White House to encourage COVID boosters, flu shot this fall
The Biden administration hopes to make getting a COVID-19 booster as routine as going in for the yearly flu shot
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Your support makes all the difference.The Biden administration hopes to make getting a COVID-19 booster as routine as going in for the yearly flu shot.
Thatās at the heart of its campaign to sell the newly authorized shot to an American public that has widely rejected COVID-19 boosters since they first became available last fall.
Shots of the updated boosters, specifically designed by Pfizer and Moderna to respond to the omicron strain, could start within days. The U.S. government has purchased 170 million doses and is emphasizing that everyone will have free access to the booster.
White House COVID-19 coordinator Dr. Ashish Jha said this latest round of shots will offer protection during the busy cold and flu season, with the hope of transitioning people to get the vaccine yearly. Typically, at least half of U.S. adults get a flu shot.
āWe expect them to provide more durable protection over time,ā Jha said in an interview Wednesday with The Associated Press. āThe goal very much is to get to a point where people get their COVID shot on a regular basis, the way they do their flu shot.ā
Community health workers in North Carolina, home to the countryās lowest COVID-19 booster rate, like the strategy, especially because of confusion among some people about vaccine schedules.
āI believe in keeping things simple,ā said Marty Stamey, an outreach coordinator for the Mountain Area Health Education Center in western North Carolina. āIāve heard a lot of people say, āI think Iāll just wait and try to do it like the flu shots.āā
The White House plan also relies in part of on local health departments, providers and community groups to reach out and encourage people to get the updated booster. Pharmacies, health providers and state or local health departments are preparing to send text messages to millions of people that will encourage them to get a booster this fall, White House officials said.
Jha said he recommends most Americans get the booster by the end of October.
Still, this latest vaccination campaign faces several challenges.
A majority of Americans got their first and second dose of the COVID-19 vaccine when it was released last year but theyāve been more reluctant to get a booster jab, with less than half getting their first booster since it became available late last year.
Congress also has not moved forward on President Joe Bidenās $22.5 billion request earlier this year for the COVID-19 response. Republicans criticized the request, pointing to the $1.9 trillion already spent on responding to the pandemic. Running short on funds, the government announced it would stop shipping COVID-19 tests to peopleās homes after Friday.
And COVID-19 funding is drying up for many of the community groups that received millions of federal tax dollars to hire workers who spent months reaching deep into neighborhoods with door knocks, mobile vaccine clinics and posters encouraging people to inoculate against COVID-19.
White House officials say those local leaders deserve a lot of credit for stamping out misinformation about the COVID-19 vaccine and convincing many around the country that the shot will protect them.
āThose are the really critical messengers,ā Jha said.
That on-the-ground work has been crucial to getting people vaccinated in the rural, Spanish- and Haitian-speaking communities that the Migrant Clinicians Network has reached throughout Texas, California and Maryland with its $8.5 million federal grant.
āSimply having the vaccines available is one thing, but getting the shots in the arms is another,ā said Amy Liebman, a chief program officer for the nonprofit group.
Some of those local health organizations, too, are now stretched as they work to get low vaccination rates among children under 12 up. Only a third of 5- to 11-year-olds received both doses of the COVID-19 vaccine since becoming eligible late last year. Meanwhile, just 7% of children under 5 have gotten a first dose since it was made available this summer.
Dr. Niharika Khanna at the University of Maryland School of Medicine has just started making progress on convincing new mothers that the vaccine is safe and effective for their babies.
Her program, which has hired more than 269 health workers and administered more than 12,000 vaccinations and boosters across Delaware, Maryland, Virginia and West Virginia, isnāt quite ready to transition back to pushing COVID-19 boosters.
āAll of these people, all of these relationships weāve carefully cultivated are at risk for falling apart,ā Khanna said. āToday if you were to say to me switch to booster, Iād say no. I need another two to three weeks to really get these people going.ā
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AP White House Correspondent Zeke Miller contributed to this report.