Morning Briefing
Summaries of health policy coverage from major news organizations
Wisconsin Hospital Orders Those With Vax Exemptions To Get Novavax Shot
Froedtert Hospital is alerting its employees who had taken religious exemptions for COVID-19 vaccination聽because they had concerns about the use of fetal cell lines in their development that they must now get vaccinated using a recently-approved shot. (Shastri and Van Egeren, 9/8)
WISN 12 News spoke to a Froedtert employee anonymously on Wednesday. ... The employee said she is Catholic and the previous vaccines were against her religious beliefs because of the ingredients. "The fact that this new vaccine doesn't use, or says it doesn't use, any cells from aborted fetuses, does that go against your religion still?" asked WISN 12 News reporter Caroline Reinwald. "Yes, just because it's my body my temple. God is within us," the employee said. "If we're uncomfortable, or not sure about something, then we shouldn't do it." (Reinwald and Wainscott, 9/8)
In other news about mandates 鈥
A federal lawsuit in Montana seeks to block a state agency from enforcing on tribal lands a legislative prohibition against COVID-19 vaccine mandates. The Glacier County Regional Port Authority filed the complaint Tuesday in U.S. District Court in Great Falls. The litigation comes after Montana Labor and Industry Department officials determined the port authority discriminated against an unvaccinated person who attempted to attend one of its meetings, in Browning. (9/8)
For much of the country, this school year started with Covid restrictions in the past: No more masking, vaccine mandates, social distancing requirements or testing regulations. But for many Head Start programs, federal requirements remain in force, complicating operations. Under a federal rule announced almost a year ago, Head Start centers must require vaccines for staff and masks for anyone 2 years or older, according to the Department of Health and Human Services, which oversees the program. The federally-funded preschool system collectively serves nearly 750,000 children from low-income families. (Gilreath, 9/7)
More on the vaccine rollout 鈥
"We want Americans to know that the vaccine is here and that they shouldn't wait" to get it, a senior administration official told NBC News on Thursday. The plans urge schools across the United States to hold at least one vaccination clinic before Thanksgiving, as well as university-led vaccination campaigns this fall. (Edwards, 9/8)
Earlier this week, Anthony Fauci, President Biden鈥檚 chief medical adviser, put it bluntly: 鈥淕et your updated Covid-19 shot as soon as you are eligible.鈥 For many people over the age of 12, that would be right now. There鈥檚 just one problem with the advice. It鈥檚 still early to get a flu shot. (Branswell, 9/9)
As summer vacations wind down, the days get shorter and children prepare to go to school, preschool and day care, they could encounter an unwelcome classmate: COVID. Yet despite the prospect of another fall surge in cases, a remarkably low percentage of young children have been vaccinated against the disease. The U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention recommends children get vaccinated for COVID. So why have so few parents refrained from getting their child the shot? (Lewis, 9/7)
Annual US sales of Covid-19 shots could be high as $12.9 billion, with health officials likely recommending an annual booster, vaccine maker Moderna Inc. said in a meeting with investors.聽(Peebles, 9/8)
On Paxlovid and other covid treatments 鈥
A spokersperson for Pfizer, the maker of Paxlovid, describes rebounds as 鈥渦ncommon and not uniquely associated with any specific treatment.鈥 The resarchers鈥 findings, though, suggest a different story:聽Infectious disease specialists say the rebounds aren鈥檛 uncommon, and patients should watch for them. They should also feel reassured that聽symptoms聽are almost always mild when a rebound occurs.聽(Goldberg, 9/8)
With many people heading back to school and the office, and cooler weather soon likely to lure more indoors, the number of COVID-19 infections this fall is expected to rise. Paxlovid, an antiviral medication shown to significantly decrease the risk of serious COVID complications, has become the most popular treatment with over 4 million prescriptions written in the United States since federal regulators authorized the drug last December. (Lazar, 9/8)
Dwindling public demand for COVID vaccines and private market pressures should combine to cost manufacturers billions of dollars once the federal government stops buying the shots, eating into Pfizer and Moderna's pandemic profits. (Owens, 9/9)