The Mercury News

U.S. gives full approval to Moderna’s vaccine

- By Matthew Perrone

WASHINGTON >> U.S. health regulators on Monday granted full approval to Moderna’s COVID-19 vaccine, a shot that’s already been given to tens of millions of Americans since its emergency authorizat­ion over a year ago.

The action by the Food and Drug Administra­tion means the agency has completed the same rigorous, time-consuming review of Moderna’s shot as dozens of other long-establishe­d vaccines.

The decision was bolstered by real-world evidence from the more than 200 million doses administer­ed in the U.S. since the FDA cleared the shot in December 2020. The FDA granted full approval of Pfizer’s vaccine last August.

Public health advocates initially hoped the regulatory distinctio­n would boost public confidence in the shots. But there was no discernabl­e bump in vaccinatio­ns after the Pfizer approval, which was heavily promoted by President Joe Biden and other federal officials. Still, regulators said Monday they hoped the extra endorsemen­t would encourage more people to get vaccinated.

More than 211 million Americans, or 63% of the total population, are fully vaccinated. About 86 million people have gotten a booster dose. Vaccinatio­ns peaked last spring at more than 3 million per day, and now average less than 750,000 per day. The pace of vaccinatio­ns briefly spiked following news of the omicron variant in December but has since slowed again.

The FDA reviewed months of additional follow-up data submitted by Moderna to confirm the vaccine’s effectiven­ess against COVID-19. The FDA also analyzed and kept watch for serious side effects that have proved to be very rare. The vaccine includes a warning about a rare type of heart inflammati­on that mostly occurs in young men following the second dose. Most cases are mild and resolve quickly.

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