Tag Archives: Bivalent

Effectiveness of a bivalent mRNA vaccine booster dose to prevent severe COVID-19 outcomes: a retrospective cohort study – The Lancet

  1. Effectiveness of a bivalent mRNA vaccine booster dose to prevent severe COVID-19 outcomes: a retrospective cohort study The Lancet
  2. Bivalent COVID-19 booster vaccine shown to be highly effective in reducing deaths and hospitalizations Medical Xpress
  3. Durability of Bivalent Boosters against Omicron Subvariants | NEJM nejm.org
  4. Pfizer bivalent vaccine reduces Covid-related death risk by 68 per cent in older people: Study The Financial Express
  5. New bivalent booster vaccines highly effective in reducing Covid deaths and hospitalisations, study finds Independent.ie
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

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Annual? Bivalent? For all? Future of COVID shots murky after FDA deliberations

Enlarge / Dr. Peter Marks, director of the Center for Biologics Evaluation and Research within the Food and Drug Administration, testifies during a Senate Health, Education, Labor, and Pensions Committee hearing on the federal coronavirus response on Capitol Hill in March 2021, in Washington, DC.

The US Food and Drug Administration’s committee of independent vaccine experts gathered Thursday to discuss the future of COVID-19 shots. The meeting seemed primed for explosive debate. Earlier in the week, the FDA released documents that made clear the agency is holding steadfast to its idea that COVID vaccines will fit the mold of annual flu shots—with reformulations decided in the first half of each year, followed by fall rollouts in anticipation of winter waves.

But outside experts, including some on the FDA’s advisory committee, have questioned almost every aspect of that plan—from the uncertain seasonality of COVID-19 so far, to the futility of chasing fast-moving variants (or subvariants, as the case may be). Some have even questioned whether there’s a need to boost the young and healthy so frequently when current vaccines offer protection against severe disease, but only short-lived protection against infection.

One particularly outspoken member of FDA’s committee, Paul Offit, a pediatrician and infectious disease expert at Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia, has publicly assailed the bivalent booster, writing a commentary piece in the New England Journal of Medicine earlier this month titled: Bivalent Covid-19 Vaccines — A Cautionary Tale. (The FDA’s advisory committee voted 19-2 in support of the bivalent boosters last year, with Offit being one of the two votes against.)

Yet, despite the charged background of yesterday’s meeting, the sparks of disagreement fizzled over a calm discussion. The nine-hour meeting culminated with a unanimous vote by the committee in favor of “harmonizing” future formulations of COVID-19 vaccines so that primary series and boosters are matched formulations. For example, the primary series vaccines would match the updated bivalent boosters, which currently target both the original strain of SARS-CoV-2 that came out of Wuhan, China, as well as omicron subvariants BA.4/5.

Streamlining

The FDA seemed to soften the ground with questions and discussion topics focused on “harmonizing” and simplifying COVID vaccines. After the single vote, the agency directed the committee to discuss “simplifying the immunization schedule,” before getting to the more perilous, but still gentle discussion topic of considering “periodic updates to COVID-19 vaccine composition.”

Overall, the committee members favored streamlining vaccines where possible—making primary series shots match booster doses, and potentially whittling down regimens to one dose for adults and two for children and high-risk adults.

“There’s so much confusion about these different formulations that I think anything we can do to ease up on that confusion and simplify things, it’s going to be a good thing,” said Archana Chatterjee, Dean of Chicago Medical School and a voting committee member, said at the end of yesterday’s meeting. “I concur with my other colleagues that there definitely remains a need for these vaccines and for us to do our best to get them into arms. Having vaccines is not sufficient, we need to have them be used. … This is a step in the right direction in getting us there.”

But, the bigger steps for future vaccines—deciding what formulation should be used next, who should get them, and when—remained elephant-sized questions in the meeting room. And even among the relatively placid comments, it was clear that large disputes were bubbling under the surface.

Before the committee’s vote and discussion, the advisors listened to a series of presentations from vaccine makers, the FDA, and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, which all provided updates on the state of COVID-19 and the performance of the vaccines so far.

