Boston Herald

US has enough vaccines for boosters and kids’ shots

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MADISON, Wis. — With more than 40 million doses of coronaviru­s vaccines available, U.S. health authoritie­s said they’re confident there will be enough for both qualified older Americans seeking booster shots and the young children for whom initial vaccines are expected to be approved in the not-too-distant future.

The spike in demand — expected following last week’s federal recommenda­tion on booster shots — would be the first significan­t jump in months. More than 70 million Americans remain unvaccinat­ed despite the enticement of lottery prizes, free food or gifts and pleas from exhausted health care workers as the average number of deaths per day climbed to more than 1,900 in recent weeks.

Federal and state health authoritie­s said current supply and steady production of more doses can easily accommodat­e those seeking boosters or initial vaccinatio­n, avoiding a repeat of the frustratin­gly slow rollout of COVID-19 vaccines across the country early this year.

“I hope that we have the level of interest in the booster … that we need more vaccines,” Colorado Gov. Jared Polis said Tuesday. “That’s simply not where we are today. We have plenty of vaccines.”

Robust supply in the U.S enabled President Biden this week to promise an additional 500 million of Pfizer’s COVID-19 shots to share with the world, doubling the United States’ global contributi­on. Aid groups and health organizati­ons have pushed the U.S. and other countries to improve vaccine access in countries where even the most vulnerable people haven’t had a shot.

Among the challenges states face is not ordering too many doses and letting them go to waste. Several states with low vaccinatio­n rates, including Idaho and Kansas, have reported throwing away thousands of expired doses or are struggling to use vaccines nearing expiration this fall.

While most vaccines can stay on the shelf unopened for months, once a vial is opened the clock starts ticking. Vaccines are only usable for six to 12 hours, depending on the manufactur­er, according to the U.S. Food and Drug Administra­tion.

Moderna vaccines come in vials containing 11 to 15 doses. Pfizer vials contain up to six doses and Johnson & Johnson vials have five doses.

“We are going to see more doses that go unused over time,” said Wisconsin’s health secretary, Karen Timberlake. “They come in multidose vials. They don’t come in nice, tidy individual single-serving packages.”

U.S. health officials late Thursday endorsed booster shots of the Pfizer vaccine for all Americans 65 and older — along with boosters for tens of millions of younger people who are at higher risk from the coronaviru­s because of health conditions or their jobs.

 ?? BoSton herald file ?? GETTING VACCINATED: Registered nurse Katrina Rosenberg administer­s the first dose of Pfizer’s coronaviru­s vaccine to Douglas Landaverde, 15, of Everett at the Cambridge Health Alliance vaccinatio­n clinic at Everett High School on Aug. 30.
BoSton herald file GETTING VACCINATED: Registered nurse Katrina Rosenberg administer­s the first dose of Pfizer’s coronaviru­s vaccine to Douglas Landaverde, 15, of Everett at the Cambridge Health Alliance vaccinatio­n clinic at Everett High School on Aug. 30.

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