The Standard Journal

Fed report links vaccines to COVID reduction in Ga.

- By Tim Darnell

A new report shows COVID-19 vaccinatio­ns may have helped prevent roughly 5,100 new COVID-19 infections and 700 deaths among seniors in Georgia during the first five months of this year.

The study, conducted by the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services (HHS), also found that vaccinatio­ns were linked to a reduction of about 265,000 COVID-19 infections nationally, 107,000 hospitaliz­ations, and 39,000 deaths among Medicare beneficiar­ies between January and May 2021.

“This report reaffirms what we hear routinely from states: COVID-19 vaccines save lives, prevent hospitaliz­ations, and reduce infection,” said HHS Secretary Xavier Becerra.

More than 352,000 lives were lost during the first nine months of the COVID-19 pandemic. Prior to the availabili­ty of vaccines, nearly 80% of these deaths were among people 65 and older who were also Medicare eligible.

Between January and May of this year, when vaccinatio­n rates grew from 1% to 47% among adults 18 to 64 and from 1% to 80% among seniors, the study found an 11% to 12% decrease in weekly COVID-19 hospitaliz­ations and deaths among Medicare beneficiar­ies for every 10% increase in county vaccinatio­n rates.

All racial and ethnic groups in 48 states experience­d reduced numbers of COVID-19 deaths, hospitaliz­ations and infections linked to vaccinatio­n rate increases. Texas and Hawaii were excluded from the analysis due to data reporting limitation­s.

The study also found that vaccines were linked to a reduction of about 5,600 deaths among nursing home Medicare beneficiar­ies, a group that was disproport­ionately impacted by the pandemic.

 ?? ?? Xavier Becerra
Xavier Becerra

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