The Sentinel-Record

Biden and McConnell get COVID-19 boosters, encourage vaccines

- ZEKE MILLER Associated Press writers Josh Boak and Lisa Mascaro contribute­d.

WASHINGTON — Seventyeig­ht-year-old Joe Biden and 79-year-old Mitch McConnell got their booster shots Monday, the Democratic president and the Republican Senate leader urging Americans across the political spectrum to get vaccinated or plus up with boosters when eligible for the extra dose of protection.

The shots, administer­ed just hours apart on either end of Pennsylvan­ia Avenue, came on the first workday after the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and the Food and Drug Administra­tion recommende­d a third dose of the Pfizer vaccine for Americans 65 and older and approved them for others with preexistin­g medical conditions and high-risk work environmen­ts.

Both leaders said that even though the booster doses provide more enduring protection against the virus, they weren’t the silver bullet to ending the pandemic.

“Boosters are important, but the most important thing we need to do is get more people vaccinated,” Biden said.

Nearly 25% of eligible Americans aged 12 and older haven’t received a single dose of the vaccines. They are bearing the brunt of a months-long surge in cases and deaths brought about by the more transmissi­ble delta variant of the virus that has killed 688,000 in the U.S. since the pandemic began.

“Like I’ve been saying for months, these safe and effective vaccines are the way to defend ourselves and our families from this terrible virus,” said McConnell, a polio survivor.

Biden got his first shot on Dec. 21 and his second dose three weeks later, on Jan. 11, along with his wife, Jill Biden. The first lady, who is 70, received her Pfizer booster dose in private at the White House on Monday afternoon, said her spokespers­on, Michael LaRosa.

“Now, I know it doesn’t look like it, but I am over 65 — I wish I — way over,” the president joked. “And that’s why I’m getting my booster shot today.”

Biden has championed booster doses since the summer as the U.S. experience­d a sharp rise in coronaviru­s cases driven by the delta variant. While the vast majority of cases continue to occur among unvaccinat­ed people, regulators pointed to evidence from Israel and early studies in the U.S. showing that protection against so-called breakthrou­gh cases was vastly improved by a third dose of the Pfizer shot.

But the aggressive American push for boosters, before many poorer nations have been able to provide even a modicum of protection for their most vulnerable population­s, has drawn the ire of the World Health Organizati­on and some aid groups, which have called on the U.S. to pause third shots to free up supply for the global vaccinatio­n effort.

Biden said last week that the U.S. was purchasing another 500 million doses of the Pfizer vaccine — for a total of 1 billion over the coming year — to donate to less well-off nations.

Biden took questions from reporters about his vaccinatio­n experience and matters of the day as a military nurse injected the dose into his arm.

The president said he did not have side effects after his first or second shots and hoped for the same experience with his third.

Vice President Kamala Harris, 56, received the Moderna vaccine, for which federal regulators have not yet authorized boosters — but they are expected to in the coming weeks. Regulators are also expecting data soon about the safety and efficacy of a booster for the single-dose Johnson & Johnson shot.

At least 2.66 million Americans have received booster doses of the Pfizer vaccine since mid-August, according to the CDC. About 100 million Americans have been fully vaccinated against COVID-19 through the Pfizer shot. U.S. regulators recommend getting the boosters at least six months after the second shot of the initial two-dose series.

 ?? The Associated Press ?? ■ President Joe Biden receives a COVID-19 booster shot during an event in the South Court Auditorium on the White House campus on Monday in Washington.
The Associated Press ■ President Joe Biden receives a COVID-19 booster shot during an event in the South Court Auditorium on the White House campus on Monday in Washington.

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