People be very careful this virus is not done yet

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3 USA Basketball Select Team players test positive for COVID

Team USA prepares for Tokyo Olympics

Players train during the first day of USA Basketball practice, ahead of the Olympics, at Mendenhall Center at UNLV in Las Vegas on Tuesday, July 6, 2021. (Chase Stevens/Las Vegas Review-Journal) @csstevensphoto





By Dylan Svoboda Las Vegas Review-Journal
July 8, 2021 - 5:04 pm

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Three USA Basketball Men’s Select Team players are out of training camp in Las Vegas after testing positive for COVID-19, according to head coach Greg Popovich.
ESPN’s Brian Windhorst reported that three players, Immanuel Quickley of the New York Knicks and Miles Bridges and P.J. Washington of the Charlotte Hornets, a product of Finley Prep, were out due to COVID-19 protocols.

Popovich said Thursday that he could not confirm which players had tested positive. Windhorst also reported that all three players were away from the Olympic team at practice today at UNLV.
The three are members of the Select Team, which practices with Team USA’s main Olympic basketball squad. Popovich said the COVID-19 outbreak was confined to those three players and that there are no additional issues or positive tests.
The men’s Olympic basketball team is in Las Vegas from July 6 to 19 and playing exhibition games at Michelob Ultra Arena to prepare for the Tokyo Olympics later this month.

The Olympic team will compete against Nigeria, Australia, Argentina and Spain in exhibition contests in Las Vegas. The team will face France on July 25 in its first game of the Olympics tournament.
 

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CF Montreal trade Erik Hurtado after forward refuses to get COVID-19 vaccine
By The Athletic Staff
54 Comments
CF Montreal traded Erik Hurtado to Columbus Crew SC for $200,000 in general allocation money on Thursday, citing the forward's unwillingness to get the COVID-19 vaccine as a factor for the trade.

"There was some interest in Erik during the past few weeks and we listened to the offers, even though we were satisfied with Erik’s work," sporting director Olivier Renard said in a statement. "Because he’s not vaccinated against COVID-19, his situation was problematic and we started considering a trade when we got the confirmation that the team could return to Montreal.

"Before proceeding, Erik also confirmed that he was not comfortable taking the vaccine, so we concluded this deal, which we felt was very satisfactory."

Hurtado, who Montreal acquired in February, played seven games for the club and got one assist. He last played on May 22.
Hurtado's role
Sam Stejskal, staff writer: With starter Gyasi Zardes with the U.S. men's national team ahead of the Gold Cup and reserve Bradley Wright-Phillips still sidelined with a hamstring injury, Hurtado will provide much-needed cover for the Crew at striker in the short-term.

He'll be available for the club's match on Friday at FC Cincinnati. Though he won't be Columbus' main option moving forward, the 30-year-old could conceivably play a role right off the bat on Friday, especially with Wright-Phillips not expected to return until at least next Wednesday.
League-wide implications
Stejskal: Quebec and Ontario have loosened their restrictions to allow fully vaccinated members of CF Montreal and Toronto FC to return home for training. That obviously created problems for Hurtado and Montreal; it could do the same for unvaccinated players on Toronto FC.

TFC midfielder Nick DeLeon told media earlier this year that he would not take the COVID-19 vaccine. Toronto GM Ali Curtis said Sunday that one or two players are either not vaccinated or still need a second shot. It's not clear what TFC, who returned to Canada on Thursday, plan to do with the unvaccinated players.

Every Vancouver Whitecaps player is fully vaccinated, according to club CEO and sporting director Axel Schuster.
Where Canadian teams stand with returning home
Stejskal: CF Montreal revealed last week that it would return to Montreal for training after Wednesday's win against New York City FC in Orlando. It's not yet clear when they'll be allowed to host matches at Stade Saputo. The club hasn't yet announced where it will host FC Cincinnati on July 17.

Like Montreal, it's not clear when TFC will be able to resume playing at their normal home, BMO Field. TFC play next on July 17. President Bill Manning said TFC will not be playing that match in Orlando, where it had been based so far this season, and that there is a backup plan in a different U.S. city.

Though every member of the Whitecaps has been fully vaccinated, they do not yet know when they'll be able to return to British Columbia, even for training. The club confirmed on May 28 that all of its July home matches — up to and including the July 31 game against Minnesota — will be played at Rio Tinto Stadium in Sandy, Utah, where the club has made its home so far this season.
 

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Bubba Watson identified as COVID-19 close contact, pulls out of The Open
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Bubba Watson has withdrawn from The Open after he was identified as being a close contact of someone who has tested positive for COVID-19.
He has been replaced in the field by Brendan Steele.

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Watson said in a statement that he is vaccinated against COVID-19 but "not enough time has passed for me to comfortably join the charter flight and risk exposure to the other players and personnel on board."

Watson's caddie, Ted Scott, tweeted that he and Watson are "gutted" by the development.
Rules for close contacts are stricter in the United Kingdom for golfers deemed to be a close contact than in the United States. Close contacts in the U.K. are forced to withdraw from tournaments. In the U.S., close contacts undergo daily testing.
 

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Masters champ Hideki Matsuyama withdraws from Open
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Hideki Matsuyama discusses being the first male Japanese player to win a major championship and what his mindset was during the back nine at the Masters. (2:16)

SANDWICH, England -- Masters champion Hideki Matsuyama has withdrawn from The Open, citing a recent COVID-19 diagnosis and his inability to practice properly in time for the year's final major championship.
Matsuyama, who became the first male golfer from Japan to win a major championship when he captured the Masters in April, tested positive for the coronavirus on July 2 before the second round of the Rocket Mortgage Classic in Detroit.


He has been in quarantine since that positive result and the R&A reported that he is not experiencing symptoms, although he has continued to test positive.

