The Standard Journal

Vaccines remain the difference maker in fighting COVID-19

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Now would be a great time for you to roll up your sleeve and get the COVID-19 vaccine if you haven’t received it already.

The public’s willingnes­s to be vaccinated earlier this year made a tremendous impact on limiting the spread of the virus, and hospital admission rates in our area had dropped to single digits.

Then came the delta variant, which is much easier to spread and has affected younger and healthier people at a higher rate than the original COVID-19 strain. Infections have quickly climbed back up, and many hospitals are seeing admission numbers similar to where they were in November and December of 2020.

While some people who have already been vaccinated have been infected with the delta variant, the vaccine has proven effective for the overwhelmi­ng majority of those who have been fully vaccinated.

The vaccine can prevent severe illness, hospitaliz­ation and death. Additional­ly, even in cases of COVID-19 among the fully vaccinated, vaccines make it more likely that those people will have a milder and shorter illness compared to those who are unvaccinat­ed.

People have every reason to trust the work that went into developing the vaccine. That process was not rushed. The required trials were similar to those of previous vaccinatio­ns and the observatio­n period before approval was even longer.

What was fast-tracked was the process surroundin­g the bureaucrac­y and red tape that often accompanie­s the approval of vaccines. It is likely that full FDA approval of the Pfizer and Moderna vaccines could be weeks away, ending the emergency use authorizat­ion designatio­n that initially allowed the vaccines to be given to the public.

The medical research shows that the vaccines are safe and that they work. We can vouch for that at Floyd because the overwhelmi­ng majority of the patients we are seeing now in the hospital are the unvaccinat­ed.

There are also some half-truths and misreprese­ntations that have been circulatin­g concerning the vaccines. It is important to be informed.

One of the biggest misreprese­ntation is that the vaccines will alter your

DNA. There is nothing in the vaccines that will make that happen.

The COVID-19 vaccines are known as mRNA, or Messenger RNA vaccines. They teach cells how to make a protein to jumpstart antibody production to fight off infectious diseases.

The mRNA technology is nothing new. It has existed since the 1980s and was used to treat a viral inflammati­on of the eye. The same technology was used to create a vaccine to fight Zika, the virus spread by mosquitoes. It does not change your DNA.

Some people are under the impression that if you have had COVID-19 you have full immunity, so the shot is unnecessar­y. Unfortunat­ely it is not that simple.

Recovering from COVID-19 does provide some antibody protection against reinfectio­n, but vaccinatio­ns help your body create a better overall immune response.

Studies have proven that receiving an mRNA vaccine after you have already been infected provides 20 to 70 times more protection against variants.

Also, there is no fetal tissue in the mRNA vaccines. An initial step for the mRNA vaccines (Pfizer and Moderna) was testing against existing fetal cell lines that have been around since the 1980s. Those current fetal cell lines are thousands of generation­s removed from the original fetal tissue and do not contain any tissue from a fetus.

There is no indication that the vaccines cause infertilit­y. Women who participat­ed in the trial phase and others who were vaccinated later have been able to conceive. Pregnant women who contract COVID-19 have a higher risk of pre-term delivery or a stillbirth in addition to higher risk of maternal death.

The vaccinatio­n is a matter of public health and the best way to keep people free to enjoy their lives. Vaccines have effectivel­y helped protect the public from a host of diseases, from polio to tetanus to smallpox. Mass vaccinatio­ns for smallpox were so effective you don’t even need a shot for that anymore.

We don’t want anyone to find themselves in the ICU getting treated for COVID-19. Protect yourself, your family and your friends.

You can schedule a vaccinatio­n at Polk Medical Center by calling 770-749-4125.

 ??  ?? Dr. Ken
Jones
Dr. Ken Jones

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