A round of Pfizer booster vaccinations will be offered to seniors and the most vulnerable Americans after the Food and Drug Administration signed off plans for the extended rollout. It follows a series of heated discussions among top U.S. scientists over whether a booster shot is necessary and who should be allowed to get it.
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“We fully support our federal partners’ determination to provide boosters, and California has built the necessary infrastructure to mobilize such vaccine distribution – all to help protect the health and well-being of Californians,” Newsom said in a statement.
“Vaccines work,” he added. “They are safe, effective, and are how we end this pandemic.”
The action plan will ensure state officials can meet the demand for boosters and will be able to roll out COVID-19 vaccines for residents under the age of 12, which the state expects to begin as early as next month.
The announcement comes after the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) authorized the Pfizer-BioNTech COVID-19 vaccine for boosters for those over the age of 65 and other high-risk individuals.
The Pennsylvania Department of Health reported 5,498 new COVID cases Thursday. Average daily cases in Pennsylvania are currently at 4,756, according to the Mayo Clinic.
Thursday’s new cases also marked a steep increase from the 4,394 cases documented on Wednesday. There were 32 new confirmed deaths in the state Thursday, bringing the death total to 29,030, according to the Pennsylvania death registry.
Almost 85 percent of Portugal’s population is vaccinated against COVID-19, the highest rate in the world, according to Our World in Data.
The government announced Thursday that it will remove COVID-19 capacity restrictions for restaurants, bars, weddings, concerts and theaters.
READ MORE: “Portugal Closing in on COVID Vaccines for 85 Percent of Population, Highest Rate in World”
Governor Kathy Hochul announced Thursday that people who get vaccinated between now and October 24 can enter to win football tickets and other prizes from the Buffalo Bills, New York Giants and New York Jets.
Currently, 62.7 percent of the state population is fully vaccinated and 70.2 percent of the population has received at least one shot, according to state data.
This new batch of incentives could be a push to get younger New Yorkers vaccinated. About 59 percent of 12-15-year-olds and about 70 percent of 16-25 and 26-34-year-olds have received one dose.
As of Tuesday, the state is reporting an average of 117 new COVID-19 cases a day for every 100,000 people, according to data from the New York Times.
Alaska achieved a new single-day record for most resident cases with 1,224, according to state data. Cases have increased 29 percent from last week.
“We are on top of this. We’ve always been on top of this,” Governor Mike Dunleavy said in a press conference Wednesday. Dunleavy said he did not see a need to implement COVID-19 restrictions in the state.
The number of COVID-19 hospitalization has rapidly increased since July. There are currently 200 people hospitalized with coronavirus, with 34 currently on ventilators.
“When we look at our hospital capacity and we look at our number of hospitalizations, we see more people in Alaska being hospitalized right now than we’ve ever seen before in the pandemic,” Alaska’s Chief Medical Officer Dr. Anne Zink said during a press conference Wednesday.
With this is a slight uptick in the past few days, the figure has decreased from 38 hospitalizations last Friday.
Beds in pediatric intensive-care units across the state are currently operating between 79 and 100 percent capacity.
Overall, there were 3,165 confirmed and probable COVID-19 cases and 44 confirmed and probable COVID-19 deaths reported Wednesday, according to the South Carolina Department of Health and Environmental Control.
Weekly cases have decreased over the month of September, dropping from 30,937 the week of September 11 to 27,868 last week, according to state data.
“We are not out of the woods, and I fully expect case counts to go up again across the country over the weeks and months to come,” Dr. Megan Ranney, the associate dean of the School of Public Health at Brown University, told CNN.
According to data from Johns Hopkins University, the seven-day average for new cases has declined by more than 20,000 to about 130,000 cases a day.
Ranney said this decline comes as states that saw a surge of Delta cases are coming down off their peaks.
In a press conference Thursday, Donald Kauerauf, who started in his new role at the beginning of the month, said he is haunted by the state law that restricts local health departments from extending public COVID-19 safety orders.
“This is one that haunts me, this is one I worry about,” Kauerauf said. “Public health is not politics, it is helping people. And the damage that is being done not only across Missouri but across the country where there are oppositions to views, the quarreling, the lack of respect to knowledge and outright meanness to each other in the public health field.”
The law in question prevents health orders issued during a state of emergency order from lasting more than 30 days within a 180-day period. Those issued outside a state of emergency can only last 21 days within a 180-day period.
