Moderna COVID-19 vaccine trial open to kids and teens in Houston – KHOU.com

Moderna COVID-19 vaccine trial open to kids and teens in Houston – KHOU.com

Mercyhealth starts administering second doses of COVID-19 vaccine – WREX-TV

Mercyhealth starts administering second doses of COVID-19 vaccine – WREX-TV

January 7, 2021

ROCKFORD (WREX) Frontline workers at Mercyhealth started receiving their second dose of the COVID-19 vaccine on Wednesday.

The healthcare workers are getting their second dose of the Pfizer vaccine after receiving their first dose of the virus in December.

Mercyhealth was one of the first health systems in Rockford to start administering the Pfizer vaccine.

Pfizer reports its vaccine is 95 percent effective in preventing COVID-19 among people who had no evidence of prior infection. Due to limited allocation,and based on federal and state guidance, the first shipment of the Pfizer vaccine was given to health care workers.

Healthcare workers with SwedishAmerican Hospital will start receiving their second dose of the vaccine on Thursday.


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Mercyhealth starts administering second doses of COVID-19 vaccine - WREX-TV
More than 52k health care workers have received COVID-19 vaccines, close to 70k have scheduled appointments – WSPA 7News

More than 52k health care workers have received COVID-19 vaccines, close to 70k have scheduled appointments – WSPA 7News

January 7, 2021

COLUMBIA, SC (WSPA) Front-line health care workers in SC are being asked to schedule appointments to get their shots before Jan. 15th.

One day after the Governor set that deadline, state health officials gave an update on the COVID-19 vaccine rollout in South Carolina. They said as of Wednesday 36% of the Pfizer-BioNTech Vaccines theyve received from the Federal Government have been administered.

They are still asking for patience. Interim Director of Public Health Dr Brannon Traxler said, It is going to take some time.

She said everyone in Phase 1-A of the states vaccination plan have to sign up for a vaccine by Jan. 15th.

If not, they would be put in the next category Phase 1-B to get a vaccine.

Dr. Traxler said, Our ultimate goal is to save south Carolinians lives. DHEC remains dedicated just as they have been this whole pandemic to working with our partners and ensure everyone in this situation who wants to get a vaccine will be able to get a vaccine.

They said health care workers and their employers need to contact their local hospitals to get an appointment for a vaccine.

The South Carolina Hospital Association said some of their members have touched base with all eligible health care workers in their community. Chief Operating Officer Melanie Matney said, They are ready to move on to phase 1-B. Some communities feel January 15th might be too late they can do it sooner than that.

She said hospitals are working on different ways to help health care workers in their community schedule an appointment. They have set up email accounts to answer questions and help with the process.

DHEC has updated their website with contact information for hospitals.

Dr. Traxler said they are also working on finalizing plans on the best way to sign people up in Phase 1-B for the vaccine.

According to DHEC, about 1,000 health care workers in South Carolina have already received their second dose of the vaccine.


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JUST IN: BMS Dragway COVID-19 vaccination gate closed at noon, expecting to run out of vaccine – WJHL-TV News Channel 11

JUST IN: BMS Dragway COVID-19 vaccination gate closed at noon, expecting to run out of vaccine – WJHL-TV News Channel 11

January 7, 2021

JOHNSON CITY, Tenn. (WJHL) The U.S. Department of Labor reported 41,724 new unemployment claims filed in Tennessee and Virginia last week.

According to a report from the department, 25,170 claims were filed in Virginia during the week ending on January 2 along with Tennessees 16,554.


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JUST IN: BMS Dragway COVID-19 vaccination gate closed at noon, expecting to run out of vaccine - WJHL-TV News Channel 11
How Some Locals Skipped To The Front Of The COVID-19 Vaccine Line – DCist

How Some Locals Skipped To The Front Of The COVID-19 Vaccine Line – DCist

January 7, 2021

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How experts say the federal government can speed up COVID-19 vaccinations – ABC News

How experts say the federal government can speed up COVID-19 vaccinations – ABC News

January 7, 2021

The effort to vaccinate Americans against COVID-19 has been marked by criticism that doses are being doled out too slowly to prevent additional spread and deaths -- and some experts are calling for a sharply stepped-up national approach.