"I'm feeling fine but haven't been able to practice in preparation for The Open,'' Matsuyama said in a statement released by the R&A. "Combining that with the difficult travel to the UK, my team and I have decided it's best to withdraw to ensure everyone's safety.

"I feel badly missing The Open and look forward to playing again at St Andrews next year. I'd like to thank the many golf fans for their continued concern and support as I strive to return to the game I love as soon as possible.''

American Harold Varner III is now in the Open field.

The Open is operating under different protocols than is the case on the PGA Tour. The R&A said that Matsuyama would have needed a negative test upon arrival in England in order to play.

Matsuyama would be allowed to return to competition on the PGA Tour 10 days following the onset of symptoms or testing positive for the virus even if his tests come back positive. According to Centers for Disease Control guidelines, a person who shows symptoms might continue to test positive for months, although he is no longer deemed contagious after 10 days.

Ranked 18th in the world, Matsuyama's best finish since winning the Masters was a tie for 26th at the PGA Championship. He will now turn his attention to the Olympic golf tournament, which begins July 29 outside of Tokyo. The next three players on the R&A's reserve list for The Open are all Americans: Brendan Steele, John Catlin and Adam Long.
 

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3 USA Basketball Select Team players test positive for COVID

Team USA prepares for Tokyo Olympics

Players train during the first day of USA Basketball practice, ahead of the Olympics, at Mendenhall Center at UNLV in Las Vegas on Tuesday, July 6, 2021. (Chase Stevens/Las Vegas Review-Journal) @csstevensphoto





By Dylan Svoboda Las Vegas Review-Journal
July 8, 2021 - 5:04 pm

Don't miss the big stories. Like us on Facebook.
Three USA Basketball Men’s Select Team players are out of training camp in Las Vegas after testing positive for COVID-19, according to head coach Greg Popovich.
ESPN’s Brian Windhorst reported that three players, Immanuel Quickley of the New York Knicks and Miles Bridges and P.J. Washington of the Charlotte Hornets, a product of Finley Prep, were out due to COVID-19 protocols.

Popovich said Thursday that he could not confirm which players had tested positive. Windhorst also reported that all three players were away from the Olympic team at practice today at UNLV.
The three are members of the Select Team, which practices with Team USA’s main Olympic basketball squad. Popovich said the COVID-19 outbreak was confined to those three players and that there are no additional issues or positive tests.
The men’s Olympic basketball team is in Las Vegas from July 6 to 19 and playing exhibition games at Michelob Ultra Arena to prepare for the Tokyo Olympics later this month.

The Olympic team will compete against Nigeria, Australia, Argentina and Spain in exhibition contests in Las Vegas. The team will face France on July 25 in its first game of the Olympics tournament.

CF Montreal trade Erik Hurtado after forward refuses to get COVID-19 vaccine
By The Athletic Staff
54 Comments
CF Montreal traded Erik Hurtado to Columbus Crew SC for $200,000 in general allocation money on Thursday, citing the forward's unwillingness to get the COVID-19 vaccine as a factor for the trade.

"There was some interest in Erik during the past few weeks and we listened to the offers, even though we were satisfied with Erik’s work," sporting director Olivier Renard said in a statement. "Because he’s not vaccinated against COVID-19, his situation was problematic and we started considering a trade when we got the confirmation that the team could return to Montreal.

"Before proceeding, Erik also confirmed that he was not comfortable taking the vaccine, so we concluded this deal, which we felt was very satisfactory."

Hurtado, who Montreal acquired in February, played seven games for the club and got one assist. He last played on May 22.
Hurtado's role
Sam Stejskal, staff writer: With starter Gyasi Zardes with the U.S. men's national team ahead of the Gold Cup and reserve Bradley Wright-Phillips still sidelined with a hamstring injury, Hurtado will provide much-needed cover for the Crew at striker in the short-term.

He'll be available for the club's match on Friday at FC Cincinnati. Though he won't be Columbus' main option moving forward, the 30-year-old could conceivably play a role right off the bat on Friday, especially with Wright-Phillips not expected to return until at least next Wednesday.
League-wide implications
Stejskal: Quebec and Ontario have loosened their restrictions to allow fully vaccinated members of CF Montreal and Toronto FC to return home for training. That obviously created problems for Hurtado and Montreal; it could do the same for unvaccinated players on Toronto FC.

TFC midfielder Nick DeLeon told media earlier this year that he would not take the COVID-19 vaccine. Toronto GM Ali Curtis said Sunday that one or two players are either not vaccinated or still need a second shot. It's not clear what TFC, who returned to Canada on Thursday, plan to do with the unvaccinated players.

Every Vancouver Whitecaps player is fully vaccinated, according to club CEO and sporting director Axel Schuster.
Where Canadian teams stand with returning home
Stejskal: CF Montreal revealed last week that it would return to Montreal for training after Wednesday's win against New York City FC in Orlando. It's not yet clear when they'll be allowed to host matches at Stade Saputo. The club hasn't yet announced where it will host FC Cincinnati on July 17.

Like Montreal, it's not clear when TFC will be able to resume playing at their normal home, BMO Field. TFC play next on July 17. President Bill Manning said TFC will not be playing that match in Orlando, where it had been based so far this season, and that there is a backup plan in a different U.S. city.

Though every member of the Whitecaps has been fully vaccinated, they do not yet know when they'll be able to return to British Columbia, even for training. The club confirmed on May 28 that all of its July home matches — up to and including the July 31 game against Minnesota — will be played at Rio Tinto Stadium in Sandy, Utah, where the club has made its home so far this season.
These probably wont be the only ones...
 

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I believe you

Bro if anything it has been very difficult

To over estimate and under estimate the intelligence level of the general public

We got a Russian bot spamming the board during a pandemic

a supposed predominantly black board

To NOT GET VACCINATED

Spreading misinformation

deliberate lies

Targeting US specifically

Not about who killed pac and biggie or photoshopped models

Lies that effect our HEALTH AND WELL BEING as a people

And going unchecked.