“If we’ve lost that local respect from the system, how are we going to recover from that?” Kauerauf said.
“Let’s set the rhetoric behind, let’s focus on issues of public health and understand that it’s about people,” he added. “What we’re doing is to protect people, and that’s job number one.”
The state mandate requires health care workers, educators and state employees to be fully vaccinated by October 18 or they will lose their job. Medical and religious exemptions are including in the order.
Governor Jay Inslee is confident that his mandate is “legally sound.”
“We hope that public servants and those who have made their careers around protecting the health and safety of the public will choose to do the right thing and get vaccinated. As for the lawsuit, we are confident that the governor’s proclamations are legally sound,” Tara Lee, spokesperson for Inslee, told KING-TV.
New York state is also battling a lawsuit that is urging the state to include a religious exemption for its COVID-19 vaccine mandate for health care workers.
The NY State Attorney General’s office argues that there is no constitutional obligation to include such an exemption because health care workers in the state are already required to be vaccinated against measles, mumps and rubella without exemption.
The mandate was set to take effect next Monday, but it is currently on hold while this case makes its way through the courts.
The CDC’s Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices (ACIP) is meeting Thursday to discuss the benefits and risks of COVID-19 booster shots and assess other evidence in order to make a recommendation on a third dose.
The European Medicines Agency (EMA) announced Thursday that it expects to make a decision on a booster dose of the BioNTech/Pfizer COVID-19 vaccine by early October.
“Studies in immunocompromised people show that an additional dose of mRNA vaccines can increase the level of protection,” Dr. Marco Cavaleri, the head of anti-infectives and vaccines at the EMA, said during a press briefing.
In an internal poll among teachers in the United Federation of Teachers (UFT), 98 percent said they believe neither the mayor nor the Department of Education has a proper COVID-19 safety plan.
Over 90 percent said teachers and students are not able to maintain a three-foot distance throughout the day and 89 percent said students are not following mask protocols.
This comes after a judge ruled Wednesday that New York City can proceed with a mandate requiring teachers to get vaccinated by next Monday or lose their job. A lawsuit from the city unions placed a temporary restraining order on the mandate.
The UFT estimates about 90 percent of its teachers have already received the shot.
It will soon overtake New York state, notably one of the most impacted states for deaths in the whole of the country.
The authors of a study documenting the findings, which were published in the journal Nature Communications, said the research could lead to the development of new frontline treatments against the disease that can be administered in the form of a simple nasal spray.
An international team of researchers, led by scientists from the U.K. government-supported Rosalind Franklin Institute in England, found that short chains of molecules known as nanobodies effectively neutralized the SARS-CoV-2 virus in infected hamsters, which were being used as a model for the human immune system.
FULL STORY: How Llama Antibodies Could Be Used As a New COVID Treatment
All three were put on the variants of interest list because of their potential ability to easily spread and cause severe disease, but their presence around the world and in various countries dwindled to the point that the WHO’s COVID chief Maria Van Kerkhove believes they present a diminished public health risk.
FULL STORY: WHO Drops 3 COVID Mutations From Variants of Interest List After They Fail to Take Hold
It follows criticism from UN and WHO leaders over the poor progress made in the Covax scheme, where richer nations buy and supply poorer regions with COVID jabs.
“We need a global vaccination plan to at least double production & ensure vaccines reach 70% of the world’s population in the first half of 2022,” he said in opening remarks to the 76th UN General Assembly.
It follows similar remarks from World Health Organization chief Dr. Tedros Adhanom, who said earlier this month he was “appalled” by the lack of progress.
FDA acting commissioner Dr. Janet Woodcock said in a statement that the authorization would allow booster shots for healthcare workers, teachers, grocery workers, and those in homeless shelters or prisons.
White House Press Secretary Jen Psaki called the decision a “major step forward” for the U.S. vaccine rollout in a tweet last night.
R.1 also shares the D614G - found in all other variants that have overtaken the novel Alpha strain - which has been shown to significantly increase infectiousness.
Writing in Forbes, scientist William A. Haseltine describes how all five mutations could spell for a dangerous variant emerging in the U.S.
Over 2,200 Americans have been found with the R.1 strain so far, with the latest case detected on August 6 and representing at least 0.5 percent of all new cases last month.
Maryland was found to have the highest number of cases, with 399 cases being detected since it was first found in the country.