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st joseph family practice :: Article Creator St. Joseph County Health Alert: Gas Stoves Linked To Asthma In Children And Early Deaths. Doctor Explains State Zip Code Country St. Joseph County Residents: THC Lingers In Breastmilk For Days. Doctor Explains State Zip Code Country Second Pop-up Pap Test Clinic To Be Held May 10 At St. Joseph's Breadcrumb Trail Links News Local News For the most part, women look forward to having a pap test as much as they, well, look forward to having a pap test. Published May 02, 2024  •  Last updated May 03, 2024  •  3 minute read Join the conversation You can save this article by registering for free here. Or sign-in if you have an account. St. Joseph's Health Care London on Grosvenor Street in London. Photograph taken on Monday, June 5, 2023. (Mike Hensen/The London Free Press) Article content For the most part, women look forward to having a pap

The New Vaccine Your Patients May Not Want



booster shots near me :: Article Creator

DeSantis Repeats Lie That Booster Shots Make You More Likely To Get COVID

Flailing GOP presidential candidate Gov. Ron DeSantis will apparently repeat any lie that he thinks will endear him to the Trump wing of the Republican Party. One of the more egregious examples is his recent assertion: "Every booster you take, you're more likely to get COVID as a result of it." Total bullshit.

It's not clear whence the governor got his misinformed soundbite, but the internet is filled with similar bogus claims by anti-COVID vaccine YouTube grifters like retired British nurse educator John Campbell. So what is really the case?

The governor's assertion probably stems from a likely deliberate misinterpretation of an August 2023 Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) risk assessment summarizing the possible efficacy of current COVID vaccines against the then-new COVID BA.2.86 variant. COVID vaccines are formulated to target specific variants of the virus. The most recent booster targets the XBB.1.5 omicron variant. However, the virus is constantly mutating and throwing up new variants that might break through immune protection that has been primed by a booster to fight XBB.1.5 variant. This is the question that the CDC's August assessment aimed to address with reference to the BA.2.86 variant.

The CDC summary stated:

Based on what CDC knows now, existing tests used to detect and medications used to treat COVID-19 appear to be effective with this variant. BA.2.86 may be more capable of causing infection in people who have previously had COVID-19 or who have received COVID-19 vaccines [emphasis added]. Scientists are evaluating the effectiveness of the forthcoming, updated COVID-19 vaccine. CDC's current assessment is that this updated vaccine will be effective at reducing severe disease and hospitalization. At this point, there is no evidence that this variant is causing more severe illness. That assessment may change as additional scientific data are developed. CDC will share more as we know more.

Anti-vaccine grifters twisted (deliberately?) the highlighted sentence into headlines like: "CDC Finally Admits That Vaccinated Are Now More Susceptible to COVID Than Unvaxxed." It did no such thing.

Read the sentence again: BA.2.86 may be more capable of causing infection in people who have previously had COVID-19 or who have received COVID-19 vaccines.

Clearly, all that it is saying is that the new variant may be capable of evading immune protection induced by either infection or vaccination. In other words, both previously infected and vaccinated people might be susceptible to the new BA.2.86 variant. It does not even come close to saying that vaccinated people are more likely to get COVID.

In response to this online bunkum, the CDC appended a clarification in September to its risk assessment (although why one was needed if people had practiced basic reading skills is beyond me) that notes:

The first risk assessment CDC released on BA.2.86 included the following sentence: "BA.2.86 may be more capable of causing infection in people who have previously had COVID-19 or who have received COVID-19 vaccines." The intent of this sentence was to raise the possibility that BA.2.86 might be more capable of causing infection compared with other variants currently circulating, but this sentence has been misinterpreted by some. Vaccination remains the best available protection against the most severe outcomes of COVID-19, including hospitalization and death. COVID-19 vaccines also reduce the chance of having Long COVID.

Of course, I agree that the CDC massively damaged its credibility during the pandemic, but only the conspiracy-addled will insist that whatever its researchers report now must be always false.

Whatever the CDC's prior sins, it is nevertheless the case that the virus never stops mutating. The newest and increasingly widespread variant has been dubbed JN.1. Virologists think the JN.1 variant may be the most infectious version yet. The good news, however, is that the current booster formulated for the XBB.1.5 variant continues to provide protection against the worst consequences—hospitalization and death—of JN.1 infection.

As a January 12 news article in the Journal of the American Medical Association (JAMA) reports, "Fortunately, laboratory research and rates of COVID-19 hospitalizations and deaths suggest that the XBB.1.5 vaccine still protects against severe illness in the JN.1 era."

"The purpose of vaccination is to decrease the severity of diseases," explained University of Tokyo virologist Kei Sato in JAMA. "Many people think that the purpose of vaccination is to prevent infection, but this is wrong."

It would have been fantastic if the COVID vaccines had offered permanent sterilizing immunity the way that vaccines for measles and polio largely do, but reams of evidence do show that current vaccines significantly protect people from the worst consequences of COVID infections. Let's hope that research on creating a universal COVID vaccine bears fruit sooner rather than later.

In any case, pandering presidential candidates should refrain from passing along anti-vaccine lies to voters.

Disclosure: I was boosted with the XBB.1.5 vaccine in September. 


Covid-19 Booster Jabs Now Available

St Bernard's Hospital. Photo by Eyleen Gomez.

22nd January 2024 Covid-19 booster vaccines are now available at the Primary Care Centre, the Gibraltar Health Authority said on Monday. People entitled to the vaccines are those over the age of 50 or any person considered as vulnerable due to their age or medical condition. These can include people with diabetes types 1 and 2, people with cancer, people who may be taking immunosuppressant medication or are immunosuppressed for any other reason or have a long-term medical condition. People who are carers of vulnerable persons or have significant contact with a vulnerable person are also able to access the booster, as are those who work in health and/or social care, or are in long term residential care, or are pregnant. We will also make an exception for those who really would like to have the vaccine to protect themselves from the virus. The GHA said it will also make an exception "for those who really would like to have the vaccine" to protect themselves from the virus. "Unfortunately, the delay in receiving the vaccines has been due to the UK not having been able to send them to Gibraltar until now," the GHA said. The GHA also reminded people that flu vaccines are still available and can be given at the same time as the Covid-19 jab. "It is not too late to have either or both vaccines, as these will still protect you and others," it said. Dr Helen Carter, Director of Public Health, added: "It is important to have the booster vaccines to reduce the spread of Covid-19 now and during spring." "Covid-19 is still with us and we have to ensure that we do everything we can to help protect those people who are considered as vulnerable in our community." As of January 22, 2024, people wanting to receive the Covid-19 booster are urged to contact telephone number 200 66966 to book an appointment. The telephone lines will be opened from 9am – 3pm. The Covid-19 immunisation vaccination programme will start on Thursday January 25 from 1pm to 4:30hrs, at the Primary Care Centre ground floor. Walk-in clinics are not being offered at this time and a scheduled appointment is vital. "We will however, offer opportunistic vaccines if you have an appointment with a clinician at the PCC and want to have the vaccine," the GHA said. "Your cooperation on the matter is most appreciated."

It's Not Too Late To Get Flu Vaccine Or COVID-19 Booster Shots. Why You Should Get Them

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