What that say?
 

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Guillain-Barré and Vaccines: What You Need to Know
The link between the rare neurological disorder and the Johnson & Johnson Covid-19 vaccine may be real, but the risk appears to be very small.



The F.D.A. added a warning about the potential side effect to its fact sheet about the Johnson & Johnson Covid vaccine, but there is not yet enough evidence to establish that the shot causes the condition.Credit...Carlo Allegri/Reuters
By Emily Anthes
July 12, 2021
Johnson & Johnson’s beleaguered Covid-19 vaccine may be associated with a small increased risk of Guillain–Barré syndrome, a rare but potentially serious neurological condition, federal officials said on Monday. The Food and Drug Administration has added a warning about the potential side effect to its fact sheets about the vaccine.
The risk appears to be very small. So far, there have been 100 reports of the syndrome in people who had received the Johnson & Johnson vaccine. Nearly 13 million doses of the vaccine have been administered in the United States.
Here are answers to some common questions about the syndrome and its connection to vaccination.
What is Guillain-Barré syndrome?
Guillain-Barré is a rare condition in which the body’s immune system attacks nerve cells. It can cause muscle weakness and paralysis. Although the symptoms often pass within weeks, in some cases, the condition can cause permanent nerve damage. In the United States, there are typically 3,000 to 6,000 cases of the syndrome per year, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. It is most common in adults over 50.
The precise cause of the syndrome is unknown, but in many cases the condition follows another illness or infection, such as the flu. It has also been reported in people with Covid-19.
What does it have to do with vaccination?
This is not the first vaccine that has been linked to Guillain-Barré, although the risk appears to be tiny. A large swine flu vaccination campaign in 1976 led to a small uptick in the incidence of syndrome; the vaccine caused roughly one extra case of Guillain-Barré for every 100,000 people vaccinated. The seasonal flu shot is associated with roughly one to two additional cases for every million vaccines administered.

“I think the data are pretty compelling that the flu vaccine causes Guillain-Barré syndrome, but it’s a very small risk,” said Daniel Salmon, the director of the Institute for Vaccine Safety at Johns Hopkins University.
The shingles vaccine Shingrix may also increase the risk of the condition.
It is not entirely clear why some vaccines may cause Guillain-Barré. “We don’t really understand the biological mechanism,” Dr. Salmon said. “It’s an incredible frustration.”
The Coronavirus Outbreak ›
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July 12, 2021, 10:00 p.m. ET

What do we know about its connection to the Covid-19 vaccines?
One hundred reports of the syndrome after vaccination with the Johnson & Johnson shot have been submitted to the federal Vaccine Adverse Event Reporting System (VAERS), officials said on Monday. Of those, 95 cases resulted in hospitalization, and one was fatal.
The syndrome was generally reported about two weeks after vaccination, primarily in men, many of whom were 50 or older, officials said. There is not yet enough evidence to establish that the vaccine causes the condition, but the F.D.A. will continue to monitor the situation, the agency noted in a statement.
There is not yet any data to suggest a link between the condition and Covid-19 vaccines made by Pfizer-BioNTech or by Moderna, both of which rely upon a different technology, the F.D.A. said.
What signs and symptoms should I look out for?
The syndrome is most likely to appear within 42 days of vaccination, the F.D.A. notes in its revised fact sheet for patients. You should consult with a doctor if you begin to experience weakness or tingling in your arms and legs, double vision or difficulty walking, speaking, chewing, swallowing or controlling your bladder or bowels.
Should I still get a Covid-19 vaccine?
If the link between the vaccine and Guillain-Barré is real, it appears to be far outweighed by the risks of Covid-19, experts said. In the United States, almost all hospitalizations and deaths from Covid-19 are happening in those who are unvaccinated, the C.D.C. said in a statement. The agency recommends that everyone who is 12 or older be vaccinated.
“Everything has risks,” Dr. Salmon said. “And the key to decision-making is to optimize the benefits and reduce the risks.” He added, “Covid is a pretty nasty disease that’s killed 600,000 people.”
 

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F.D.A. Attaches Warning of Rare Nerve Syndrome to Johnson & Johnson Vaccine
Federal regulators concluded that the risk of developing the syndrome was low, and that the benefits of the vaccine still strongly outweigh it.




Administering the Johnson & Johnson vaccine in Brooklyn in May. About 12.8 million people — or about 8 percent of the fully vaccinated population in the United States — have received the Johnson & Johnson shot.Credit...James Estrin/The New York Times
By Sharon LaFraniere and Noah Weiland
July 12, 2021Updated 10:28 p.m. ET
The Food and Drug Administration warned on Monday that Johnson & Johnson’s coronavirus vaccine can lead to an increased risk of a rare neurological condition known as Guillain–Barré syndrome, another setback for a vaccine that has largely been sidelined in the United States.
Although regulators have found that the chances of developing the condition are low, they appear to be three to five times higher among recipients of the Johnson & Johnson vaccine than among the general population in the United States, according to people familiar with the decision. The warning was attached to fact sheets about the vaccine for providers and patients.
Federal officials have identified 100 suspected cases of Guillain-Barré among recipients of Johnson & Johnson’s one-dose shot through a federal monitoring system that relies on patients and health care providers to report adverse effects of vaccines. Ninety-five percent of those cases were considered serious and required hospitalization, the Food and Drug Administration said. The reports are preliminary.
In a statement, the agency said that while “the available evidence suggests an association” between the Johnson & Johnson vaccine and increased risk of Guillain–Barré syndrome, “it is insufficient to establish a causal relationship.”
The agency added that it “continues to find the known and potential benefits clearly outweigh the known and potential risks” of the vaccine.
About 12.8 million people — or about 8 percent of the fully vaccinated population in the United States — have received the Johnson & Johnson shot. By contrast, about 146 million have been fully vaccinated with Pfizer’s or Moderna’s vaccines, both of which require two doses.
Guillain-Barré syndrome occurs when the immune system damages nerve cells, causing muscle weakness and occasional paralysis, according to the Food and Drug Administration. Several thousand people — about 10 out of every million — develop the condition every year in the United States. Most recover from even severe symptoms. It has also been reported in people with Covid-19.