More than 4.8 million Americans have received their first dose of the two-dose regimen of the COVID-19 vaccines from Pfizer and Moderna, according to data from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention published Tuesday morning.

That number represents only a small portion of the more than 15.4 million doses distributed to states so far, leading to questions about what's caused the delay and complaints that the federal government and Operation Warp Speed hasn't done enough to help state vaccination efforts.

Hundreds wait in line at Lakes Park Regional Library to receive a COVID-19 vaccine in Fort Myers, Fla., Dec. 30, 2020.

"The federal plan was to load up, you know, 40 million boxes of IKEA furniture and the states are opening up the box and [saying] 'Oh my god, it says assembly required' that's what's happened, right and so there was never a plan to vaccinate the American people," said Dr. Peter Hotez, Co-Director of the Center for Vaccine Development at Texas Childrens Hospital and Dean of the National School of Tropical Medicine at Baylor College of Medicine.

The FDA provided information and fact sheets as a kind of "assembly instructions" on how to prepare the concentrated vaccine doses to be administered and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention supplied educational materials for hospitals, but it is largely up to states and specific facilities to determine how to process and carry out vaccinations and how much they can handle at a time.

Officials with Operation Warp Speed say there is a delay in collecting data from states and the vaccine rollout was slower because of the holidays.

But Hotez and other experts say while the federal government should have taken ownership of vaccination efforts from the beginning, there are changes that could speed up the pace and meet the goal of vaccinating the vast majority of the population needed to stop the spread of the virus through herd immunity. He said vaccinating millions of people in a matter of months requires more infrastructure than sending people to their local hospital or pharmacies, but the federal government can help states and cities open mass vaccination sites able to administer more vaccines every day.

"How are you going to open up RFK Stadium? How are you going to open up FedEx Field now and you're gonna how are you going to open up, where the Nationals play and create a venue, with which we can vaccinate those individuals," he said of how to expand vaccinations in Washington, D.C.

Louisville Mayor Greg Fischer addresses members of the media during the first day of mass Moderna COVID-19 vaccinations in Broadbent Arena at the Kentucky State Fair and Exposition Center on Jan. 4, 2021 in Louisville.

Hotez said the federal government should also set clear goals on how many people need to be vaccinated each day and put less emphasis on phased eligibility if doing so interferes with that timeline. He said making vaccines available to specific populations or job categories beyond health care workers and nursing home facilities is too fussy and complex.

"There is no thought to how to operationalize that [Phase] 1B, 1C," he said of the next groups recommended to receive the vaccine under CDC guidelines.

"What are you going to do, take a pharmacist at Walmart, and they can make her the gatekeeper for who gets vaccinated and who doesn't? I mean, it doesn't make any sense," he told ABC.

Surgeon General Jerome Adams said Tuesday his message to states is just that, match up supply and demand.

"Your headline today really should be surgeon general tells states and governors to move quickly to other priority groups. If the demand isn't there in 1a, go to 1b and continue on down. If the demand isn't there in one location, move those vaccines to another location," Adams said on NBC's "Today" program.

Adams also endorsed an idea supported by former FDA Commissioner Scott Gottlieb who says there should be more shipments of vaccines going to pharmacies to start vaccinating the populations with the most demand for the vaccine. Adams said there will be more information this week about ramping up vaccination efforts from CVS and Walgreens, both of which are working with Operation Warp Speed.

A woman waits to enter the locations where the Pfizer-BioNTech COVID-19 Vaccine is being given at the Vista View Park in Davie, Fla., Jan. 2021. At this location only seniors 65 years old and older will receive the vaccine.

Houston reported so much demand for appointments when vaccine doses were made available to older adults that its call center was overwhelmed on the first day. And vaccination sites in Florida are seeing lines of older Americans early in the morning or even camping out overnight to get their vaccines.

