’s inclusion of COVID vaccination is another indicator that the virus is expected to hang around.

    But, Glatt said, “there’s not really a clear scientific consensus on how important the [updated booster] is for different age groups.”

    Glatt said he focuses on boosters for relatively older people, starting at age 50. For a healthy younger adult, who would be at low risk of severe COVID, the benefits of getting another booster are less clear, he said.

    Both Glatt and Fryhofer encouraged people to talk to their doctor about their personal situation. The new vaccine schedule includes links to CDC information that doctors and patients can use to make decisions about the updated COVID boosters.

    At this point, it’s not clear what COVID vaccination will look like going forward: Will it be a yearly immunization, like the flu shot, that is recommended for adults and kids?

    “It’s still evolving,” Glatt said. “We’ll have to wait and see.”

    For anyone wondering, it’s not “too late” to get the updated booster, both doctors said. For the time being, there is no COVID “season,” as there is for the flu.

    But, Fryhofer noted, people might want to get the booster shots while they’re still free. Once the Biden administration ends the COVID national health emergency declaration in May and the COVID vaccines the government still has left are gone, that will no longer be the case.

    Other than the inclusion of COVID vaccination, most of the recommendations for adult immunizations remain the same. But there is one addition related to polio.

    Most Americans were vaccinated against polio in childhood, and the risk of contracting the infection in the United States is “extremely low,” according to the CDC.

    But the 2023 recommendations say that certain adults at risk of poliovirus exposure may consider one lifetime polio booster. That includes people traveling to countries where polio is circulating.

    There has been no sustained transmission of poliovirus in the United States for about 40 years, the CDC says. But the virus made headlines last summer after a case of paralytic polio was reported in New York State. It struck a young adult who had never received the polio vaccine.

    The full vaccine schedule is being published simultaneously on Feb. 10 in both the Annals of Internal Medicine and the CDC’s Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Report.

    More information

    The U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention has more on the updated COVID booster.

     

    SOURCES: Sandra Adamson Fryhofer, MD, liaison, Advisory Committee on Immunization Practice; Aaron Glatt, MD, chief, infectious diseases, and hospital epidemiologist, Mount Sinai South Nassau, Oceanside, N.Y., and professor, medicine, Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai, New York City; Annals of Internal Medicine, Feb. 10, 2023, online

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  • FDA Panel Backs Shift Toward One-Dose COVID Shot

    FDA Panel Backs Shift Toward One-Dose COVID Shot

    Jan. 26, 2023 – A panel of advisers to the FDA unanimously supported an effort today to simplify COVID-19 vaccinations, with the aim of developing a one-dose approach — perhaps annually — for the general population.

    The FDA is looking to give clearer direction to vaccine makers about future development of COVID-19 vaccines. The plan is to narrow down the current complex landscape of options for vaccinations, and thus help increase use of these shots. 

    COVID remains a threat, causing about 4,000 deaths a week recently, according to the CDC. 

    The 21 Members of the Vaccines and Related Biological Products Advisory Committee (VRBPAC) voted unanimously “yes” on a single question posed by the FDA: 

    “Does the committee recommend harmonizing the vaccine strain composition of primary series and booster doses in the U.S. to a single composition, e.g., the composition for all vaccines administered currently would be a bivalent vaccine (Original plus Omicron BA.4/BA.5)?”

    In other words, would it be better to have one vaccine potentially combining multiple strains of the virus, instead of multiple vaccines – such as a two-shot primary series then a booster containing different combinations of viral strains.

    The FDA will consider the panel’s advice as it outlines new strategies for keeping ahead of the evolving virus.

    In explaining their support for the FDA plan, panel members said they hoped that a simpler regime would aid in persuading more people to get COVID vaccines.

    Pamela McInnes, DDS, MSc, noted that it’s difficult to explain to many people that the vaccine worked to protect them from more severe illness if they contract COVID after getting vaccinated. 