The new safety concern comes at a precipitous moment in the nation’s fight against Covid-19. The pace of vaccinations has slowed considerably as a new, more contagious variant called Delta is spreading quickly in undervaccinated areas. Federal health officials worry that the news about another possible side effect from the Johnson & Johnson shot could make some people even more hesitant to accept not just that vaccine, but those developed by Pfizer-BioNTech or Moderna, even though no evidence of increased risk of Guillain–Barré syndrome has been identified with them. Those vaccines rely on a different technology.
“What worries me most is that it reinforces the lack of confidence that people had,” said Dr. Steven Black, an emeritus professor of pediatrics at Cincinnati Children’s Hospital Medical Center and the co-director of the Global Vaccine Data Network, a consortium that researches the safety of vaccines. “They’ll say, ‘Aha, see, I was right.’ But they’re not right.”

The risk is low enough, he added, that “for people trying to make a rational decision, this should not influence their decision to get vaccinated.”
The suspected cases were reported to the Vaccine Adverse Event Reporting System, a 30-year-old federal monitoring system. In a statement released on Monday, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention said the cases were mostly reported about two weeks after vaccination and mostly in men, many of them ages 50 years and older.
Johnson & Johnson said in a statement that “the risk of having this occur is very low, and the rate of reported cases exceeds the background rate by a small degree.”

Guillain-Barré syndrome has previously been linked to other vaccines, including the 1976 swine flu vaccine and other flu vaccines. Some studies suggested that people were more likely to develop Guillain-Barré from the flu than from flu vaccines, which are monitored every year by the C.D.C. for any associations with the condition. The Food and Drug Administration warned this year that GlaxoSmithKline’s shingles vaccine, Shingrix, could also increase the risk of the disease.
The warning is the second that the agency has issued for the Johnson & Johnson vaccine: In April, it warned of an increased risk of blood clots coupled with low platelets, components of blood that normally help to heal wounds. The warning came after a 10-day pause in administering the shot, during which officials investigated a small spate of such cases among women.
Federal regulators called for the pause because unlike the reports of Guillain-Barré syndrome, the authorities learned that the blood clots had caused several deaths, and that some physicians were prescribing the wrong treatment for patients.
The database indicates only one possible death of a recipient of the Johnson & Johnson shot from Guillain-Barré syndrome. But the man, a 57-year-old from Delaware, had also had a heart attack and a stroke in the past four years, raising questions about what led to his death in April.
Even though it requires only one dose and is easier to store than Pfizer’s and Moderna’s vaccines, Johnson & Johnson’s shot has played only a minor role in the U.S. inoculation campaign. That is partly because a plant in Baltimore that was supposed to supply most of the doses in the country was shut down for three months because of regulatory violations. The factory, operated by Emergent BioSolutions, a subcontractor, has been forced to throw out the equivalent of 75 million doses because of suspected contamination, significantly delaying deliveries to the federal government.
At the same time, demand for the shot plummeted after the safety pause in April. At that time, 15 women in the United States and Europe who had received the Johnson & Johnson shot were diagnosed with the clotting disorder; three died. The C.D.C. has now confirmed 38 cases of the disorder.
Regulators and federal health officials warned that women younger than 50, in particular, should be aware of the “rare but increased” clotting risk. In the nearly three months since the pause ended, only about five million people in the United States have taken Johnson & Johnson’s shot, and state officials report that people are much more wary of it. Millions of doses that have been distributed by the federal government are sitting unused and will expire this summer.
Alex Gorsky, Johnson & Johnson’s chief executive, said last month that he was still hopeful that the vaccine, which has been used in 27 countries, would help contain the pandemic overseas. The company has promised up to 400 million doses to the African Union. Separately, Covax, the global vaccine-sharing program, is supposed to receive hundreds of millions of doses.
Studies have showed that the Johnson & Johnson shot protects people against more contagious coronavirus variants, including the Delta variant, and is highly effective at preventing severe Covid-19, hospitalizations and death.
The Food and Drug Administration shares jurisdiction over vaccines with the C.D.C., but it is solely responsible for issuing product warnings. The Guillain-Barré cases will be discussed in an upcoming meeting of a committee of outside experts who advise the C.D.C., the agency said.
Federal regulators also attached warnings to the Pfizer-BioNTech and Moderna vaccines, but some government health officials described them as less serious than the warnings about Johnson & Johnson. The agency last month pointed to an increased risk of inflammation of the heart or the tissue surrounding it — diseases known as myocarditis and pericarditis — particularly among adolescents and young adults who had received Pfizer-BioNTech or Moderna shots.
The C.D.C. said that in most of the reported cases, symptoms promptly improved after rest or medication. By contrast, symptoms of Guillain-Barré typically require medical intervention, officials said.
The revised fact sheet for Johnson & Johnson’s shot states that recipients should immediately seek medical attention if they develop any of the following symptoms: weakness or tingling sensations, especially in the legs or arms, that worsens and spreads to other parts of the body; difficulty walking; difficulty with facial movements, including speaking, chewing or swallowing; double vision or inability to move eyes; or difficulty with bladder control or bowel function.
 

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With the Delta Variant, Do I Need a Covid Booster Shot?
Although studies of a third dose are underway, experts agree that the vaccines are still working well, even against the Delta variant, and that booster shots are not necessary right now.