"If stockpiles continue to build, eligibility should be expanded. We can move quickly through the prescribed phases of the vaccination program as inventories build and start offering it to the general public based on age, which can be lowered from 75 to 65 and so on. Society has a responsibility to help the most vulnerable, and the collective good depends on maximizing the number of vaccinations. These two goals dont need to be in conflict," he wrote in an op-ed in the Wall Street Journal.

Gottlieb also discussed prioritizing shipping more doses out to states, instead of holding back second doses for people who have already received one. But Hotez said that won't address the slow pace of vaccinations on the ground.

The FDA said this week it doesn't plan to recommend any changes to how the two-dose vaccines should be administered without more research on the potential impact of delaying the second dose.

Dr. Leana Wen, anemergencyphysicianand public health professor at George Washington University who previously worked as Baltimore's Health Commissioner, said the federal government could allocate additional shipments of vaccine doses to cities or parts of the country able to carry out vaccinations quickly as a sort of pilot program to show what works.

"Empower 10 cities, give them a million doses each, or more, to administer within a month period and let's learn from their experience, they're all going to do it differently," she told ABC News.

Wen said there are examples of vaccines being administered quickly, like hospitals in Texas able to give doses to health care workers 24/7 until all employees were vaccinated. But she said there are more examples of a specific bottleneck after vaccines are shipped to locations around the country, partly because of the administrative burden on hospitals and public health officials who are already overwhelmed with the high number of new COVID-19 cases.

Tom, 69, and Judy Barrett, 67, from Marco Island wait in line in the early morning hours at Lakes Park Regional Library to receive the COVID-19 vaccine in Fort Myers, Fla., Dec. 30, 2020.

She said the federal government can help overwhelmed state and local health officials find more staff like retired nurses or medical students to help with scheduling, collecting information, or even administering vaccinations.

"That's something that can be done on a national level, the federal government can say for this period of time for this purpose we are suspending any licensing requirements. We are getting full liability cover for anyone doing vaccinations we are going to work it out with national medical, nursing, and pharmacists associations to do a national recruitment campaign," she said.

But that doesn't mean the federal government should takeover vaccine administration, said John Brownstein, chief innovation officer at Boston Children's Hospital and Harvard University professor. The goal is more to support the states than going around them because its going to create unnecessary conflict if the federal government dictates how its done, said Brownstein, an ABC contributor.Brownstein said he sees the federal governments role as ensuring states have enough staff to give injections and helping to set up sites for mass vaccinations. Wen said states or the federal government could activate resources like the National Guard but officials tell ABC their role is likely to be more in helping with logistics like setting up vaccination sites or transporting vaccine shipments to rural areas.

A National Guard official told ABC News that guardsmen and women are less likely to be called on to administer vaccines because that would take medical troops away from their roles as civilian health care providers in their communities.

It's also unlikely a large federal activation of the National Guard will be necessary since governors can tap them for more specific needs at any time. At least seven states have mobilized National Guard units for administrative or logistical support on vaccination efforts. The government also can help support the deployment of online tools like Vaccine Finder, a system developed by Google to deploy the H1N1 vaccine. Brownstein, who runs Vaccine Finder, hopes the site will play a role in people to determine their personal eligibility for the COVID-19 vaccine based on location and availability.

A nurse with the Riley County Health Department walks past the COVID-19 vaccine mobile command center in the parking lot of Bill Snyder Family Stadium at Kansas State University in Manhattan, Kansas, Dec. 22, 2010. The Moderna Vaccine arrived in Riley County on Dec. 22.

The incoming Biden administration has named several people to lead the high-profile areas of pandemic response, including vaccinations and testing, under a White House coordinator for all aspects of the response, Jeff Zeints.

Zeints has said "everything is on the table" for the Biden takeover of COVID-19 response in an interview with an opinion writer for the Washington Post, including using federal units to transport vaccines to more rural areas, using the Defense Production Act to increase manufacturing of vaccine components, and providing more money for state and local vaccination efforts.

Wen said one thing she will look for from the Biden administration is whether the federal government takes ultimate responsibility for all aspects of the process for the COVID-19 vaccines, saying "the buck has to stop with someone."