Data dive

Although Offit and others have criticized the bivalent boosters for not being better than the previous boosters, the data presented in the meeting argued otherwise. Real-world observational data shows an advantage for people boosted with the bivalent booster compared with the original (monovalent) vaccine—even against the more recent subvariants. Data presented during the meeting shows it has outcompeted the original vaccine in terms of protection against symptomatic infection, visits to the emergency department or urgent care visits, and hospitalization.

In a CDC study published Wednesday, for instance, researchers found that the bivalent booster’s relative vaccine effectiveness against symptomatic infection with a BA.5-related omicron sublineage (which includes BQ.1 and BQ.1.1) was 52 percent among people from 18 to 49 years old. In other words, people in this age group had 52 percent more protection against infection with BA.5-related strains than people who received the original booster. For ages 50 to 64, the relative effectiveness against BA.5-related infection was 43 percent, and it was 37 percent among those 65 years and older.

Against the more recent XBB/XBB.1.5-related omicron subvariants, relative effectiveness against infection was 49 percent among people  18 to 49, 40 percent among people 50 to 64 years, and 43 percent among those 65 years and older.

There’s also been a slew of serology studies looking at how the bivalent booster’s antibody responses compare with those from the original booster when up against the gamut of currently circulating omicron subvariants. The results are mixed and, in some cases, hard to compare due to differences in intervals between vaccination, the number of people involved, and the types of assays used. But overall, the FDA argued that they suggest that the bivalent booster provides better neutralizing antibody responses against currently and recently circulating omicron subvariants than the original vaccine.

“The important thing is that the results all trend in the same direction,” Jerry Weir, director of the FDA’s Division of Viral Products, said in the meeting Thursday. “In other words, with all of these studies just like those from the manufacturers, there is improved variant-specific neutralization following administration of the bivalent BA.4/5 vaccine compared with the monovalent… I find it somewhat remarkable to see that level of uniformity.”

For instance, one of the most recently published studies, released Wednesday in the New England Journal of Medicine, found that a bivalent boost led to a roughly threefold increase in neutralizing antibody levels against XBB.1 compared with people boosted with the original booster. That increase was roughly the same (3.6-fold and 2.7-fold) among people without and with previous SARS-CoV-2 infection, respectively.

Despite criticism by Offit and others before the meeting, committee members seemed comfortable with the bivalent data, accepting the FDA’s rosy retrospective.

“I’m totally convinced that the bivalent vaccine is beneficial as a primary series and its boosters,” committee member David Kim, an infectious disease expert at the Department of Health and Human Services, said.

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U.S. CDC still looking at potential stroke risk from Pfizer bivalent COVID shot

Jan 26 (Reuters) – New data from one U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) database shows a possible stroke risk link for older adults who received an updated Pfizer (PFE.N)/BioNTech (22UAy.DE) COVID-19 booster shot, but the signal is weaker than what the agency had flagged earlier in January, health officials said on Thursday.

U.S. Food and Drug Administration officials said they had not detected a link between the shots and strokes in two other safety monitoring databases.

The new data was presented at a meeting of outside experts that advise the FDA on vaccine policy.

Earlier this month, U.S. health officials said they had detected the possible link to ischemic strokes in people over age 65 who received the newer booster shots in its Vaccine Safety Datalink (VSD) database. They said at the time it was very unlikely to represent a true clinical risk.

Dr. Nicola Klein of healthcare company Kaiser Permanente, which maintains VSD data for the CDC, said the rate of strokes observed in the database had slowed in recent weeks, but the signal was still statistically significant, meaning likely not by chance.

Most of the confirmed cases had also received a flu vaccine at the same time, which might be a factor, she said.

FDA scientist Richard Forshee said the agency plans to study whether there is any increased risk of stroke from receiving the two shots at the same time.

Both agencies still recommend older adults receive the booster shots, now tailored to target Omicron variants as well as the original coronavirus.

Dr. Walid Gellad, professor of medicine at University of Pittsburgh, said the issue required further investigation.