A woman receives a third dose of the Pfizer-BioNTech Covid vaccine at the Sheba Medical Center in Israel.Credit...Jack Guez/Agence France-Presse — Getty Images
By Tara Parker-Pope
July 12, 2021
Covid-19 booster shots are in the news, but chances are that Americans won’t be getting an extra shot in the arm any time soon.
A surprise announcement from the vaccine maker Pfizer-BioNTech that it plans to seek authorization for a booster shot in the United States has prompted new worries among the general public about the effectiveness of Covid vaccines against the highly contagious Delta variant.
Pfizer said it plans to seek authorization for a booster shot in the coming weeks, citing the possibility that protection against the coronavirus will wane six to 12 months after full immunization with the current two-shot regimen.
But Pfizer’s talk of booster shots has been dismissed as premature by some of the world’s leading vaccine experts, who note that all evidence suggests that the Pfizer shots, along with the Moderna and Johnson & Johnson vaccines, continue to provide strong protection against Covid-19.
A joint statement by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and the Food and Drug Administration offered a quick rebuke to the Pfizer announcement, noting that public health officials, not private pharmaceutical companies, would make the decision about booster shots.
“Americans who have been fully vaccinated do not need a booster shot at this time,” the statement said. “We are prepared for booster doses if and when the science demonstrates that they are needed.”
Even so, searches on Google for booster shots surged amid continuing worries about the Delta variant and the risk of breakthrough infections among the vaccinated. Adding to the confusion is the news that Israel’s Ministry of Health said on Monday it would begin offering a third dose of the Pfizer vaccine to adults with weakened immune systems, including cancer and organ transplant patients, in the country’s first step toward booster shots for the most vulnerable.

So is a booster shot in your future? We talked to leading experts about whether booster shots are imminent and why it may be risky to give extra doses to the fully vaccinated in wealthy countries when many people around the world haven’t gotten their first shots. Here are answers to common questions.
Why is Pfizer talking about booster shots?
All of the vaccine companies have been studying booster shots for months, just in case they’re needed in the future. But Pfizer’s announcement that it’s ready to seek approval came as a surprise.
In a news release, Pfizer-BioNTech cited recent data from Israel’s Ministry of Health announcing that although the vaccine remains about 93 percent effective at preventing serious illness and hospitalization, the vaccine is about 64 percent effective at stopping breakthrough infections, or infections that occur in those who are fully vaccinated, with or without symptoms. That figure is down from about 95 percent in May, before the highly infectious Delta variant became widespread.
Experts say the data from Israel hasn’t been peer-reviewed and may be complicated by a number of variables. Other studies from Britain, Scotland and Canada show the Pfizer vaccine is still about 80 percent to 88 percent effective against the Delta variant.
But Pfizer said that the findings from Israel were consistent with its own vaccine studies, and that it planned to present its data to federal health officials. A booster given six months after the second dose of the vaccine increases the potency of antibodies against the original coronavirus and the Beta variant, the form first detected in South Africa, by five- to tenfold, the company said, and it believes a vaccine booster would perform similarly against the Delta variant.
“We continue to believe that it is likely, based on the totality of the data we have to date, that a third dose may be needed within six to 12 months after full vaccination,” the company said.
The Coronavirus Outbreak ›
Latest Updates
Updated
July 12, 2021, 10:00 p.m. ET

What do public health experts say about booster shots?
Several public health experts have criticized the Pfizer announcement, calling it “opportunistic” and “irresponsible.” Pfizer’s chief scientific officer met with top U.S. scientists on Monday to discuss the research. Officials said after the meeting that more data — and possibly several more months — would be needed before regulators could determine whether booster shots were necessary.
“Pfizer doesn’t get to decide when we need boosters; the F.D.A., C.D.C. and other regulatory agencies do that,” said Dr. Carlos del Rio, an infectious disease expert at Emory University. “The data needs to be shown publicly in an open, transparent way.”
Dr. del Rio noted that even the data from Israel, cited in the company’s news release, shows the vaccine remains highly effective at protecting people from serious illness. Instead of talking about boosters, the focus should be on getting more shots in the arms of the unvaccinated, he said.
“If you’ve been vaccinated, you don’t need to worry about boosters,” Dr. del Rio said. “The people who need to worry are those that haven’t been vaccinated. The booster is to get more people vaccinated. The more people we get vaccinated, the less likely we’ll have transmission.”
Dr. Paul A. Offit, a professor at the University of Pennsylvania and a member of the F.D.A.’s vaccine advisory panel, said that while it’s important to study the safety and effectiveness of a booster dose to prepare for when it might be needed, the current evidence shows the vaccines are working against the Delta and other variants. He said he thinks it’s unlikely that people in the general population will get booster shots this year.
“All the data to date point to the fact that immunity against severe critical illness is relatively long lasting,” Dr. Offit said. “The issue is not whether we can get a third dose. It’s whether we can get the first two doses in people who aren’t vaccinated.”
Should I be worried about the Delta variant?
The Delta variant now accounts for more than half of all infections in the United States, and the real risks are to the unvaccinated. While the Pfizer vaccine and others in use in the United States are slightly less effective against the Delta variant, all of them still offer significant protection against serious illness or hospitalization from Covid-19.
Moderna has said test-tube studies using blood samples from vaccinated people show the vaccine is still highly effective against the Delta variant, which caused only a “modest reduction” in virus-fighting antibodies in the samples. And Johnson & Johnson has released two studies that show its vaccine remains effective against Delta, showing only a small drop in potency.
“Roughly 99 percent of people who are hospitalized and killed by this virus are unvaccinated,” Dr. Offit said. “You’re not really trying to prevent asymptomatic or mild symptoms. You’re trying to keep people out of the hospital and out of the morgue. It’s a goal we’ve met remarkably well.”
Why not just get a third shot to be sure?
Given that large parts of the world still have very low vaccination rates, and vaccine supplies are limited, most public health experts say it’s shortsighted to give additional doses to people in wealthy countries who are fully vaccinated.
In the United States, nearly 50 percent of all residents are fully vaccinated. But in India, only about 5 percent of the population is fully vaccinated. In much of Africa, fewer than 1 percent of people are vaccinated. The concern is that the longer large parts of the world remain unvaccinated, the greater the risk that new, more threatening variants will emerge.
“American lives continue to be at risk if there are large outbreaks elsewhere with more variants being created,” said Dr. Ashish K. Jha, dean of the Brown University School of Public Health. “Even if you take a very narrow lens that you only care about the lives of Americans, there’s still a very compelling argument that a first shot for an Indian person does more good for America than a third shot for an American.”
In a news conference on Monday, the leader of the World Health Organization pushed back against Pfizer’s plan to seek authorization for booster shots. “The priority now must be to vaccinate those who have received no doses and protection,” Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus, the W.H.O. director general, said.
Who will be first in line to get booster shots once they are approved?
Some countries are already giving booster doses of vaccine to people with compromised immune systems, including people who have undergone cancer treatment or those who have had organ transplants. Since April, health care providers in France have routinely given a third dose of a two-dose vaccine to people with certain immune conditions. On Monday, Israel also announced it would give a third dose of vaccine to highly vulnerable adults.
In addition, Moderna is gearing up to test a third dose in 120 organ transplant recipients, and Pfizer, which produces some medications that suppress immunity, is planning a study of 180 adults and 180 children with compromised immune systems.
An estimated 5 percent of the U.S. population is considered to be immunocompromised because of health conditions or drug treatments. While it may be months before booster shots are recommended for the general population, if at all, it’s possible federal health officials will approve an extra shot for a select group of vulnerable patients with compromised immune systems.
Dr. Jha said the medical community was waiting for guidance from the C.D.C. and the F.D.A. about whether to give booster doses to people who are immunocompromised and did not develop adequate protection after a standard course of vaccination. “There are some data emerging that a third shot helps those people,” Dr. Jha said. “It really requires the engagement of your specialist. I think most physicians are saying hold. They’d like to see the C.D.C. recommendations on this.”
 

