Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Study shows vaccines’ help for older adults

It finds lower risk of hospitaliz­ation

- COMPILED BY DEMOCRAT-GAZETTE STAFF FROM WIRE REPORTS

The Pfizer-BioNTech and Moderna vaccines being deployed to fight the coronaviru­s pandemic are highly effective in preventing hospitaliz­ations among older adults, the group most at risk for severe disease and death, according to a federal study released Wednesday.

The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention results provide the first real-world evidence in the United States that both vaccines prevent severe covid-19 illness, as they did in clinical trials.

In the study, fully vaccinated adults 65 and older were 94% less likely to be hospitaliz­ed with covid-19 than people of the same age who were not vaccinated, according to the CDC. People who were partially vaccinated were 64% less likely to be hospitaliz­ed with the disease than the unvaccinat­ed.

The risk for severe illness increases with age, and because older adults are at the highest risk, the CDC prioritize­d them for vaccinatio­n. About 68% of adults 65 and older in the United States — more than 37 million people — have been fully inoculated, the data shows.

Early reports from Israel documented the real-world effectiven­ess of vaccinatio­n, including among older adults, but those reports looked only at those inoculated with the Pfizer-BioNTech vaccine. In the CDC analysis, both Pfizer-BioNTech and Moderna were represente­d.

The analysis is one of many by the CDC and other groups to assess the effectiven­ess of the coronaviru­s vaccines in real-life conditions. In the United Kingdom, another study released Wednesday found that a single dose of the Pfizer-BioNTech or Oxford-AstraZenec­a vaccines may reduce transmissi­on of the coronaviru­s within households by almost 50%. Researcher­s from Public Health England said that protection was seen around two weeks after vaccinatio­n — regardless of a person’s age or contacts.

British Health Secretary Matt Hancock called the findings “terrific news,” adding that the results further reinforced the need for people to get vaccinated to end the pandemic.

The Public Health England study found that those infected with the coronaviru­s three weeks after receiving one dose of vaccine were between 38% and 49% less likely to pass on the infection to close contacts, compared with those who were unvaccinat­ed. The study was based on 57,000 people from 24,000 households who were considered contacts of a vaccinated person.

In the United States, CDC Director Rochelle Walensky welcomed that agency’s findings about protection for fully vaccinated older adults.

“The results are promising for our communitie­s and hospitals,” Walensky said in a statement. “As our vaccinatio­n efforts continue to expand, covid-19 patients will not overwhelm health care systems — leaving hospital staff, beds, and services available for people who need them for other medical conditions.”

Until now, there had not really been “system-level evidence for both mRNA vaccines at the community level,” said Jeanne Marrazzo, director of infectious diseases at the University of Alabama at Birmingham.

Death rates for hospitaliz­ed older adults can be six to eight times that of people younger than 65, Marrazzo said in an email. More than half the individual­s in the analysis were over 75.

Unlike during the clinical trials, the CDC analysis of data took place as more-transmissi­ble and potentiall­y more-deadly variants of the virus were circulatin­g, primarily B.1.1.7, which was first identified in the United Kingdom and is now the dominant strain in the United States.

The CDC study looked at hospitaliz­ations among 417 participan­ts during the first three months of this year at 24 hospitals in 14 states. Researcher­s compared prior covid-19 vaccinatio­n in a group of 187 patients who tested positive for the coronaviru­s with a very similar control group of 230 patients who tested negative. To determine the real-world effectiven­ess of the vaccines in preventing hospitaliz­ation, they compared the odds of prior vaccinatio­n between these groups.

Among the 187 patients who tested positive, for example, only one person had been fully vaccinated. But in the other group, 18 had been fully vaccinated. Even though the numbers are relatively small, the difference was still significan­t because it shows that patients with covid-19 were much less likely to have completed full vaccinatio­n with the Pfizer-BioNTech or Moderna vaccines, the data shows.

As expected, the analysis confirmed that vaccinatio­n provided no protection to people who had received their first dose less than two weeks earlier. It takes two weeks for the body to form an immune response after vaccinatio­n.

STATE RESTRICTIO­NS

Separately, governors in Oregon and Washington are about to impose new restrictio­ns as infections and hospitaliz­ations in the the Pacific

Northwest rise to alarming levels.

Oregon Gov. Kate Brown is putting 15 counties that encompass the state’s biggest cities into the extreme risk category starting Friday, imposing restrictio­ns that include banning indoor restaurant dining. As Brown issued her order on Tuesday, she said rising covid-19 hospitaliz­ations threaten to overwhelm doctors.

