Current:Home > StocksFDA approves updated COVID-19 vaccines, shots should be available in days -AssetVision
FDA approves updated COVID-19 vaccines, shots should be available in days
View
Date:2025-04-13 17:29:25
WASHINGTON (AP) — U.S. regulators approved updated COVID-19 vaccines on Thursday, shots designed to more closely target recent virus strains -- and hopefully whatever variants cause trouble this winter, too.
With the Food and Drug Administration’s clearance, Pfizer and Moderna are set to begin shipping millions of doses. A third U.S. manufacturer, Novavax, expects its modified vaccine version to be available a little later.
“We strongly encourage those who are eligible to consider receiving an updated COVID-19 vaccine to provide better protection against currently circulating variants,” said FDA vaccine chief Dr. Peter Marks.
The agency’s decision came a bit earlier than last year’s rollout of updated COVID-19 vaccines, as a summer wave of the virus continues in most of the country. The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention already has recommended this fall’s shot for everyone age 6 months and older. Vaccinations could be available within days.
While most Americans have some degree of immunity from prior infections or vaccinations or both, that protection wanes. Last fall’s shots targeted a different part of the coronavirus family tree, a strain that’s no longer circulating -- and CDC data shows only about 22.5% of adults and 14% of children received it.
Skipping the new shot is “a hazardous way to go,” because even if your last infection was mild, your next might be worse or leave you with long COVID symptoms, said Dr. Robert Hopkins Jr. of the National Foundation for Infectious Diseases.
This fall’s vaccine recipe is tailored to a newer branch of omicron descendants. The Pfizer and Moderna shots target a subtype called KP.2 that was common earlier this year. While additional offshoots, particularly KP.3.1.1, now are spreading, they’re closely enough related that the vaccines promise cross-protection. A Pfizer spokesman said the company submitted data to FDA showing its updated vaccine “generates a substantially improved response” against multiple virus subtypes compared to last fall’s vaccine.
The big question: How soon to get vaccinated? This summer’s wave of COVID-19 isn’t over but the inevitable winter surges tend to be worse. And while COVID-19 vaccines do a good job preventing severe disease, hospitalization and death, protection against mild infection lasts only a few months.
People who are at high risk from the virus shouldn’t wait but instead schedule vaccinations once shots are available in their area, Hopkins advised.
That includes older adults, people with weak immune systems or other serious medical problems, nursing home residents and pregnant women.
Healthy younger adults and children “can get vaccinated anytime. I don’t think there’s a real reason to wait,” Hopkins said – although it’s OK to seek the shots in the fall, when plenty of doses will have arrived at pharmacies and doctor’s offices.
The exception: The CDC says anyone who recently had COVID-19 can wait three months after they recover before getting vaccinated, until immunity from that infection begins to wane.
Hopkins, who sees patients at the University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences, calls it vital for more youngsters to get vaccinated this year – especially with schools starting as coronavirus levels are high around the country.
“COVID does not kill many children, thank goodness, but it kills far more children than influenza does,” Hopkins said, adding that teachers, too, should quickly get up to date with the vaccine.
Health authorities say it’s fine to get a COVID-19 and flu vaccination at the same time, a convenience so people don’t have to make two trips. But while many drugstores already are advertising flu shots, the prime time for that vaccination tends to be late September through October, just before flu typically starts its cold weather climb.
___
The Associated Press Health and Science Department receives support from the Howard Hughes Medical Institute’s Science and Educational Media Group. The AP is solely responsible for all content.
veryGood! (192)
Related
- Who are the most valuable sports franchises? Forbes releases new list of top 50 teams
- 2024 RNC Day 1 fact check of the Republican National Convention
- Video shows woman's scarily close encounter with grizzly. She says she'd still 'choose the bear.'
- Inside Richard Simmons' Final Days Before Death
- Meet the volunteers risking their lives to deliver Christmas gifts to children in Haiti
- AT&T says nearly all of its cell customers' call and text records were exposed in massive breach
- New Jersey Democrats set to pick candidate in special House primary for Donald Payne Jr.'s seat
- Real Salt Lake's Cristian 'Chicho' Arango suspended four games
- Charges tied to China weigh on GM in Q4, but profit and revenue top expectations
- Want to retire but can't afford it? This strategy could be right for you.
Ranking
- Questlove charts 50 years of SNL musical hits (and misses)
- Victim of Texas inmate set for execution was loving schoolteacher, pillar of her community
- Save 25% on Ashley Graham's Favorite Self-Tanning Mist During Amazon Prime Day 2024
- New spacesuit is 'Dune'-inspired and could recycle urine into water
- Sonya Massey's father decries possible release of former deputy charged with her death
- Kenyan police say psychopathic serial killer arrested after women's remains found in dump
- Federal jury returns for third day of deliberations at bribery trial of Sen. Bob Menendez
- Misinformation and conspiracy theories swirl in wake of Trump assassination attempt
Recommendation
Paula Abdul settles lawsuit with former 'So You Think You Can Dance' co
A happy retirement: Marine K-9s reunite with first handlers
Home Run Derby's nail-biting finish had Teoscar Hernandez, Bobby Witt's families on edge
Real Salt Lake's Cristian 'Chicho' Arango suspended four games
Former longtime South Carolina congressman John Spratt dies at 82
Small plane crashes into river on Maryland’s Eastern Shore, officials say
Dow closes at record high after attempted Trump assassination fuels red wave hope
Dow closes at record high after attempted Trump assassination fuels red wave hope