The Columbus Dispatch

CDC panel discusses who needs boosters

- Lauran Neergaard and Mike Stobbe

An influential panel of advisers to the Centers for the Disease Control and Prevention convened on Wednesday to debate which Americans should get COVID-19 booster shots and when – a question that has proved more contentiou­s than the Biden administra­tion apparently expected.

The meeting came days after a different advisory group – this one serving the Food and Drug Administra­tion – overwhelmi­ngly rejected a sweeping White House plan to dispense third shots to nearly everyone. Instead, that panel endorsed booster doses of the Pfizer vaccine only for senior citizens and those at high risk from the virus.

While the COVID-19 vaccines continue to offer strong protection against severe illness, hospitaliz­ation and death, immunity against milder infection seems to be dropping months after vaccinatio­n.

Last week’s FDA advisory panel decision was only the first hurdle as the government sets its booster policy. The FDA itself still has to decide whether it agrees with its advisers’ recommenda­tion and will authorize Pfizer boosters.

If it does, the CDC then must recommend who should get the extra shots after hearing from its own Advisory Committee on Immunizati­on Practices, whose meeting was scheduled to extend into Thursday.

The priority still is to vaccinate the unvaccinat­ed, who the CDC says account for the vast majority of COVID-19 cases, now soaring to levels not seen since last winter. About 182 million Americans are fully vaccinated, nearly 55% of the total population.

“I want to highlight that in September of 2021 in the United States, deaths from COVID-19 are largely vaccine-preventabl­e with the primary series of any of the three vaccines available,” said Dr. Matthew Daley, a researcher at Kaiser Permanente Colorado and CDC adviser who opened Wednesday’s meeting.

Much of the deliberati­on at the meeting was expected to be about who is considered at high enough risk for an extra dose.

Many experts are torn about the need for boosters because they see the vaccines working just as expected. It is normal for virus-fighting antibodies to wane months after vaccinatio­n.

 ?? MATT ROURKE/AP ?? While the COVID-19 vaccines offer strong protection against severe illness and death, immunity against milder infection seems to be dropping.
MATT ROURKE/AP While the COVID-19 vaccines offer strong protection against severe illness and death, immunity against milder infection seems to be dropping.

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