“If we don’t act now, doctors, nurses, hospitals and other health care providers in Oregon will be stretched to their limits treating severe cases of covid-19,” Brown said.

Washington Gov. Jay Inslee is expected to order new restrictio­ns next week for several counties that would force businesses and churches to reduce their indoor gathering capacity from 50% to 25%.

Inslee will decide which counties need to be rolled back to Phase 2 of his reopening plan after an evaluation of benchmark numbers for public health safety. The public health director for King County, which includes Seattle, expects it will be included in Inslee’s order.

“We might as well just get prepared for that and not just wait,” Patty Hayes, director of public health in Seattle and King County, told the County Council on Tuesday.

The moves come as the supply of vaccines in many places is exceeding demand.

“There are appointmen­ts available right now all across the state,” Brown said.

The public health director for northern Oregon’s Umatilla County, which was downgraded Tuesday from the moderate to the high-risk category, told state officials it can send last week’s vaccine allocation somewhere else and will likely do so again this week.

“Our demand level is dropping dramatical­ly,” Public Health Director Joe Fiumara told the East Oregonian newspaper. The county has about 6,000 doses and last week administer­ed fewer than 500 as health department staffers sat idly, waiting for people to arrive for vaccinatio­ns.

The level of vaccinatio­ns in the mostly rural county is far

short of health experts’ targets. According to Oregon Health Authority data, only about 19,000 people have been fully or partially vaccinated in the county where 78,000 people live.

OBJECTIONS RAISED

The restaurant sector objected to Brown’s action, with the Oregon Restaurant & Lodging Associatio­n declaring that the state lost more than 1,000 food service businesses in 2020 and that 200 more have closed permanentl­y so far this year.

“The move by the governor’s office is tone deaf and offensive to tens of thousands of Oregonians working in restaurant­s and bars across our state attempting to pay their bills,” said Jason Brandt, the group’s president and CEO.

Brown’s office said she is partnering with state lawmakers to approve a $20 million small-business emergency relief package to immediatel­y

support affected businesses in extreme-risk counties through the commercial rent relief program.

“It’s great that we have more money in the hopper for our clobbered hospitalit­y industry,” Brandt said.

But he added: “The amounts that have been earmarked … has never been close to enough to make these small businesses whole.”

In the Oregon Senate on Wednesday, Republican­s accused Brown of “reimposing draconian, undemocrat­ic lockdowns that threaten the livelihood­s of tens of thousands of Oregonians.”

To protest Brown’s order, the Republican senators insisted that bills be read in full, slowing the legislativ­e process.

“Republican­s are standing shoulder to shoulder with working Oregonians,” declared Senate GOP leader Fred Girod.

Brown, aiming to soften the blow to businesses, is also increasing the outdoor capacity limits for bars, restaurant­s and other sectors from 50 to 100 people in extreme-risk counties as long as they have physical distancing and other safety measures in place.

Washington is also taking a step back. In March, Inslee allowed restaurant­s and other indoor establishm­ents throughout the state to operate at half capacity, up from 25%

But as in Oregon and other states, coronaviru­s case numbers and hospitaliz­ations have been steadily rising in recent weeks.

“The results are promising for our communitie­s and hospitals. As our vaccinatio­n efforts continue to expand, covid-19 patients will not overwhelm health care systems — leaving hospital staff, beds, and services available for people who need them for other medical conditions.”

— CDC Director Rochelle Walensky, in a statement

 ??  ?? University of Arkansas at Little Rock junior Sydney Miller of West Plains, Mo., gets her first dose of the Pfizer vaccine Wednesday from Jami De La Cruz, a senior nursing student at UALR, during a clinic by Don’s Pharmacy at the Jack Stephens Center. New studies not only show the Pfizer and Moderna vaccines’ virus-fighting effectiven­ess, especially for older adults, but also their ability to reduce transmissi­on. (Arkansas Democrat-Gazette/Thomas Metthe)
University of Arkansas at Little Rock junior Sydney Miller of West Plains, Mo., gets her first dose of the Pfizer vaccine Wednesday from Jami De La Cruz, a senior nursing student at UALR, during a clinic by Don’s Pharmacy at the Jack Stephens Center. New studies not only show the Pfizer and Moderna vaccines’ virus-fighting effectiven­ess, especially for older adults, but also their ability to reduce transmissi­on. (Arkansas Democrat-Gazette/Thomas Metthe)

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