    “That is a real challenge,” said McInness, a retired deputy director of the National Center for Advancing Translational Sciences at the National Institutes of Health.

    “The message that you would have gotten more sick and landed in the hospital resonates with me, but I’m not sure if it resonates with” many people who become infected, she said.

    The Plan

    In the briefing document for the meeting, the FDA outlined a plan for transitioning from the current complex landscape of COVID-19 vaccines to a single vaccine- composition for the primary series and booster vaccination. 

    This would require:

    • Harmonizing the strain composition of all COVID-19 vaccines;

    • Simplifying the immunization schedule for future vaccination campaigns to administer a two-dose series in certain young children and in older adults and persons with compromised immunity, and only one dose in all other individuals;

    • Establishing a process for vaccine strain selection recommendations, similar in many ways to that used for seasonal influenza vaccines, based on prevailing and predicted variants that would take place by June to allow for vaccine production by September.

    During the discussion, though, questions arose about the June target date. Given the production schedule for some vaccines, that date might need to shift, said Jerry Weir, PhD, director of the division of viral products at FDA’s Center for Biologics Evaluation and Research. 

    “We’re all just going to have to maintain flexibility,” Weir said, adding that there is not yet a “good pattern” established for updating these vaccines. 

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  • The FDA Wants an Annual COVID Vaccine: What You Need to Know

    The FDA Wants an Annual COVID Vaccine: What You Need to Know

    Jan. 24, 2023 – Is pivoting to an annual COVID-19 shot a smart move? The FDA, which proposed the change on Monday, says an annual shot vs. periodic boosters could simplify the process to ensure more people stay vaccinated and protected against severe COVID-19 infection. 

    A national advisory committee plans to vote on the recommendation Thursday.

    If accepted, the vaccine formula would be decided each June and Americans could start getting their annual COVID-19 shot in the fall, like your yearly flu shot.  

    Keep in mind: Older Americans and those who are immunocompromised may need more than one dose of the annual COVID-19 shot.

    Most Americans are not up to date with their COVID-19 boosters. Only 15% of Americans have gotten the latest booster dose, while a whopping nine out of 10 Americans age 12 or older finished their primary vaccine series. The FDA, in briefing documents for Thursday’s meeting, says problems with getting vaccines into people’s arms makes this a change worth considering. 

    Given these complexities, and the available data, a move to a single vaccine composition for primary and booster vaccinations should be considered,” the agency says.

    A yearly COVID-19 vaccine could be simpler, but would it be as effective? WebMD asks health experts your most pressing questions about the proposal.

    Pros and Cons of an Annual Shot

    Having an annual COVID-19 shot, alongside the flu shot, could make it simpler for doctors and health care providers to share vaccination recommendations and reminders, according to Leana Wen, MD, a public health professor at George Washington University and former Baltimore health commissioner.

    “It would be easier [for primary care doctors and other health care providers] to encourage our patients to get one set of annual shots, rather than to count the number of boosters or have two separate shots that people have to obtain,” she says.

    “Employers, nursing homes, and other facilities could offer the two shots together, and a combined shot may even be possible in the future.”

    Despite the greater convenience, not everyone is enthusiastic about the idea of an annual COVID shot. COVID-19 does not behave the same as the flu, says Eric Topol, MD, editor-in-chief of Medscape, WebMD’s sister site for health care professionals.

    Trying to mimic flu vaccination and have a year of protection from a single COVID-19 immunization “is not based on science,” he says. 

    Carlos del Rio, MD, of Emory University in Atlanta and president of the Infectious Diseases Society of America, agrees. 

    “We would like to see something simple and similar like the flu. But I also think we need to have the science to guide us, and I think the science right now is not necessarily there. I’m looking forward to seeing what the advisory committee, VRBAC, debates on Thursday. Based on the information I’ve seen and the data we have, I’m not convinced that this is a strategy that is going to make sense,” he says. 

    “One thing we’ve learned from this virus is that it throws curveballs frequently, and when we make a decision, something changes. So, I think we continue doing research, we follow the science, and we make decisions based on science and not what is most convenient.” 

