Weekly Roundup
COVID-19 Vaccine Development, Policy, and Public Perception in the United States
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CommuniVax Corner
Our local teams continue to make strong progress in their community outreach and engagement efforts.
- In Baltimore, team members have led a local pop-up vaccination site and participated in a mayoral task force focusing on rollout efforts. The team has also worked on Spanish-language podcasts addressing COVID-19 vaccines and school re-openings, and plan to make videos of Latinx individuals sharing positive messages about COVID-19 vaccination.
- The San Diego team will be participating in an upcoming event: the COVID Discovery and Equity Dialogue: Southern California Border Region COVID Research Partnerships. The goal of this event is to explore ways of aligning COVID-19 research with related community health needs.
- In Idaho, the team is holding biweekly meetings with the local vaccine rollout teams at public health departments and supporting vaccine clinics at small pharmacies in target communities.
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People, Perceptions, and Polls
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NEWS
More Black And Latinx Americans Are Embracing COVID-19 Vaccination. Hispanic Americans are still a bit less likely than white Americans to say they have received, or plan to get, a COVID-19 vaccination. But that's partly because Hispanic Americans as a group are younger than white Americans, and younger people are generally less interested in getting a COVID-19 vaccine. A lack of contact with physicians may have contributed to vaccine hesitancy among Black residents who look to their doctors for vaccine advice . (NPR, 3/20/21)
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OP-ED
Funding Black and Latinx community institutions is the key to vaccine equity. The labor of the pastors, congregation members, community organizers and allies has largely been taken for granted. In the last five weeks we have partnered with community groups to run six COVID-19 vaccine equity events delivering thousands of doses to historically marginalized populations. The labor is real and significant. For a 150-dose event, we asked everyone to log their hours and activities so we could rapidly iterate on the process. It took over 20 people 300 hours to make the event happen. The labor costs for that event, completely outside of the health system, amounted to $40 to $50 per vaccine dose. For the largest event of 500 doses, 3,000 phone calls were made to recruit and register older Latinx adults. (The Hill, 3/25/21)
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OP-ED
Vaccine Passports Won’t Get Us Out of the Pandemic. In much of the world, coronavirus vaccines remain in short supply and, in some cases, wholly unavailable. As governments, largely in rich countries, seek to use vaccine passports to relax restrictions, they risk relying on a fragmented system that could have the adverse effect of extending the pandemic . (New York Times, 3/22/21)
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NEWS
I have a COVID-19 vaccine appointment. Do I deserve it? The cruelest reality of the vaccine system is that it is exactly those who are likely to struggle to get a COVID-19 vaccine appointment who need the shot the most: people of color, service workers, the elderly, and the disabled. Those demographic groups are more likely to live in heavily polluted communities. Exposure to air pollution has been shown to be a significant risk factor for more severe COVID-19 outcomes. And yet, those burdened neighborhoods have been shunted aside in the vaccine rollout in places like Chicago . (Grist, 3/18/21)
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NEWS
Five myths about coronavirus vaccines. Three coronavirus vaccines have been authorized for emergency use in the United States. Two more are expected to be authorized later in the spring. These five vaccines will be used to immunize the American people and are expected to stop or slow the epidemic in the United States. But even before the vaccines were approved, myths were spreading about them . (Washington Post, 3/19/21)
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NEWS
A Hospital Encounters Vaccine Hesitation Among Its Own Staff. In New York State, African-Americans make up about 17 percent of the adult population but have received only 10 percent of the shots. That is because of difficulties gaining access to the shots but also because of a lingering reluctance — and that has rung true at Harlem Hospital, where a majority of the staff is Black, administrators said. (New York Times, 3/24/21)
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Research, Development, and Clinical Practice
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NEWS
AstraZeneca COVID-19 Vaccine Trial Data Questioned By Safety Board. A safety board overseeing AstraZeneca's COVID-19 vaccine trial is raising concerns about the company's data. In an unusual post-midnight statement, the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases said the Data and Safety Monitoring Board, which monitors the trial, is concerned that "outdated information" may have been included in the trial results . (NPR, 3/23/21)
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NEWS
