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Morning Briefing

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Wednesday, Aug 4 2021

Full Issue

Viewpoints: When Will FDA Move On Full Vaccine Approval?; Vaccinated Shouldn't Have To Be Restricted

Opinion writers examine these covid and vaccine issues.

As calls for the Food and Drug Administration to fully approve Covid-19 vaccines grow louder, the agency itself has little to say. This is a mistake. The agency insists it is 鈥渨orking as quickly as possible鈥 and has suggested that full approval may come for at least one vaccine by the end of summer. The public is left wondering: What鈥檚 taking so long? This isn鈥檛 just a minor nuisance. It undermines trust in the vaccines聽and damages the FDA鈥檚 most valuable asset 鈥 its credibility. (8/3)

When you go to the airport, you see two kinds of security rules. Some apply equally to everyone; no one can carry weapons through the TSA checkpoint. But other protocols divide passengers into categories according to how much of a threat the government thinks they pose. If you submit to heightened scrutiny in advance, TSA PreCheck lets you go through security without taking off your shoes; a no-fly list keeps certain people off the plane entirely. Not everyone poses an equal threat. Rifling through the bags of every business traveler and patting down every preschooler and octogenarian would waste the TSA鈥檚 time and needlessly burden many passengers. (Juliette Kayyem, 8/3)

The New York vaccine passport simply acknowledges what public health experts have understood since early in the pandemic, crowds of people, indoors, without masks create an epidemiological powder keg just waiting for a spark. The real questions to ask are whether this provides enough safety, and if so, should it be implemented nationally? Will it Work? We knew from the outset that the SARS CoV-2 vaccines dramatically reduce rates of infection, rates of symptoms and disease severity. But that was alpha. This is delta. (Robert D. Morris, 8/3)

I was sitting on an examination table at an urgent care clinic in Timonium, giving my history to a physician鈥檚 assistant. An hour later, she would call me to confirm that I was positive for COVID-19. Given the way that I felt, it was what I expected. But it wasn鈥檛 supposed to happen: I鈥檝e been fully vaccinated for months. (Allan Massie, 8/3)

鈥淏e first, be right, be credible,鈥 are among the most important principles for health authorities to follow in a crisis, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention shared in a pamphlet on crisis communication in 2018. To meet those goals, the report advises, avoid sending mixed messages from multiple experts, releasing information too late, taking paternalistic attitudes, failing to counter rumors and myths in real time and engaging in public power struggles and causing confusion. (Zeynep Tufekci, 8/4)

As new variants 鈥斅燿elta, and then probably epsilon and whatever comes next 鈥斅燽ring us more waves of Covid-19 in the fall and winter, policymakers and citizens in all developed countries should聽say out loud and in unison: This time, let鈥檚 save our kids.聽This means, yes, offering youngsters vaccinations if the parents agree, as Germany just decided to do for children older than 12, even while a commission of scientists still dithers about recommending this step.聽(Andreas Kluth, 8/4)

We are at a crossroads with respect to COVID-19 and its impact on children. Over the first year of the pandemic in the U.S., fewer than 6 percent of COVID-19 cases occurred among children, and most produced only minor symptoms. Unfortunately, the new delta variant of COVID-19 appears to be a game changer. Having practiced and done research in pediatric infectious diseases for more than 35 years, traveling the world studying and treating HIV/AIDS and many other epidemic infectious diseases, I am worried. (Mark W. Kline, 8/3)

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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