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U.S. Officials Push Back on Pfizer’s Request for Booster Shot Approval
After meeting with company representatives, officials said the decision would depend partly on data on infections in vaccinated people that cause serious disease or hospitalization.




A man receiving a third dose of the Pfizer-BioNTech coronavirus vaccine in Israel on Monday. Some experts say Israel’s move could foreshadow a U.S. decision to at least recommend booster shots for the vulnerable.Credit...Jack Guez/Agence France-Presse — Getty Images
By Sheryl Gay Stolberg and Sharon LaFraniere
July 12, 2021Updated 9:28 p.m. ET
Representatives of Pfizer met privately with senior U.S. scientists and regulators on Monday to press their case for swift authorization of coronavirus booster vaccines, amid growing public confusion about whether they will be needed and pushback from federal health officials who say the extra doses are not necessary now.
The high-level online meeting, which lasted an hour and involved Pfizer’s chief scientific officer briefing virtually every top doctor in the federal government, came on the same day Israel started administering third doses of the Pfizer-BioNTech vaccine to heart transplant patients and others with compromised immune systems. Officials said after the meeting that more data — and possibly several more months — would be needed before regulators could determine whether booster shots were necessary.
The twin developments underscored the intensifying debate about whether booster shots are needed in the United States, at what point and for whom. Many American experts, including Dr. Anthony S. Fauci, President Biden’s chief medical adviser for the pandemic, have said there is insufficient evidence yet that boosters are necessary. Some, though, say Israel’s move may foreshadow a government decision to at least recommend them for the vulnerable.
Pfizer is gathering information on antibody responses in those who receive a third dose, as well as data from Israel, and expects to submit at least some of that to the Food and Drug Administration in the coming weeks in a formal request to broaden the emergency authorization for its coronavirus vaccine.
But the final decision on booster shots, several officials said after the meeting, will also depend on real-world information gathered by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention about breakthrough infections — those occurring in vaccinated people — that cause serious disease or hospitalization.
And any recommendations about booster shots are likely to be calibrated, even within age groups, officials said. For example, if booster shots are recommended, they might go first to nursing home residents who received their vaccines in late 2020 or early 2021, while elderly people who received their first shots in the spring might have a longer wait. And then there is the question of what kind of booster: a third dose of the original vaccine, or perhaps a shot tailored to the highly infectious Delta variant, which is surging in the United States.
“It was an interesting meeting. They shared their data. There wasn’t anything resembling a decision,” Dr. Fauci said in a brief interview Monday evening, adding, “This is just one piece of a much bigger puzzle, and it’s one part of the data, so there isn’t a question of a convincing case one way or the other.”

Amy Rose, a Pfizer spokeswoman, said in a statement, “We had a productive meeting with U.S. public health officials on the elements of our research program and the preliminary booster data.”
The Department of Health and Human Services, which convened the meeting, issued its own statement reiterating the administration’s stance. “At this time, fully vaccinated Americans do not need a booster shot,” it said.
With less than half of the United States population fully vaccinated, some experts said Monday that the country needed to remain focused on getting all Americans their first dose. The Food and Drug Administration’s most important task, they said, is to increase public confidence by granting full approval to the coronavirus vaccines in use, which for now are authorized on an emergency basis.
“At this point, the most important booster we need is to get people vaccinated,” said Dr. Carlos del Rio, an infectious disease expert at Emory University in Atlanta. The booster doses in Israel, he added, “will help us answer some questions, but at the end of the day I don’t agree with what they’re doing. I think it’s awfully premature.”
Within the Biden administration, some fear that if Americans are convinced that coronavirus vaccines provide only short-lived immunity before requiring a booster, they will be less likely to accept a shot. But those concerns could fall by the wayside if new data from Israel, expected in the next several weeks, shows conclusively that immunity wanes after six to eight months, significantly raising the risks for the elderly or other vulnerable populations.

