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Morning Briefing

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Friday, Apr 1 2022

Full Issue

Being Pregnant Makes Risk Of Breakthrough Covid Soar

Axios and the Washington Post cover data showing pregnancy is linked to nearly double the risk of having a breakthrough covid infection. Organ transplants are similarly correlated to breakthroughs. Other media outlets cover more covid matters, including 44 countries being under 20% vaxxed.

Pregnancy nearly doubles the chances a person will have a breakthrough COVID-19 infection, according to new study released Thursday. The findings, from Wisconsin-based company Epic, analyzed millions of patient records to home in on what comorbidities increase a person's risk of contracting the coronavirus while fully vaccinated. Pregnancy topped the list, according to the findings first reported by the Washington Post. Pregnant individuals were 1.91 times more likely to have a breakthrough case when compared to the rest of the population. (Garfinkel, 3/31)

The new study goes beyond what has previously been understood, suggesting that even pregnant people who are fully vaccinated tend to have less protection from the virus than many other patients with significant medical problems. 鈥淚f you are fully vaccinated, that鈥檚 magnificent,鈥 said a lead author of the study, David R. Little, a physician who is a researcher at Epic, a Wisconsin company that maintains electronic patient records for nearly 1,000 hospitals and more than 20,000 clinics across the country. 鈥淏ut if you are fully vaccinated and become pregnant, you remain at higher risk of acquiring covid.鈥 (Goldstein and Keating, 3/31)

In other news about vaccines and covid pills 鈥

State officials are encouraging people with multiple co-morbidities and older residents 鈥 especially those over 65 鈥 to get a second booster dose of the COVID-19 vaccine, recently approved for those 50 and older. But for now, officials are not considering mandating second booster shots for nursing home staff and other long-term care facility workers. In January, Gov. Ned Lamont issued an executive order requiring those employees and any contractors who work with nursing homes get a COVID-19 booster shot. 鈥淚 do not anticipate that we are going to be moving in that direction,鈥 Dr. Manisha Juthani, Connecticut鈥檚 public health commissioner, said Thursday. (Carlesso, 4/1)

COVID vaccine supply struggles are easing, but in 44 countries 鈥 most of them in Africa 鈥 less than 20% of the population is fully vaccinated. In 19, the rate is under 10%. Those countries "have doses now, and they know that there are more doses available," says Seth Berkley, CEO of the Gavi vaccine alliance and point person for the global COVAX initiative. After a year of waiting for vaccine doses, the primary concern is now delivery. (Lawler, 3/31)

With thousands of Covid deaths a day, time is the one thing the world doesn鈥檛 have. Whenever the virus starts to subside, new variants or subvariants pop up, causing fresh spikes in cases. Knowing the critical role Pfizer鈥檚 drug could play in quashing the virus, health organizations, researchers, and companies are working to accelerate Paxlovid production beyond what is currently forecast and bring down the high cost of manufacturing. 鈥淲e need to see what鈥檚 possible and if we can go faster,鈥 says Janet Ginnard, strategy director at Unitaid, the health agency that鈥檚 helping to coordinate Covid drug deployment. Unitaid is working with partners exploring how to increase manufacturing yields and helping countries boost testing to get the therapy to more people, she says. (Paton, 4/1)

And in news about covid mandates 鈥

The Idaho Senate on Thursday failed to override Republican Gov. Brad Little鈥檚 veto of legislation making it illegal for most businesses to require the coronavirus vaccine. The Senate didn鈥檛 muster the two-thirds majority vote necessary to keep alive the 鈥淐oronavirus Pause Act.鈥 The vote was 21-14. (Ridler, 3/31)

The Alaska Capitol鈥檚 coronavirus outbreak grew to nearly three dozen active cases Thursday, as lawmakers say there鈥檚 little political will to enact tougher measures than voluntary masking and testing. Some 10% of the 400 legislators and support staff working at the Capitol have tested positive in the past few days. And the Legislature鈥檚 official figures 鈥 33 active cases as of Thursday 鈥 exclude at least two additional infections detected on at-home tests, and two cases among media, confirmed by the Daily News. At least four legislators have publicly confirmed testing positive in recent days: Anchorage Democratic Reps. Chris Tuck and Ivy Spohnholz, North Pole GOP Rep. Mike Prax and Anchorage Democratic Sen. Tom Begich. (Herz, 3/31)

Most Californians still favor COVID-19 restrictions, including requirements to show proof of vaccination at large outdoor gatherings or to enter places like indoor restaurants and bars, a new survey suggests. The findings from the Public Policy Institute of California, based on a poll conducted March 6-17 of almost 1,700 adults statewide, indicate continued overall support for the sort of health interventions that have been widely relaxed amid dwindling coronavirus cases and COVID-19 hospitalizations. (Lin II and Money, 3/31)

This is part of the Morning Briefing, a summary of health policy coverage from major news organizations. Sign up for an email subscription.
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