"Ultimately, while the implementation is going to be done on the ground the ultimate responsibility has to be with the federal government because this is a federal, this is a wartime effort that requires a national mobilization," she said.

ABC News' Matthew Seyler and Anne Flaherty contributed to this report.


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The secret sauce behind Israels successful COVID-19 vaccination program – Brookings Institution

The secret sauce behind Israels successful COVID-19 vaccination program – Brookings Institution

January 7, 2021

By the time Im writing these lines, Israelwhich started vaccinating its population in early Decemberhas already vaccinated over 14 percent of its citizens in just over three weeks. This is an impressive achievement that places it at the top of the list of COVID-19 vaccination efforts, way above richer and larger countries such as the United States and many European nations.

While the current prime minister, Benyamin Netanyahurunning for reelection in March 2021, the fourth election in two yearshas made sure to take all the credit for this success (and he definitely deserves some of it) the truth is that theres more than only his statesmanship, policymaking ability, or personal charm behind this great achievement. After all, if it was only up to Netanyahus public health policies, most Israelis wouldnt be demonstrating regularly against his governments handling of the pandemic for the past few months, which has been disastrous, to put it mildly.

The first question is how Israel was able to get that many vaccines when supply is short? It is not becauseaccording to reportsIsrael paid about $30 per dose, almost double what other nations did. In fact, many countries probably would have been willing to pay even more, especially since almost any price is cheaper than the losses associated with extending the pandemic. In a recent column, Israel Channel 13 journalist Nadav Eyal explained what was really behind Israels ability to get an impressive amount of vaccine doses. The answer: Israel is a great pilot country for the pharma companiessmall and able to put together a massive vaccination program quickly and effectively. Netanyahu knew it, and the pharma companies did too. This was confirmed, in fact, by the Israeli Minister of Health, Yuli Edelstein, who said in a recent interview that Israel had entered into negotiations with drugmakers as an early bird, given its ability to deliver.

What makes Israel a great pilot country? The answer: its vast public health infrastructure, a public good that has developed through heavy public investment since the creation of the state about 70 years ago. The World Banks World Development Indicators show signs of the high levels of public investment in Israels health system since the early years of the state. For instance, in 1960, Israel had 2.5 physicians and 6.83 hospital beds for every 1,000 people, compared to less than 1.3 and less than 6, respectively, for countries such as Uruguay, Poland, and Greece, which had similar income per capita levels at the time. Israel at the time also stood out in terms of results: In 1961, Israel had the highest life-expectancy figures for countries with similar incomes. In fact, despite some negative trends in public investment in health in recent years, today Israel spends about 7 percent of its GDP on health and with it is able to achieve remarkable results. Life expectancy at birth for the average Israeli citizen is among the highest in the world, at almost 83 years. This is higher than other richer countries that invest even more in health, such as the United States, which spends nearly 20 percent of its GDP on health services while the average American can expect to live about 78 years. In other words, when it comes to public health, Israel gets more bang for the buck.

One of the products of Israels heavy public investment in health since its beginning is its fairly unique public health infrastructure. Israels health system relies on four semi-private Health Management Organizations (HMOs) present all over the country (even in smaller and less populated cities and towns) providing health services to every single citizen, insured through social security payroll contributions and an individual mandate. These HMOs, originally founded as health cooperatives, are a legacy of the socialist-oriented ideas and policies that go back to the creation of the state and even before, as do many other things in Israel. The centralized chain of command, which allows all medical facilities in the countryfrom hospitals to small medical facilities in remote townsto respond to a national plan designed at the HMOs headquarters, is part of the secret to implementing a national public health operation such as massive vaccination quickly and efficiently. For a country of relatively small size (Israel has under 9 million citizens), Israel also has an exemplary single electronic medical record system that includes all of the insured citizens and is shared by all HMOsmaking such a vast logistical operation very feasible. Such an interconnected network with presence all over the territory probably wouldnt exist if it would have responded only to profit and private incentives.