“Sometimes signals are not clear,” Gellad said in an email. “It makes sense to look into it more, and it doesn’t make sense to change practice given the known benefits (of getting the booster) in this age group.”

(This story has been corrected to fix the name to Nicola from Nicole in paragraph 5)

Reporting by Michael Erman; Editing by Bill Berkrot

Our Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.

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U.S. CDC still looking at potential stroke risk from Pfizer bivalent COVID shot

By Michael Erman

(Reuters) – New data from one U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) database shows a possible stroke risk link for older adults who received an updated Pfizer/BioNTech COVID-19 booster shot, but the signal is weaker than what the agency had flagged earlier in January, health officials said on Thursday.

U.S. Food and Drug Administration officials said they had not detected a link between the shots and strokes in two other safety monitoring databases.

The new data was presented at a meeting of outside experts that advise the FDA on vaccine policy.

Earlier this month, U.S. health officials said they had detected the possible link to ischemic strokes in people over age 65 who received the newer booster shots in its Vaccine Safety Datalink (VSD) database. They said at the time it was very unlikely to represent a true clinical risk.

Dr. Nicole Klein of healthcare company Kaiser Permanente, which maintains VSD data for the CDC, said the rate of strokes observed in the database had slowed in recent weeks, but the signal was still statistically significant, meaning likely not by chance.

Most of the confirmed cases had also received a flu vaccine at the same time, which might be a factor, she said.

FDA scientist Richard Forshee said the agency plans to study whether there is any increased risk of stroke from receiving the two shots at the same time.

Both agencies still recommend older adults receive the booster shots, now tailored to target Omicron variants as well as the original coronavirus.

Dr. Walid Gellad, professor of medicine at University of Pittsburgh, said the issue required further investigation.

“Sometimes signals are not clear,” Gellad said in an email. “It makes sense to look into it more, and it doesn’t make sense to change practice given the known benefits (of getting the booster) in this age group.”

(Reporting by Michael Erman; Editing by Bill Berkrot)

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Even bivalent updated COVID-19 boosters struggle to prevent omicron subvariant transmission – an immunologist discusses why new approaches are necessary

By almost any measure, the vaccination campaign against SARS-CoV-2, the virus that causes COVID-19, has been a global success.

As of January 2023, more than 12 billion vaccines against SARS-CoV-2 have been administered in an effort that has saved countless lives – more than 14 million in the first year of vaccine availability alone. With a 95% efficacy in the prevention of severe infection and death, and better safety profiles than similar historically effective vaccines, the biomedical community hoped that a combination of vaccination and natural immunity might bring the pandemic to a relatively quick end.

But the emergence of new viral variants, particularly omicron and its array of subvariants, upended those expectations. The latest omicron strain, XBB.1.5. – dubbed “Kraken”, after a mythical sea creature – has rapidly become the dominant subvariant in the U.S. The World Health Organization is calling it the most contagious strain so far, with its success almost certainly attributable to an ability to dodge immunity from previous vaccines or infections.

The effort to get ahead of these ever-changing variants is also in part what has led the Food and Drug Administration to reconsider its approach to COVID-19 vaccination. On Jan. 23, 2023, the agency proposed that current guidelines for a series of shots followed by a booster be replaced by an annual COVID-19 vaccine that is updated each year to combat current strains. The proposal is set to be reviewed by the FDA’s science advisory committee on Jan. 26.

Limitations of current mRNA vaccination strategies

Unfortunately, the new bivalent shots, which include components from both the original SARS-CoV-2 strain as well as a recent omicron variant, have not performed as well as some scientists had hoped. Although there is no question that the updated jabs are capable of boosting antibody levels against SARS-CoV-2 and helping to prevent severe illness and hospitalization, several studies have suggested that they are not necessarily more capable of preventing omicron infections than their predecessors.

As an immunologist who studies how the immune system selects which antibodies to produce and immune responses to COVID-19, these new results are disappointing. But they are not entirely unexpected.

