The Morning Journal (Lorain, OH)

Surge shows why updated vaccines needed

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As COVID-19 killed thousands of Americans every day in late 2020 and early 2021, the U.S. government’s rapid success in shepherdin­g the creation, emergency approval and initial rollout of safe, effective, free vaccines was a major public health victory — one made all the more amazing because it came under a president who spent part of his last year in office saying the pandemic was less of a problem than it was.

But start in another to his pandemic twist, after response, a President Joe Biden — who defeated Donald Trump in a campaign that emphasized he would be a stable, reliable hand on the wheel — is increasing­ly facing criticism that he has failed to rise to the challenge on two key issues.

The first has to do with his administra­tion’s inexplicab­le passivity in responding to evidence that both the Moderna and the Pfizer-BioNTech vaccines were not as effective in dealing with the variants and subvariant­s of the original version of the coronaviru­s. This is of particular concern with the omicron subvariant­s known as BA.4 and BA.5, which have spread rapidly across the nation in recent months, not only eluding some vaccinatio­ns but infecting the vaccinated multiple times. Though this group generally avoids severe health consequenc­es, these reinfectio­ns only add to the vaccine skepticism that is common among millions of Americans. Yet it took until June 30 for the Food and Drug Administra­tion to finally urge that vaccines be updated to better address the omicron threat. The risks this delay poses are compounded by the increasing failure of campaigns to get the Americans most at risk of serious COVID-19 complicati­ons to protect themselves.

As The Washington Post’s Leana S. Wen has noted, just 34% of those 65 and older have received their second booster, and nearly 30% have not been boosted at all.

That the original coronaviru­s’s successors have so far seemed less threatenin­g doesn’t mean future versions will follow suit.

And spikes in cases and hospitaliz­ations mean Los Angeles County may again mandate indoor masking.

This pandemic isn’t over yet. The U.S. needs updated vaccines — and more people accepting them.

That the original coronaviru­s’s successors have so far seemed less threatenin­g doesn’t mean future versions will follow suit. ... The U.S. needs updated vaccines — and more people accepting them.

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