Don’t Be Surprised When Vaccinated People Get Infected. Breakthrough infections, which occur when fully vaccinated people are infected by the pathogen that their shots were designed to protect against, are an entirely expected part of any vaccination process. They’re the data points that keep vaccines from reaching 100 percent efficacy in trials; they’re simple proof that no inoculation is a perfect preventative. And so far, the ones found after COVID-19 vaccination seem to be unextraordinary . (The Atlantic, 3/19/21)
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NEWS
CDC’s Messonnier: We can’t change the Covid-19 vaccine regimen unless we know it works. Some lawmakers and scientists have also called for looking into giving a lower dosage of the Moderna vaccine, which, as given now, contains about three times as much vaccine as the Pfizer shot. But without additional data, Messonnier cautioned against such a move. She questioned whether lowering the dosage might have an effect on how long the vaccine guards people or reduce the quality of protection it provides . (STAT, 3/16/21)
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NEWS
Why Some of Your Vaccine 'Side Effects' Might Just Be Placebo. Just as our positive expectations can make us feel better after taking a new potential treatment, for a while at least, our negative expectations can do the opposite and make us feel crummy. On Twitter, some have even admitted to feeling worse after taking the placebo than they did after taking the real thing later on. (Gizmodo, 3/22/21)
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Law, Policy, and Politics
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NEWS
U.S. Rushes to Expand Covid Vaccine Eligibility in a ‘Race Against Time’. But even as the pace of vaccinations has accelerated to about 2.5 million shots each day nationwide, the country finds itself at a precarious point in the pandemic. Cases, deaths and hospitalizations have all fallen sharply from January peaks, yet infection levels have plateaued this month, at about 55,000 new cases a day. While governors relax restrictions on businesses like bars, indoor gyms and casinos, highly infectious variants are spreading and some states, especially on the East Coast, have struggled for weeks to make any progress in reducing cases . (New York Times, 3/19/21)
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NEWS
Biden commits $10 billion to close racial and other gaps in vaccine coverage. Deploying funding largely from the pandemic aid plan that cleared Congress this month, the administration will invest more than $6 billion in community health centers and make front-line essential workers and all people 16 and older with high-risk medical conditions eligible for vaccination at such sites. More than 65 percent of doses allocated by the federal government to community health centers have gone to people of color, the administration said in a fact sheet announcing the plans . (Washington Post, 3/25/21)
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NEWS
Rich Countries Signed Away a Chance to Vaccinate the World. By partnering with drug companies, Western leaders bought their way to the front of the line. But they also ignored years of warnings — and explicit calls from the World Health Organization — to include contract language that would have guaranteed doses for poor countries or encouraged companies to share their knowledge and the patents they control . (New York Times, 3/22/21)
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NEWS
She Managed Concert Tours. Now, Covid Vaccines. In Caroline Smith's public-facing role, which involves managing queues, fielding questions and complaints, educating patients, and disinfecting surfaces, her mission is to get people in and get them out as safely and quickly as possible. She says her crowd-management skills and experience with venue organization make her uniquely qualified for the job, adding that dealing with disgruntled patients can, at times, compare to handling intoxicated fans . (Rolling Stone, 3/15/21)
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GUIDANCE
COVID Vaccine Equity Research Dialogues (CoVEReD). As the rollout of the U.S. COVID-19 vaccine program continues and questions remain about how allocation can simultaneously reduce risk and inequity, Penn is convening a new series, COVID Vaccine Equity Research Dialogues (CoVEReD). Hosted by Penn LDI Senior Fellows and vaccine policy experts Alison Buttenheim, PhD, MBA, and Harald Schmidt, PhD, MA, the series brings together top experts to discuss equitable vaccine distribution. (University of Pennsylvania, 3/21)
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NEWS
The Dark Web Is Teeming With Vaccine Listings Right Now. Security researchers have seen a spike in listings on dark web marketplaces in recent weeks. The sites are advertising everything from vaccine doses to falsified vaccine certifications and negative test results. Currently, more than 1,200 listings are offering a variety of vaccines, including Pfizer, Moderna, Johnson & Johnson, AstraZeneca, Sputnik, and Sinopharm . (Wired, 3/25/21)
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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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