Thus, when it comes to understanding the early success andperhaps as importantlythe reason why pharma companies trusted Israel in its ability to implement this massive endeavor, it comes down to its public health system, inherited by those in power today. This system includes the exceptional talent and devotion of Israeli health workers who continue to be at the front lines of this pandemic saving lives day and nightas in every other country in the worldbut also the legacy of decades of public investment in health care, which other rich countries today should regret not having done.


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The secret sauce behind Israels successful COVID-19 vaccination program - Brookings Institution
Hank Aaron, 86, receives COVID-19 vaccine and hopes to inspire other Black Americans to do the same – CBS Sports

Hank Aaron, 86, receives COVID-19 vaccine and hopes to inspire other Black Americans to do the same – CBS Sports

January 7, 2021

Hall of Famer Hank Aaron was vaccinated against the coronavirus (COVID-19) at the Morehouse School of Medicine health clinic in Atlanta on Tuesday. Aaron, 86, hopes that his willingness to receive the COVID-19 vaccine will inspire Black Americans to do the same,he told The Associated Press.

"I don't have any qualms about it at all, you know," Aaron said. "I feel quite proud of myself for doing something like this. ... It's just a small thing that can help zillions of people in this country."

According to The Associated Press, a December survey showed 40 percent of Black people said they would not get the coronavirus vaccine. Aaron received the first of two doses of the Moderna vaccine alongside his wife, Billye, former U.N. Ambassador and civil rights leader Andrew Young and former U.S. Health and Human Services Secretary Louis Sullivan.

Aaron ended his 23-year MLB career with 755 home runs and was inducted into the National Baseball Hall of Fame and Museum in 1982. After retirement, Aaron held various positions within the Atlanta Braves -- the team he spent 21 seasons with -- front office.


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Hank Aaron, 86, receives COVID-19 vaccine and hopes to inspire other Black Americans to do the same - CBS Sports
Britain gambles on Covid-19 vaccines, upping the stakes for the rest of us – STAT

Britain gambles on Covid-19 vaccines, upping the stakes for the rest of us – STAT

January 7, 2021

In an extraordinary time, British health authorities are taking extraordinary measures to beat back Covid-19. But some experts say that, in doing so, they are also taking a serious gamble.

In recent days, the British have said they will stretch out the interval between the administration of the two doses required for Covid-19 vaccines already in use potentially to as long as three months, instead of the recommended three or four weeks. And they have said they will permit the first dose and second dose for any one person to be from different vaccine manufacturers, if the matching vaccine is not available.

The moves are borne of a desire to begin vaccinating as many people as quickly as possible, particularly with Britain facing high levels of transmission of an apparently more infectious form of SARS-CoV-2, the virus that causes Covid-19.

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But they are also effectively turning that country into a living laboratory. The moves are based on small slices of evidence mined from subsets of subsets of participants in clinical trials, as one expert described it for STAT, and on general principles of vaccinology rather than on actual research into the specific vaccines being used. If the efforts succeed, the world will have learned a great deal. If they fail, the world will also have gained important information, though some fear it could come at a high cost.

American health officials have dismissed the possibility that the U.S. would follow Britains lead, with Anthony Fauci, director of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, saying the vaccines in use one made by Moderna, the other by the Pfizer and BioNTech partnership will be deployed here using the schedules that were tested in Phase 3 trials that generated the evidence on which the Food and Drug Administration authorized the vaccines for emergency use.

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While data from both suggest the vaccines start to protect about 10 or 12 days after the first dose, its not known how long that initial protection lasts. In clinical trials, levels of neutralizing antibodies, which are thought to play a critical role in protecting against infection, were not substantial after the first dose of vaccine for the Pfizer vaccine.

While we think that single shot could give protection for more than four weeks, we just dont know that. We dont know when its going to drop off, said John Mascola, director of NIAIDs Vaccine Research Center. Mascola said Operation Warp Speed, the federal governments project to fast-track Covid vaccines, ruled out the possibility of altering vaccination schedules before Britain decided to do so.

