Weekly Roundup
COVID-19 Vaccine Development, Policy, and Public Perception in the United States
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CommuniVax Corner
Read more about the work of Communivax's local teams and working group members in these stories:
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People, Perceptions, and Polls
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NEWS
Russian Anti-Vaccine Disinformation Campaign Backfires. For more than a year, Russian-aligned troll factories overseeing thousands of social media accounts have been accused by Western countries and disinformation experts of spreading anti-vaccine messages in an aggressive campaign to spread conspiracy theories and cast doubt on Western coronavirus vaccines. But the year-long offensive appears to have backfired. Russian officials now worry that the anti-vaccine skepticism encouraged by the troll factories has spilled over and is partly responsible for the high level of vaccine hesitancy among Russians . (VOA, 11/18/21)
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NEWS
Schools, Pediatricians Look to Make Up Lost Ground on Non-Covid Vaccinations. Child health experts hope community clinics, along with the return to in-person classes, more well-child visits and the rollout of covid shots for younger children, can help boost routine childhood immunizations, which dropped during the pandemic. Despite a rebound, immunization rates are still lower than in 2019, and disparities in rates between racial and economic groups, particularly for Black children, have been exacerbated . (KHN, 11/18/21)
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Law, Policy, and Politics
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NEWS
Biden Cautions Against ‘Panic’ Over Omicron, Urges Boosters. The administration doesn’t yet believe new formulations of coronavirus vaccines will be necessary, but is already working with Pfizer Inc., Moderna Inc. and Johnson & Johnson on contingency plans, he said. He said he’ll issue a new strategy to combat a winter surge of coronavirus on Thursday, but that the U.S. will not have to undertake further lockdowns or shutdowns. (Bloomberg, 11/29/21)
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NEWS
Red States Are Now Paying Unemployment Benefits to Anti-Vaxxers Who Quit Their Jobs. Under these new laws, any worker who gets fired for broadly defined “misconduct,” such as flunking an employer-imposed drug test, is disqualified from unemployment benefits—but employees who refuse COVID vaccination are glorified, protected, and subsidized. The state must guarantee, that these reckless freeloaders “will still receive unemployment benefits despite being fired for standing up for their beliefs.” (Slate, 11/30/21)
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Research, Development, and Clinical Practice
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NEWS
Once rare, lung transplants for COVID-19 patients are rising quickly. Some transplant centers have said patients will lose their spot on the list if they are not vaccinated against coronavirus. But some say eliminating anyone who hasn't had a COVID vaccine from even being considered for an organ may be unfair because it could exclude racial, religious or ethnic groups that have lower vaccination rates. (NPR, 11/28/21)
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NEWS
What J&J Can Still Teach Us. This incessant ragging has been all too easy—and maybe shortsighted. According to some experts, the haters are overlooking a trait that could rescue J&J’s reputation, and possibly even keep it in scientific contention. “I think there is a silver lining to this vaccine that a lot of people don’t see,” David Martinez, an immunologist at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill who is studying immune responses to COVID-19 shots, told me. It’s a trait called durability—the ability of a vaccine’s protection to persist, despite the ravages of time. (The Atlantic, 12/1/21)
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NEWS
The Evidence is Piling Up That Pregnant People Should Get Vaccinated. Hundreds of thousands of pregnant women in the U.S. have now been safely vaccinated against COVID-19. Studies have found that vaccinated women had similar miscarriage rates as unvaccinated women. And scientists have found that vaccines are working for pregnant women: Early reports show that vaccinated mothers have a lower risk of coronavirus infection as well as covid antibodies in their umbilical cords and breastmilk. This means mothers are more likely to provide some protection to newborns. (Center for Public Integrity, 11/23/21)
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This newsletter supports CommuniVax, a research coalition convened by the
Johns Hopkins Center for Health Security and the Texas State University Department of Anthropology,
with support from the Chan Zuckerberg Initiative and The Rockefeller Foundation.
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