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Medicine United States

US To Recommend COVID Vaccine Boosters at 8 Months (apnews.com) 329

Associated Press: U.S. health experts are expected to recommend COVID-19 booster shots for all Americans eight months after they get their second dose of the vaccine, to ensure longer-lasting protection as the delta variant spreads across the country. Federal health officials have been looking at whether extra shots for the vaccinated would be needed as early as this fall, reviewing case numbers in the U.S. as well as the situation in other countries such as Israel, where preliminary studies suggest the vaccine's protection against serious illness dropped among those vaccinated in January.

An announcement on the U.S. booster recommendation is expected as soon as this week, according to two people familiar with the matter who spoke to The Associated Press on the condition of anonymity to discuss internal deliberations. Doses would only begin to be administered widely once the Food and Drug Administration formally approves the vaccines, which are being dispensed for now under what is known as emergency use authorization. Full approval of the Pfizer shot is expected in the coming weeks.

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US To Recommend COVID Vaccine Boosters at 8 Months

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  • Update (Score:5, Interesting)

    by rossdee ( 243626 ) on Tuesday August 17, 2021 @10:31AM (#61700983)

    Does the manufacturer (Moderna) have a new version tailored to the Delta variant yet?

    Is the government going to pay for my time off when I am sick for 3 days afterwards?

    • Re:Update (Score:4, Insightful)

      by Wookie Monster ( 605020 ) on Tuesday August 17, 2021 @10:44AM (#61701041)
      Another question that needs to be asked: Will a booster cause you to be 3 days sick, or will the protection from the earlier vaccination mean that your immune system adapts more quickly? I never got sick from a flu vaccine, possibly because my immune system is already trained to deal with the flu, due to previous infections and vaccinations.
      • They said 88% say it's the same or better than the 2nd shot. Most people were sick for 1 day or less, not 3, from the 2nd shot, among those that were sick at all, many only had a little soreness and fatigue.
      • We don't use attenuated virus vaccines for much of anything anymore. When you get a vaccine, it's for your immune system to "practice" for the real thing. That usually means just a target protein (or mRNA that can be transcribed to the target protein). The "feeling sick" you get afterwar is caused by homeostatic side-effects of your own immune response. So, uh, yeah, subsequent vaccines may cause you to not feel well. But you aren't "sick" in the sense that you are experiencing symptoms related to a pat
    • Is the government going to pay for my time off when I am sick for 3 days afterwards?

      You were so sick you had to take off for 3 days? If that's the case, I am shocked you're young enough to still work. My elderly parents got sick for a day tops. I didn't get sick at all.

      My guess is that if you were SO sick you couldn't work for 3 days, you'd probably be dead or on a ventilator if you actually caught COVID...but fuck science for trying to save your life, right?

      Stop whining, you fucking child. You're ruining it for the rest of us. Your opinions do not outweigh the science and your

      • Comment removed (Score:5, Insightful)

        by account_deleted ( 4530225 ) on Tuesday August 17, 2021 @11:02AM (#61701149)
        Comment removed based on user account deletion
        • by Somervillain ( 4719341 ) on Tuesday August 17, 2021 @11:33AM (#61701313)

          Still better than COVID. Rather be sick and in pain than both of those things and unable to breath.

          So no need to be an ass about it.

          Your first sentence is key. You realize that while the experience sucked, catching COVID would be worse. The attitude that the vaccine is some imposition is childish and stupid. Even if COVID doesn't kill you, what about long haul COVID or the shittiness of mundane COVID? I have a young, fit relative with long-haul COVID. She used to go to the gym 5x a week and now can't finish a class she could easily do before....and she's in her early 30s....slender, low-stress life, no pre-existing conditions/injuries...aged 20 years from that...I don't think anyone wants that.

          Yes, some will have shitty side effects, but I will bet that if they react more severely to the vaccine than the average person, they'd react MUCH more severely to COVID than the average person, if not just die.

          Those of us who are responsible adults are doing our part, getting vaccinated, wearing masks, social distancing...and instead of getting our lives back to normal, which we all thought it would be 3 months ago, it's being ruined by red state anti-vaxxer idiots. I don't want my kids attending another semester of zoom school because of these idiots. I don't like half the businesses in my community shutting down or being on the brink of shutting down because of these idiots. I don't like innocent people in their vicinity getting sick or variants spreading because of these people. It's very frustrating how prevalent anti-vax attitudes are, particularly among the red states, holding the nation back from recovery.

        • I find it weird how random the effects are. My friend's wife runs cross country ultramarathons and she felt kind of ill for a day or so, and so did my friend (who is nearly as athletic).

          I had zero effect from Pfizer besides a sore arm, and even that last about 3 hours and only the first shot. Running around the fucking block would be a challenge for me.

          Meanwhile, last fall's flu shot? I was miserable for 2 and a half days, like I actually had the flu. First time I have ever had a reaction from the flu s

        • by Ksevio ( 865461 )

          From what I've heard, the shot is usually only bad for people that have a strong immune reaction to it, so the first shot will be bad if you've been exposed to covid19 (or another coronavirus). There are also the people who are asymptomatic for the virus which could relate to the vaccine reaction. When I got it, the worst I had was a sore arm, same for my wife.