Paul Bieniasz of Rockefeller University is one of those who is watching the evolving situation in Britain with dread. A retrovirologist who turned from HIV research to work on SARS-2, Bieniasz is studying how the virus acquires mutations that allow it to evade the protective antibodies people develop when they have contracted Covid-19, or when they have been vaccinated against it.

Bieniasz believes Britain is replicating in people the experiments hes been doing in his lab and could be fostering vaccine-resistant forms of the virus.

On New Years Day he posted a short, sarcastic treatise Musings of an anonymous, pissed off virologist on Twitter outlining how one could go about rendering Covid vaccines impotent, if that was ones goal. Giving millions of people who are at daily risk of contracting the disease incomplete protection by delaying the second dose of vaccine was key, he suggested.

My concern, as a virologist, is that if you wanted to make a vaccine-resistant strain, what you would do is to build a cohort of partially immunized individuals in the teeth of a highly prevalent viral infection, Bieniasz told STAT. Even rolling out the vaccine at all when there is so much transmission occurring is far from ideal, he said, suggesting it would have been safer to beat down the amount of virus in circulation before beginning the vaccine deployment.

You are essentially maximizing the opportunity for the virus to learn about the human immune system. Learn about antibodies. Learn how to evade them, he said.

Isabella Eckerle, a coronavirus researcher at the Geneva Center for Emerging Viral Diseases, shares Bieniaszs concern that Britain is increasing the potential for so-called escape mutants. She understands the public health imperative behind its approach, but worries about having large numbers of partially protected people for several months at a stretch. Britain is vaccinating its oldest citizens first. The immune systems of the elderly dont function as well as those of younger adults; some will inevitably contract Covid while waiting for their second dose of vaccine, she said.

Reports of partially vaccinated people contracting Covid may also erode confidence in the vaccines, Eckerle said: If we fail to use this vaccine in a good way, it will damage the whole field of vaccinology for many, many years, I think.

Stephen Goldstein, a virologist at the University of Utah who specializes in coronaviruses, said that taking Britains approach at a time of limited supply of vaccine could create other problems.

If we vaccinate everybody with one dose and six weeks later, the efficacy is now like 30% and we dont have the doses to boost them at that point because weve used up their second doses on another round of first doses, its a disaster potentially, he said.

Not everyone agrees there is a disaster in the making. Some believe it makes sense, given Britains surge in cases and the rapid spread there of the B.1.1.7 variant, which studies suggest may be 50% more transmissible than the viruses it is quickly replacing.

At the core of my being, I really wish that we could adhere to the original schedule of vaccines, because thats the safest thing to do, said Akiko Iwasaki, a virologist and immunologist at Yale University who tweeted about her support for the British approach. But seeing whats happening in the world and just sort of looking at the situation of poor rollout and distribution, Im feeling frustrated that we need to come up with some other options.

(Iwasaki was dismayed, though, to realize Britains instructions to clinicians that they could use a non-matching second dose of vaccine if that is their only option was not going to be done in the context of a clinical trial. While there is reason to believe boosting with a different type of vaccine might actually be useful in some cases particularly if the first dose is a vaccine like the AstraZeneca vaccine that uses a harmless virus onto which genetic material from SARS-2 has been fused the approach has not been studied at all in clinical trials.

Theyre kind of wasting the opportunity if theyre just sort of randomly doing it and not even following up on the effectiveness of that combination, Iwasaki said. So yeah, Im a lot more comfortable if it was a trial of some sort.)

Rajeev Venkayya, president of global vaccines for Takeda Pharmaceuticals, also believes Britains decision to stretch out the interval between vaccine doses is justifiable.

Of course we would all want to see vaccines used exactly as they were tested in Phase 3 efficacy trials. I dont think theres any debate about that. The question is: Do you have evidence to support flexibility? And here, I do think that and this is specific to the AstraZeneca vaccine it does appear that there is additional evidence that can support a modified recommendation, said Venkayya, who served as special assistant to President George W. Bush and senior director for biodefense. In that role, Venkayya was the White House point person for pandemic preparedness efforts triggered by the spread of H5N1 bird flu.

