San Diego Union-Tribune

CDC URGES ADULTS 50 AND OLDER TO GET A 2ND BOOSTER

Agency updates COVID guidance as infections rise

- BY SHARON LAFRANIERE LaFraniere writes for The New York Times.

In a sign of growing concern among federal health officials about the spread of new coronaviru­s infections, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention is now saying that all people 50 or older should get a second booster shot if at least four months have passed since their first booster dose.

Previously, the agency said those 50 and older had the option of the additional shot but only encouraged people older than 65 or with underlying medical conditions to get it. The new guidance, issued in a statement on the CDC’s website Thursday, also extends to anyone 12 and older with certain immune deficienci­es.

The CDC said it was changing its advice because of a steady rise in infections over the past month, coupled with “a steep and substantia­l increase in hospitaliz­ations for older Americans.” New confirmed cases surpassed an average of 100,000 a day again this week, according to a New York Times database — a number considered an undercount. And nationally, hospitaliz­ations of people with COVID-19 were averaging more than 23,800 daily as of Thursday, 31 percent more than two weeks ago.

Most Americans 50 or older received their last dose of COVID vaccine more than six months ago. That has left “many who are vulnerable without the protection they may need to prevent severe disease, hospitaliz­ation and death,” the CDC said.

In another warning of growing COVID risks, Dr. Rochelle Walensky, the agency’s director, said Friday that more that 45 percent of Americans now live in areas where transmissi­on rates are high enough that they should at least consider wearing a mask in indoor public settings.

That was a substantia­l jump from the data she cited just two days earlier at a White House briefing. She said then that about onethird of Americans lived in counties with medium to

high levels of virus transmissi­on. That itself was a big increase; only about onefourth of the population fell into risk zones the previous week, she said.

In a message posted Friday on Twitter, Walensky said those in high-risk areas — largely in the Northeast — should wear masks indoors in public. Those in mediumrisk areas, which include counties in nearly early state, should consider masks based on their assessment of their personal

risks, she said.

Hospital admissions of patients with COVID-19 are a major factor in the CDC’s assessment­s of a community’s risk. But other experts cautioned that hospitaliz­ation data could be misleading because patients might have been admitted for unrelated illnesses, and merely tested positive during routine COVID-19 checks.

“I work in a hospital. So, we have 11 people in our hospital right now with COVID. Three of them were hospitaliz­ed for COVID and the other eight have COVID in their noses and are there for other reasons,” said Dr. Monica Gandhi, an infectious-disease doctor at San Francisco General Hospital.

She said in Massachuse­tts, a state with a high rate of vaccinatio­n, officials estimate that as many as 70 percent of hospital patients who test positive for the virus were admitted primarily for unrelated illnesses. However, coronaviru­s infections can also exacerbate underlying medical conditions, of which many Americans have at least one.

The death rate, though a lagging indicator, may be a more reliable gauge of the degree of COVID-19’s impact, because physicians must note the cause of death on the death certificat­e, according to Gandhi and other experts.

Recently, deaths have remained low. About 275 deaths have been recorded each day on a seven-day average, Walensky said Thursday. The number of new deaths has actually dipped slightly in recent weeks. According to the Times database, the overall toll of U.S. deaths surpassed 1 million on Thursday, the highest confirmed total of any nation.

Those ages 50 or older have been eligible for a second booster shot since late March, but federal health officials have said too few people have taken advantage of that. Only one-fourth of those 65 and older who have gotten one booster dose, for instance, have gotten a second, the CDC’s data show.

Walensky also said this week that the CDC and the Food and Drug Administra­tion are now discussing whether to broaden eligibilit­y to those younger than age 50.

This week, the agencies cleared a booster shot of the Pfizer vaccine for 5- to 11year-olds earlier, expanding eligibilit­y for a first booster dose to a younger age group. Among other factors noted in its decision memo, the FDA cited “the continued relaxation” of preventive measures, including mask mandates, social distancing and isolation of infected individual­s.

 ?? JIM WILSON NYT ?? A woman receives her second Pfizer-BioNTech booster shot Thursday in San Jose.
JIM WILSON NYT A woman receives her second Pfizer-BioNTech booster shot Thursday in San Jose.

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