      • by jythie ( 914043 )
        It is a roll of the dice. I had a healthy 25 year old coworker who was out of commision for a week, and a 70 year old one with medical issues who did not miss a beat. It does not seem to be determined by age or general health, just luck of the draw with how one's immune system reacts.
      • by Xenographic ( 557057 ) on Tuesday August 17, 2021 @11:25AM (#61701275) Journal

        > You were so sick you had to take off for 3 days? If that's the case, I am shocked you're young enough to still work. My elderly parents got sick for a day tops. I didn't get sick at all.

        I didn't get sick much, either, but you do know that it affects different people differently, right? I have a family member who can't take it due to having been hospitalized for a flu shot. The rest of us got vaccinated with just some sore arms. You're not in any position to tell other people what they did and did not experience.

        > My guess is that if you were SO sick you couldn't work for 3 days, you'd probably be dead or on a ventilator if you actually caught COVID...but fuck science for trying to save your life, right?

        Thing about their story is that it implies that they *actually got vaccinated* so you're kind of off base here.

        > Stop whining, you fucking child. You're ruining it for the rest of us.

        Actually posts like yous are often used by anti-vaxxers. I should know, because I'm out there working on convincing people who are hesitant about vaccines to get vaccinated, with modest success.

        Responses like this, which try to shut down valid complaints with no sympathy, are much harder to deal with. Science can be explained to people, but folks won't associate with people who hate them.

        Also when you deny people's experience, they don't trust you. You can think (but should not say) that the complaints are overblown, but in this case it'd be better to advise them to take some aspirin and get rest, advocate for better sick leave policies, or pretty much anything other than angrily telling them that their own eyes are lying to them.

        So when you talk about making things worse here, please look in the mirror. Your post is the type of thing makes people hesitate to take vaccines because you're promoting them and yet they know from experience that they can't trust you.

        It's the same with people who can't breathe well in masks. Maybe consider helping them find a more comfortable mask style instead of shouting down any dissent. If you truly want this to end, consider that maybe your approach should invite positive change instead of just letting you vent anger.

        Have a nice day.

        • This is one of the best ways of explaining this position I have ever seen.

          Ridiculing people doesn't help. It actively hurts. I'm glad that some people understand that.

      • by godrik ( 1287354 )

        You were so sick you had to take off for 3 days? If that's the case, I am shocked you're young enough to still work. My elderly parents got sick for a day tops. I didn't get sick at all.

        It affects different people differently. I was essentially out for two days. fever at night, drowsy the rest of the day. My wife was out for three days as well. But we typically both react to vaccines. I am usually sick-ish a day after a regular flu shot.

        My son? Nothing. My mother in law? Nothing. My parents? Nothing. My brother? Nothing. His wife was out for a couple of days though.

        I don't think the after-effect of the vaccine are linked to age.

      • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

        In Europe it's normal to have unlimited sick days and get paid for them, at least for the first week and up to some limit. After that you get some amount of money from the government. Obviously you can't be fired just for being off with COVID vaccine symptoms for a few days.

        Seems to resolve all these issues.

    • Your "reward" is not getting a tube shoved down your throat that's hooked up to a machine that breathes for you.

  • Screw this (Score:5, Funny)

    by Opportunist ( 166417 ) on Tuesday August 17, 2021 @11:01AM (#61701133)

    The whole vaccine shit really fucked up my hopes for eternal home office. Power to the unvaccinated, as long as you keep the infection rates up and running, I can stay at home and work in my undies instead of having to go to cubicle hell.

    If I felt anything but contempt for you, it would probably be gratitude for risking and often losing your life just for my comfort.

  • Since its so easy to get vaccinated lately, I've been seriously considering also getting the Moderna vaccine (I've been fully vaxed with Pfizer since April).

    Near as I can tell, the multiple vaccine route seems to be a promising technique and I think some countries have been doing it because it increases their vaccination rates (ie, fewer supply constraints).

    I kind of wonder why the "booster" wouldn't be another one of the existing vaccines vs. just more of the same vaccine a person already had (provided tha

    • A booster will increase your circulating antibodies to give you faster/better protection temporarily. A targeted booster will give you better antibodies so even when they fall off the ones that remain will do a better job. So, the first still helps, and a new booster will help more. In coming years we'll probably just mix it in with flu shots and it'll regress to normalcy.
  • This is a waste of money and shot production. The current situation in the US is due almost universally to unvaxxed people. They are the ones who are filling up hospitals to the brim. Getting shots in them before they get there is obviously the better play (though of course we see how stubborn they can be.) Moreover, excess shots and production capacity should not be used for anyone but the immunocompromised or elderly at best. We'd be better off to ship them for COVAX to help the rest of the world start i
    • I agree, it sounds like acting out of despair. The solution is to have at least 90%+ of the population vaccinated with 2 doses. Not to have 50% with 3 doses.

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