Image

Workers unpacking doses of the Pfizer vaccine from cold storage last month. Pfizer is expected to submit a formal request in the coming weeks to broaden the emergency authorization for its vaccine.Credit...Bryan Anselm for The New York Times
The administration convened Monday’s session in response to last week’s announcement by Pfizer and its German partner, BioNTech, that they were developing a version of their vaccine that targets the Delta variant, and reporting promising results from studies of people who received a third dose of the original vaccine six months after the second.

The new data is not yet published or peer reviewed, but when the companies announced that they would submit data to the Food and Drug Administration for authorization of booster shots, it caught the Biden White House by surprise.
In an unusual joint statement Thursday evening, hours after the Pfizer-BioNTech announcement, the F.D.A. and the C.D.C. pushed back.
“Americans who have been fully vaccinated do not need a booster shot at this time,” the statement said, adding, “We are prepared for booster doses if and when the science demonstrates that they are needed.”
The move may make good business sense for Pfizer-BioNTech. Since the onset of the pandemic, the partner companies have pursued a “get to market first” strategy in manufacturing and marketing their vaccine.
The companies did not take federal money or participate in Operation Warp Speed, former President Donald J. Trump’s fast-track vaccine initiative. They were not only the first to win Food and Drug Administration authorization for their coronavirus vaccine, the first to use novel mRNA technology, but also the first to gain authorization for their vaccine’s use in adolescents.
The strategy has “paid off as handsomely as anyone could ask for,” said Steve Brozak, the president of WBB Securities, a research investment bank focused on biotechnology.
Last week, Pfizer and BioNTech said a booster given six months after the second dose of the vaccine increased the potency of antibodies against the original virus and the Beta variant by five- to tenfold. But antibody levels may not be the best biological measurement of the need for booster doses, according to experts, who say it is no surprise that antibodies would increase after taking a third dose.
“Antibody response is not the only measure of immune protection,” said Dr. Leana S. Wen, a former health commissioner for Baltimore. “There have been multiple studies that suggest these vaccines also stimulate B cell and T cell immunity, so even if there isn’t as much antibody, that doesn’t mean someone isn’t protected.”
In Israel, the government agreed to provide Pfizer with data on its vaccine recipients, and Pfizer has been matching the Israeli data with its own laboratory tests on antibody responses. Some people familiar with the data say that taken together, the two data sets indicate that immunity is waning among the vaccinated after roughly six to eight months, leading to a growing number of breakthrough infections.
The attendees at Monday’s session amounted to a who’s who of government doctors: Dr. Fauci; Dr. Rochelle Walensky, the director of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention; Dr. Francis Collins, the director of the National Institutes of Health; Dr. Vivek Murthy, the surgeon general; Dr. Rachel Levine, the assistant secretary for health; Dr. Janet Woodcock, the acting F.D.A. commissioner; Dr. Peter Marks, the director of the F.D.A.’s Center for Biologics Evaluation and Research; and Dr. David Kessler, a former F.D.A. commissioner who is heading the Biden administration’s vaccine distribution effort, among others.
Dr. del Rio of Emory University complained about Monday’s meeting being conducted in private instead of Pfizer presenting its data publicly to the C.D.C.’s advisory committee on vaccine practices, which will ultimately recommend whether booster shots are necessary.
Slightly more than two-thirds of American adults — 67.7 percent — have had at least one Covid-19 shot, according to the C.D.C. That figure falls short of the Biden administration’s goals; the president had hoped to have 70 percent of adults at least partially vaccinated by July 4.
Still, the national vaccination campaign has made clear that the vaccine succeeds at preventing disease, and studies suggest that vaccines remain effective against the Delta variant. Outbreaks are occurring in areas with low rates of vaccination, and the national caseload has ticked up recently, according to a New York Times database.
World Health Organization officials emphasized on Monday the importance of prioritizing global vaccine production and distribution over the development of boosters in light of the stark gaps among countries’ vaccination programs.
“It’s not to say one or the other; it’s putting things in a crisis in order,” said Dr. Michael Ryan, the executive director of the organization’s health emergencies program, in reference to addressing what the organization calls a two-tier pandemic.
 

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De Blasio Keeps Mask Rules for New York City Schools Despite CDC Changes
BY REEMA AMIN, CHALKBEAT JUL 12, 2021, 5:01PM EDT
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Students line up with masks at P.S. 89 in Brooklyn.
New York City schools will stick with universal masking for now, despite new federal guidance that OKs ditching face coverings for vaccinated students and teachers, Mayor Bill de Blasio said Monday.
Under new guidance released last week, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention no longer recommends that staff and students who are vaccinated wear masks inside of schools.
The guidance also continues to recommend maintaining at least three feet of distance between people inside of buildings. However, social distancing should not get in the way of fully reopening buildings to every student, the agency said. If students and staff cannot be distanced, schools should take additional precautions, such as indoor masking.
De Blasio indicated that masking could go away in the fall, but for now schools will stick with face coverings.
“I’m absolutely confident based on this guidance and everything else we’ve seen that we’ll be able to get all our kids back into school in September, but for now [we’re] sticking with the idea that, you know, wearing the masks is a smart thing to do in schools,” de Blasio told reporters. “We’ll keep assessing as we go along, but I think for now it still makes sense.”
A ‘Layered Approach’
Dave Chokshi, the city’s health commissioner, said the city is still reviewing the federal guidance and would be “coming out with additional information for parents and students in the weeks ahead.”
He also said: “What I will say is that the CDC guidance mirrors the layered approach to prevention of COVID-19 that has worked in our schools thus far. And the key in that layered approach is to use all the tools that we have in our toolbox.”