While the U.S.-based trial of the AstraZeneca vaccine is testing two doses given four weeks apart, studies the company conducted elsewhere gave some participants the two doses at intervals of six to eight weeks, or nine to 11 weeks, and some received the doses at an interval greater than 12 weeks.

The Pfizer and Moderna vaccines are the first using mRNA technology, and the companies did not study those extended dosing schedules. Pfizer has objected to the proposal that the vaccine be used with a longer interval between vaccinations.

Venkayya, whose thinking is influenced by his years in the White House, said sometimes policy has to be made without perfect data.

I think that to take the standards that we typically apply to the body of evidence we require before reaching decisions and recommendations on how to use vaccines, that by necessity has to change in the midst of a crisis like this, he said. I think there is the way we do medicine and public health in peacetime where we have the luxury of taking the time we need and investing the resources and effort to collect enough data to reach a conclusion. You just dont have that luxury in the midst of a crisis.


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First case of new coronavirus variant detected in Pa. as elementary schools urged to bring students back to th – The Philadelphia Inquirer

First case of new coronavirus variant detected in Pa. as elementary schools urged to bring students back to th – The Philadelphia Inquirer

January 7, 2021

It depends on your job, age, health, and exposure risk. If you arent a health-care worker or nursing home resident, you arent yet eligible and youll have to wait for more clarity from government officials. When the states receive enough vaccine doses to open up the next phase of vaccinations, there will be more information available for people who are eligible about how to sign up for a shot. Right now, health officials are saying vaccination of health-care workers could be largely complete by early to mid-February, though theres no guarantee.


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First case of new coronavirus variant detected in Pa. as elementary schools urged to bring students back to th - The Philadelphia Inquirer
Where to receive your coronavirus vaccine in the Carolinas – WCNC.com

Where to receive your coronavirus vaccine in the Carolinas – WCNC.com

January 7, 2021

For the first time, select members of the public will be eligible for the COVID-19 vaccine as county health departments move into Phase 1B vaccine distribution.

CHARLOTTE, N.C. The beginning of the Phase 1B coronavirus vaccine distribution marks the first time any member of the public has been eligible to receive the vaccine. Phase 1A, which began in December, was limited to health care workers treating COVID-19 patients and the staff and residents of long-term care facilities such as nursing homes.

Each county will move from Phase 1A to Phase 1B independently in this county-by-county rollout. Factors contributing to the progress of phases including the available supply of the vaccine and the progress through the previous phase. The process for making reservations will vary by county and not all counties have announced plans publicly yet.

Everyone will need to receive two doses of the coronavirus vaccine in order for it to be effective.

County-by-county coronavirus vaccine distribution status

When and how to reserve appointments for the COVID-19 vaccine for counties in North Carolina and South Carolina near Charlotte.

Alexander County

Anson County

Ashe County

Avery County

Burke County

Cabarrus County

Caldwell County

Catawba County

Chester County

Chesterfield County

Cleveland County

Gaston County

Iredell County

Lancaster County

Lincoln County

Mecklenburg County, including the City of Charlotte

For the county, appointments can be booked on mecknc.gov/COVID-19 or https://booknow.appointment-plus.com/83g1hcpv/. Phone appointments may be made by calling 980-314-9400 and selecting Option 3 beginning at 8 a.m. If you leave a message, they will attempt to return your call within 24-48 business hours.

Novant Health says they are notifying eligible patients through their MyChart account. Those patients will be prompted to schedule an appointment. Those who do not have access to MyChart, who did not receive the notification, or have additional questions, may call 855-648-2248 for scheduling assistance.

Atrium Health appointments can be booked online through MyAtriumHealth.

Mecklenburg County vaccines will be administered at the Bojangles' Coliseum BOplex, please use the entrance on Briar Creek Road. Briar Creek Road is exit 244 on East Independence Blvd. For close parking, please use sections 10-15 in the parking lot.

Rowan County

Stanly County

Union County

Watauga County


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Where to receive your coronavirus vaccine in the Carolinas - WCNC.com