    COVID-19 Isn’t Seasonal Like the Flu

    “Flu is very seasonal, and you can predict the months when it’s going to strike here,” Topol says. “And as everyone knows, COVID is a year-round problem.” He says it’s less about a particular season and more about times when people are more likely to gather indoors. 

    So far, European officials are not considering an annual COVID-19 vaccination schedule, says Annelies Zinkernagel, MD, PhD, of the University of Zurich and president of the European Society of Clinical Microbiology and Infectious Diseases. 

    Regarding seasonality, she says, “what we do know is that in closed rooms in the U.S. as well as in Europe, we can have more crowding. And if you’re more indoors or outdoors, that definitely makes a big difference.”

    Which Variant(s) Would It Target?

    To decide which variants an annual COVID-19 shot will attack, one possibility could be for the FDA to use the same process used for the flu vaccine, Wen says.

    “At the beginning of flu season, it’s always an educated guess as to which influenza strains will be dominant,” she says.

    “We cannot predict the future of which variants might develop for COVID, but the hope is that a booster would provide broad coverage against a wide array of possible variants.”

    Topol agrees it’s difficult to predict. A future with “new viral variants, perhaps a whole new family beyond Omicron, is uncertain.”

    Reading the FDA briefing document “to me was depressing, and it’s just basically a retread. There’s no aspiration for doing bold things,” Topol says. “I would much rather see an aggressive push for next-generation vaccines and nasal vaccines.”

    To provide the longest protection, “the annual shot should target currently predominant circulating strains, without a long delay before booster administration,” says Jeffrey Townsend, PhD, a professor of biostatistics and ecology and evolutionary biology at Yale School of Public Health. 

    “Just like the influenza vaccine, it may be that some years the shot is less useful, and some years the shot is more useful,” he says, depending on how the virus changes over time and which strain(s) the vaccine targets. “On average, yearly updated boosters should provide the protection predicted by our analysis.”

    Townsend and colleagues published a prediction study on Jan. 5, in the Journal of Medical Virology. They look at both Moderna and Pfizer  vaccines and how much protection they would offer over 6 years based on people getting regular vaccinations every 6 months, every year, or for longer periods between shots. 

    They report that annual boosting with the Moderna vaccine would provide 75% protection against infection and an annual Pfizer vaccine would provide 69% protection. These predictions take into account new variants emerging over time, Townsend says, based on behavior of other coronaviruses.

    “These percentages of fending off infection may appear large in reference to the last 2 years of pandemic disease with the massive surges of infection that we experienced,” he says. “Keep in mind, we’re estimating the eventual, endemic risk going forward, not pandemic risk.”

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  • BioNTech’s China partner lets mainland Chinese book mRNA COVID shots in HK

    BioNTech’s China partner lets mainland Chinese book mRNA COVID shots in HK

    BioNTech SE’s Chinese partner has started allowing mainland Chinese to register for its mRNA COVID-19 vaccine in Hong Kong ahead of a border reopening early next month that may spark a wave of visitors to the financial hub.

    Shanghai Fosun Pharmaceutical Group Co. is letting people register for the shot through its app and online, with the company asking users for their personal details and whether they’ve recently recovered from COVID. Fosun, which distributes the Pfizer-BioNTech vaccine in Hong Kong, Macau and Taiwan, didn’t respond to Bloomberg News’ emailed request for more details of the program.

    While the mRNA shot has formed the backbone of COVID vaccination campaigns across the world, it remains in regulatory limbo in mainland China, which hasn’t given it the green light and instead relies on homegrown vaccines for its 1.4 billion people. China is grappling with the world’s biggest outbreak—the country’s health regulator estimated nearly 37 million people may have been infected in a single day last week—after the rapid dismantling of COVID-zero restrictions spurred a surge in virus cases.