That layered approach this past year also included a focus on ventilation, health screeners or temperature checks before students entered buildings and COVID testing of students and staff.
Principals are eagerly awaiting whether schools will get rid of social distancing since that will determine many staffing needs. If social distancing requirements remain, department officials have said that roughly 10% of schools may need to find space elsewhere for students — such as auditoriums, gyms, or even in centers run by community organizations — in order to fit everyone.
So far, 10% of children ages 12-17 in New York City are fully vaccinated, according to city health data. Children under the age of 12 are still not authorized to receive coronavirus vaccines. However, vaccinations may become available for children as young as 6 months old by the fall, which could factor into how schools approach protective measures for coronavirus.
The city’s coronavirus positivity rate has been on a slight rise since at least the end of June, when it was about 0.6%. The positivity rate was an average 1.27% over the past seven days, de Blasio said Monday.
 

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Staten Island Sees Uptick in Covid-19 Cases
Author Headshot
By Precious Fondren

Michael M. Santiago/Getty Images
As concern grows over the highly contagious Delta variant of the coronavirus, some parts of New York City are seeing an uptick in Covid-19 cases.

The seven-day average rate of positive test results increased to 1.27 percent as of Saturday, according to the latest data from the city health department, after weeks of declining cases and low hospitalization rates.

On average, there were 328 new confirmed and probable cases daily over the last week.

Here’s what to know:

The data
Staten Island has the highest test positivity rate in the city at 2.45 percent. The borough reported 113 reported cases in the last seven-day period, and is home to ZIP codes with the top three hospitalization rates in the city.



Dr. Dave Chokshi, the city health commissioner, said Staten Island’s increase in positive cases is likely due to the number of younger residents who are unvaccinated.

“It’s perhaps the most dangerous time to be unvaccinated,” Dr. Chokshi said during a news conference on Monday. “That’s why we have ensured that our vaccination efforts are proceeding with as much urgency as possible to be able to extend the protection of vaccination to as many people as we can.”

New York State lifted virtually all pandemic-related restrictions on June 15, after 70 percent of adult residents had received at least one dose of the vaccine. Dr. Wafaa El-Sadr, a professor of epidemiology at Columbia University, said the rise in cases is a reminder that the pandemic is not over.

“This should be a wake-up call,” Dr. El-Sadr said, adding, “Every effort must be made to enhance vaccination uptake, encourage testing and remind people of what they can do to protect themselves and their loved ones.”


The response
During the news conference on Monday, Mayor Bill de Blasio emphasized the importance of getting more New Yorkers vaccinated through community efforts such as mobile vaccination sites, in-home vaccinations and referral bonuses for getting vaccinated.

As of Monday, 4.4 million New Yorkers have been fully vaccinated and 4.8 million have had at least one dose, Mr. de Blasio said.

“All the effort that was put in before is the reason why the hospitalization rate has gone lower and lower,” Mr. de Blasio said. “We’re watching the data really carefully, and we’ll certainly continue to look at different options of what we got to do to respond to the situation as it develops.”
 

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Staten Island Sees Uptick in Covid-19 Cases
Author Headshot
By Precious Fondren

Michael M. Santiago/Getty Images
As concern grows over the highly contagious Delta variant of the coronavirus, some parts of New York City are seeing an uptick in Covid-19 cases.

The seven-day average rate of positive test results increased to 1.27 percent as of Saturday, according to the latest data from the city health department, after weeks of declining cases and low hospitalization rates.

On average, there were 328 new confirmed and probable cases daily over the last week.

Here’s what to know:

The data
Staten Island has the highest test positivity rate in the city at 2.45 percent. The borough reported 113 reported cases in the last seven-day period, and is home to ZIP codes with the top three hospitalization rates in the city.



Dr. Dave Chokshi, the city health commissioner, said Staten Island’s increase in positive cases is likely due to the number of younger residents who are unvaccinated.

“It’s perhaps the most dangerous time to be unvaccinated,” Dr. Chokshi said during a news conference on Monday. “That’s why we have ensured that our vaccination efforts are proceeding with as much urgency as possible to be able to extend the protection of vaccination to as many people as we can.”

New York State lifted virtually all pandemic-related restrictions on June 15, after 70 percent of adult residents had received at least one dose of the vaccine. Dr. Wafaa El-Sadr, a professor of epidemiology at Columbia University, said the rise in cases is a reminder that the pandemic is not over.

“This should be a wake-up call,” Dr. El-Sadr said, adding, “Every effort must be made to enhance vaccination uptake, encourage testing and remind people of what they can do to protect themselves and their loved ones.”


The response
During the news conference on Monday, Mayor Bill de Blasio emphasized the importance of getting more New Yorkers vaccinated through community efforts such as mobile vaccination sites, in-home vaccinations and referral bonuses for getting vaccinated.

As of Monday, 4.4 million New Yorkers have been fully vaccinated and 4.8 million have had at least one dose, Mr. de Blasio said.

“All the effort that was put in before is the reason why the hospitalization rate has gone lower and lower,” Mr. de Blasio said. “We’re watching the data really carefully, and we’ll certainly continue to look at different options of what we got to do to respond to the situation as it develops.”
Staten Island you say? What ethnic group is there a high ratio of over there? What have I been calling this plague? Did I not say there will be an increase in cases once again due to a certain group?.. prepare for a possible shutdown by fall thanks to a certain group
 

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Staten Island you say? What ethnic group is there a high ratio of over there? What have I been calling this plague? Did I not say there will be an increase in cases once again due to a certain group?.. prepare for a possible shutdown by fall thanks to a certain group

^^^^^
 

jack walsh13

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Trump is killing his own supporters even though he got vaccinated in treatment ain’t that the damn shame
Shit is unfuckin real bruh. :smh:

KpYqUv.jpg
 

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Staten Island you say? What ethnic group is there a high ratio of over there? What have I been calling this plague? Did I not say there will be an increase in cases once again due to a certain group?.. prepare for a possible shutdown by fall thanks to a certain group

I think everybody need to make they own decision on the vaccine...not be fed by a state entity or people that want to shame You into getting a shot.... IVERMECTIN works just fine....it is another option to exercise... brah
 
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