When COVID-19 vaccines were being rolled out in early 2021, immunologists began having public discussions about the potential obstacles to rapidly generating updated vaccines to emerging viral strains. At the time, there was no hard data. But researchers have known for a very long time that immunological memory, the very thing that offers continued protection against a virus long after vaccination, can sometimes negatively interfere with the development of slightly updated immune responses.

The failure of these new bivalent vaccines in widely preventing omicron infections suggests that our current approach is simply not sufficient to interrupt the viral transmission cycle driving the COVID-19 pandemic. In my view, it’s clear that innovative vaccine designs capable of producing a broader immunity are badly needed.

Vaccines are designed to generate immune memory

In simplest terms, vaccines are a way to give your immune system a sneak peek at a pathogen. There are several different ways to do this. One way is to inject inactivated versions of a virus, as has been done with polio. Another is to use noninfectious viral components, such as the proteins used for flu vaccines.

And most recently, scientists have found ways to deliver mRNA “instructions” that tell your body how to make those noninfectious viral components. This is the approach used with the Moderna and Pfizer vaccines targeted against COVID-19.

The mRNA-based vaccines all train your immune system to identify and respond against critical components of a potential invader. An important part of that response is to get your body to produce antibodies that will hopefully prevent future infections, helping to break the cycle of person-to-person transmission.

In a successful response, the immune system will not only produce antibodies that are specific to the pathogen, but will also remember how to make them in case you encounter that same pathogen again in the future.

The existing approach to COVID-19 vaccines has proved effective at preventing serious illness and death, but it has not prevented infections as well as scientists had hoped. Morsa Images/DigitalVision via Getty Images

The specter of ‘original antigenic sin’

But what happens when the virus evolves and that memory becomes obsolete?

Immunologists have wondered this since the initial COVID-19 vaccine rollout. Recently, it has found new relevance in light of the FDA’s proposal for an updated annual COVID-19 shot.

While it is possible that immune responses to updated vaccines will simply replace the old ones, that has not been true for influenza. With flu, researchers have learned that preexisting immunity to one strain can actively inhibit the ability to respond well against another.

Put in everyday language, think of a virus as a car trying to run you over. You might produce one kind of antibody against the hood, one against the bumper and one against the hubcaps that prevents the wheels from turning. You have produced three kinds of antibodies specific to the car, but it turns out that only the hubcap antibodies effectively slow it down.

Now the car mutates, like SARS-CoV-2 has. It changes the shape of the hubcaps or it removes them altogether. Your immune system still recognizes the car, but not the hubcaps. The system doesn’t know that the hubcap was the only effective target, so it ignores the hubcaps and ramps up its attack on the hood and bumper.

In ignoring the new hubcap response, the immune system’s memory of the original car is not only obsolete, but it is also actively interfering with the response necessary to target the new car’s wheels. This is what immunologists call “original antigenic sin” – ineffective immune memory that hampers desired responses to new pathogen strains.

This sort of interference has been extremely difficult to quantify and study in humans, although it may become easier with the FDA’s proposal. A once-yearly approach to COVID-19 vaccination opens the door for more straightforward studies on how memory to each vaccine influences the next.

Multi-strain vaccinations offer hope

Simultaneously, significant efforts are being made to prioritize the pursuit of a single-shot or “universal” vaccine. One approach has been to take advantage of emerging research showing that if your immune system is presented with multiple versions of the same pathogen, it will tend to choose targets that are shared between them.

Presented with a Model T, Ford F-150 and electric Mustang all at once, your immune system will often choose to ignore differences like the hubcaps in favor of similarities like the shape and rubber on the tires. Not only would this interfere with the function of all three vehicles, but it could theoretically interfere with most road-based vehicles – or viral threats such as variants.

Researchers have begun making rapid headway using this approach with the development of complex multi-strain flu vaccines that are performing well in early clinical trials. New studies focused on SARS-CoV-2 hope to do the same. Persistent pathogens including influenza and HIV all suffer from versions of the same antibody-targeting issues. It is possible that this pandemic may serve as a crucible of innovation that leads to the next generation of infectious disease prevention.

This is an updated version of an article originally published on March 8, 2021.

