Weekly Roundup
COVID-19 Vaccine Development, Policy, and Public Perception in the United States
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CommuniVax Corner
Two of our local teams in Virginia recently released reports describing efforts to address vaccine mistrust and hesitancy and improve health equity in their communities. Read more about their work on Virginia's Eastern Shore and in Hampton Roads, and check out our other local team reports at Communivax.org!
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People, Perceptions, and Polls
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NEWS
With Only 26% of Pregnant People in the United States Vaccinated Against COVID-19, New Survey Sheds Light on the Reasons Why. In July, the American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists (ACOG) and the Society for Maternal-Fetal Medicine (SMFM), the preeminent professional membership organizations guiding obstetric care, issued a strong recommendation in support of vaccination during pregnancy. In September, after the deadliest month on record for pregnant people as a result of COVID-19 infection, the CDC issued its strongest guidance to date, urging people who are currently pregnant, recently pregnant, or trying to become pregnant to receive the vaccine. (Maven Clinic, 11/21)
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NEWS
How to Put a Vaccine Card on Your Phone. In the US, those slightly-too-big-for-your-wallet paper cards are the main official record that someone has been vaccinated. They can be a pain to carry around, and are just as easy to lose as anything else that’s jangling around in your pockets. Fortunately, there are ways to digitize them. Usually . (Wired, 10/31/21)
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Law, Policy, and Politics
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NEWS
Supreme Court Won’t Block Maine’s Vaccine Mandate for Health Care Workers. The Supreme Court on Friday refused to block Maine’s requirement that health care workers be vaccinated against the coronavirus notwithstanding their religious objections. As is the court’s custom in rulings on emergency applications, its brief order gave no reasons. But the three most conservative members of the court — Justices Clarence Thomas, Samuel A. Alito Jr. and Neil M. Gorsuch — issued a lengthy dissent, saying the majority had gone badly astray . (New York Times, 10/29/21)
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NEWS
FBI Investigating Loretto Hospital’s Vaccination Program As Part Of A Criminal Probe. The FBI is investigating Loretto Hospital’s COVID-19 vaccination program following reports that doses went to ineligible people with ties to hospital administrators, government records show. Two federal grand jury subpoenas were issued to the Illinois Department of Public Health in May and September after Block Club Chicago revealed the hospital vaccinated ineligible people at Chicago’s Trump Tower, where Loretto’s chief financial officer, Dr. Anosh Ahmed, lived, as well as a luxury jewelry shop and a high-end Gold Coast steakhouse where Ahmed hung out . (Block Club Chicago, 11/2/21)
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NEWS
Vaccine Stocks Eye $24.5 Billion in Lost Value on Moderna Miss. The FBI is investigating Loretto Hospital’s COVID-19 vaccination program following reports that doses went to ineligible people with ties to hospital administrators, government records show. Two federal grand jury subpoenas were issued to the Illinois Department of Public Health in May and September after Block Club Chicago revealed the hospital vaccinated ineligible people at Chicago’s Trump Tower, where Loretto’s chief financial officer, Dr. Anosh Ahmed, lived, as well as a luxury jewelry shop and a high-end Gold Coast steakhouse where Ahmed hung out . (Bloomberg, 11/4/21)
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Research, Development, and Clinical Practice
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NEWS
US Kids Ages 5 To 11 Can Now Get COVID Vaccines. The FDA authorization on Friday and the CDC advisory committee’s unanimous decision to recommend the vaccines on Tuesday now means that you can get your kids under 12 vaccinated. (Children 12 and older are already eligible to get a Pfizer vaccine, and the CDC recommends that they do so.). (BuzzFeed News, 11/2/21)
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NEWS
The Race Is On to Develop a Vaccine Against Every Coronavirus. It is a complex project, and no group is close to reaching the goal. Universal vaccines against other recurrent, genetically variable diseases—see, especially, influenza—have been pursued unsuccessfully for years. But researchers think one for coronaviruses might be more achievable, both because this virus is less genetically complex than the one that causes the flu, and also because the threat of another coronavirus pandemic feels uncomfortably real . (Wired, 11/1/21)
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NEWS
What Do We Really Know About Vaccine Effectiveness? No vaccine is 100% effective against any disease. The covid shots are no exception. Effectiveness in preventing infection — defined as a positive test result — appears in some studies to wane sharply the more time that goes by after completing the one- or two-shot regimen. But on key measures — prevention of serious illness, hospitalization and death — real-world studies from the U.S. and abroad generally show protection weakening slightly, particularly in older or sicker people, but remaining strong overall, even with the rise of the more infectious delta variant of the covid virus . (Publication, Date)
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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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