    The major flareup has sparked a push to vaccinate the vulnerable elderly, but could also boost interest in getting inoculated while traveling. Some mainland Chinese residents received an mRNA shot in Macau, the only place where they could travel to without having to quarantine upon their return. Visitors would need to pay out of pocket, with the Financial Times reporting one couple paid $170 each for a dose. 

    Expectations are building that Hong Kong may see a wave of visitors from China from Jan. 8, when the mainland removes all quarantine for inbound travelers, restarts issuing Hong Kong travel permits and resumes express checkpoints on its borders with the financial hub. Still, it’s unclear how many may be eligible for a shot given the wave of cases on the mainland, with health authorities recommending people wait six months after their infection for their next shot. 

    The Hong Kong government said last week that residents will be given priority for receiving the bivalent vaccine for free, while non-residents remain eligible for the ancestral-strain vaccine and the non-mRNA CoronaVac shot at no cost. Some non-residents who meet certain requirements may also be able to get the bivalent vaccine for free. Non-residents may also pay to get vaccinated at private doctors, clinics and hospitals. 

    Fosun Pharm shipped 11,500 doses of the mRNA vaccine this month to be administered exclusively for German expatriates in China, under a deal brokered during German Chancellor Olaf Scholz’s visit to China in early November. It’s unclear when, or if, the shot will be approved for wider use in China. 

    Our new weekly Impact Report newsletter examines how ESG news and trends are shaping the roles and responsibilities of today’s executives. Subscribe here.

    Bloomberg

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  • COVID Attacks DNA in Heart, Unlike Flu, Study Says

    COVID Attacks DNA in Heart, Unlike Flu, Study Says

    Sept. 30, 2022 — COVID-19 causes DNA damage to the heart, affecting the body in a completely different way than the flu does, according to a recent study published in Immunology 

    The study looked at the hearts of patients who died from COVID-19, the flu, and other causes. The findings could provide clues about why coronavirus has led to complications such as ongoing heart issues.

    “We found a lot of DNA damage that was unique to the COVID-19 patients, which wasn’t present in the flu patients,” Arutha Kulasinghe, one of the lead study authors and a research fellow at the University of Queensland in Australia, told the Brisbane Times.

    “So in this study, COVID-19 and flu look very different in the way they affect the heart,” he said.

    Kulasinghe and colleagues analyzed the hearts of seven COVID-19 patients, two flu patients, and six patients who died from other causes. They used transcriptomic profiling, which looks at the DNA landscape of an organ, to investigate heart tissue from the patients.

    Due to previous studies about heart problems associated with COVID-19, he and colleagues expected to find extreme inflammation in the heart. Instead, they found that inflammation signals had been suppressed in the heart, and markers for DNA damage and repair were much higher. They’re still unsure of the underlying cause.

    “The indications here are that there’s DNA damage here, it’s not inflammation,” Kulasinghe said. “There’s something else going on that we need to figure out.”

    The damage was similar to the way chronic diseases such as diabetes and cancer appear in the heart, he said, with heart tissue showing DNA damage signals. 

    Kulasinghe said he hopes other studies can build on the findings to develop risk models to understand which patients may face a higher risk of serious COVID-19 complications. In turn, this could help doctors provide early treatment. For instance, all seven COVID-19 patients had other chronic diseases, such as diabetes, hypertension, and heart disease. 

    “Ideally in the future, if you have cardiovascular disease, if you’re obese or have other complications, and you’ve got a signature in your blood that indicates you are at risk of severe disease, then we can risk-stratify patients when they are diagnosed,” he said. 

    The research is a preliminary step, Kulasinghe said, due to the small sample size. This type of study is often difficult to conduct because researchers have to wait for the availability of organs, as well as request permission from families for post-mortem autopsies and biopsies, to be able to look at the effects on dead tissues.

    “Our challenge now is to draw a clinical finding from this, which we can’t at this stage,” he added. “But it’s a really fundamental biological difference we’re observing [between COVID-19 and flu], which we need to validate with larger studies.”

     

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