This article is republished from The Conversation, an independent nonprofit news site dedicated to sharing ideas from academic experts. If you found it interesting, you could subscribe to our weekly newsletter.

It was written by: Matthew Woodruff, Emory University.

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Matthew Woodruff does not work for, consult, own shares in or receive funding from any company or organization that would benefit from this article, and has disclosed no relevant affiliations beyond their academic appointment.

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Did you receive the COVID- 19 Bivalent booster ? Did you get your flu shot ?

DK file photo

COVID-19 and Flu vaccines save millions of lives, and they are generally free and available in many locations. 

Of course it cannot be implied from those facts that the majority of people are vaccinated. It can be implied that our hospitals are bursting at the seams with patients suffering from viral respiratory failure.

Poll



4008
votes

Show Results

The updated vaccines I’ve received are



4008
votes

Vote Now!

The updated vaccines I’ve received are

3. Both COVID-19 Bivalent and Flu shot

4. Neither COVID Bivalent or Flu, but will get both as soon as I can

5. Neither because I cannot or don’t want to



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Did you receive the COVID- 19 Bivalent booster ? Did you get your flu shot ?

DK file photo

COVID-19 and Flu vaccines save millions of lives, and they are generally free and available in many locations. 

Of course it cannot be implied from those facts that the majority of people are vaccinated. It can be implied that our hospitals are bursting at the seams with patients suffering from viral respiratory failure.

Poll



4974
votes

Show Results

The updated vaccines I’ve received are



4974
votes

Vote Now!

The updated vaccines I’ve received are

3. Both COVID-19 Bivalent and Flu shot

4. Neither COVID Bivalent or Flu, but will get both as soon as I can

5. Neither because I cannot or don’t want to



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What to know about the new bivalent COVID-19 booster and how to get it in Athens | City News

The Food and Drug Administration (FDA) approved the updated bivalent COVID-19 vaccine as a single dose booster on Aug. 31.

The new booster provides protection against the BA.4 and the BA.5 strain of the omicron variant, according to the FDA. The CDC reported that these strains currently cause the majority of positive COVID-19 cases in the United States.

As of Oct. 12, the CDC recommends that people ages 5 years and older receive one updated (bivalent) booster if it has been at least two months since their last COVID-19 vaccine dose, whether that was their final primary series dose, or an original (monovalent) booster. People who have gotten more than one of the monovalent boosters are also recommended to get an updated bivalent booster.

According to the Georgia Department of Health, 52% of Clarke County is fully vaccinated, meaning a full two-vaccine series, and 28% have received an additional dose. The Georgia Department of Health does not track the percentage of people who have received the updated bivalent booster.

Missy Jackson, the Director of Nursing at the University Health Center, said the UHC has been administering COVID-19 vaccines since the first monovalent vaccines were first released. They now administer both the original monovalent vaccines and the updated bivalent boosters. The University Health Center follows CDC guidelines for the bivalent booster.

“Since receiving the first COVID-19 vaccines in December of 2020, the UHC has administered over 36,000 vaccines to over 19,000 distinct individuals. Of those total vaccines, UHC has administered approximately 1,000 bivalent vaccines,” Jackson said.

If students wish to receive the bivalent vaccine at the UHC, they can schedule an appointment in the UHC patient portal or call the Allergy and Travel clinic at 706-542-5575.

Jackson also said the Georgia Department of Public Health and local pharmacies in the Athens area are available to provide the bivalent COVID-19 vaccine. She said it is important to contact the provider to verify if they have the correct vaccine when making an appointment.

Emily Harkness, a second-year anthropology major at the University of Georgia, said she got the updated booster at the same time as a flu vaccine. She said she has encouraged friends and family to get the vaccine to increase collective immunity.

“My grandma is very susceptible to COVID, so we’re all very cautious about it. I encouraged most of my family to get the vaccine, and I encouraged my friends as well, because it’s herd immunity,” Harkness said. “So if most people get it, then the chances of people getting very sick is going to be a lot less.”

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Does the new bivalent COVID booster have different side effects?

(NEXSTAR) – If you go to your local pharmacy or vaccination site, you’ll be getting a new type of COVID-19 shot these days. It’s a bivalent booster shoot, meaning it contains parts of the original COVID-19 variant and the omicron variant that’s grown dominant in 2022.

The new formulation is designed to give you better protection against the type of coronavirus circling now, but does a new type of vaccine mean it will feel different?

“All the side effects from the bivalent booster (in clinical trials) were very similar to what we saw with the regular booster and even going back to the initial vaccination,” said Andrew Pekosz, a virologist with the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health, in a recent media briefing. “Most often it’s redness at the site of inoculation, some soreness, feeling tired for a day or two afterwards — all the same side effects we’re seeing at relatively the same rates with the bivalent booster.”

Other common side effects of the COVID-19 vaccine in adults — whether it’s the updated formula or not — include headaches, fever, chills and nausea, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

In kids, the most common side effects are a bit different. For really young children, between 6 months and 3 years old, you’ll often see soreness at the injection site, but also swollen lymph nodes, irritability, sleepiness or loss of appetite.

In children 4 to 17 years old, the side effects are more similar to what adults see. Side effects in this age group are more likely to occur after the second dose, the CDC says.

The CDC says side effects are usually mild and pass within a day or two.

The Food and Drug Administration has authorized the use of two bivalent COVID-19 boosters. The Moderna shot is available for adults, while the Pfizer shot is available for people 12 and older.

It’s hard to say how much better these boosters will protect us from the virus than the last version, because tests of this exact recipe have only just begun in people.

The FDA cleared the new boosters based in large part on human studies of a similarly tweaked vaccine that’s just been recommended by regulators in Europe. Those tweaked shots target an earlier omicron strain, BA.1, that circulated last winter, and studies found they revved up people’s virus-fighting antibodies.

With that earlier omicron version now replaced by BA.4 and BA.5, the FDA ordered an additional tweak to the shots — and tests in mice showed they spark an equally good immune response.

There’s no way to know if antibodies produced by an omicron-matched booster might last longer than a few months. But a booster is also supposed to strengthen immune system memory, adding to protection against serious illness from the ever-mutating virus.

The Associated Press contributed to this report.

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Bivalent Boosters Available and Encouraged | News

The County of San Diego Health and Human Services Agency is encouraging San Diegans to stay current on their COVID-19 vaccine doses ahead of the upcoming winter months.

“COVID-19 vaccines and boosters are our best protection against the virus and I encourage anyone who is eligible for a booster to get one,” said Wilma J. Wooten, M.D., M.P.H., County public health officer. “While COVID-19 numbers are currently trending down, the virus remains active and infectious in our community and we anticipate more cases in the coming months as people move activities indoors.”

So far, close to 1.45 million San Diegans have received a regular booster since they became available. The County has administered more than 400 bivalent boosters since limited supplies started arriving earlier this month, while the total from all providers has surpassed 34,000.

The new bivalent boosters were developed to generate an immune response from the original COVID-19 virus, as well as the BA.4 and BA.5 Omicron subvariants. The Omicron variants are still causing the majority of new COVID-19 infections in the region.

The Pfizer/BioNTech bivalent booster is available for individuals age 12 and older. Moderna bivalent boosters are authorized for those age 18 and older, but are currently not readily available in the region as the County is awaiting additional vaccine allocations from the state.

The bivalent boosters have not yet been authorized for children under the age of 12. Youths in that age group can get boosted with the previous version of the monovalent Pfizer vaccine.

San Diegans must be fully vaccinated with the primary series of one of the approved COVID-19 vaccines before receiving a bivalent booster, meaning they must have received the two-dose primary series of Pfizer, Moderna, or the relatively new Novavax. All of those vaccines remain widely available. Also eligible for the bivalent booster are those who received at least one shot of the Janssen vaccine, which is no longer widely available.

Anyone who wants to get a bivalent booster must wait at least eight weeks after they received a previous COVID-19 vaccine until they are eligible. In addition, anyone who is fully vaccinated and recently tested positive for COVID-19, should wait three months after infection to get a bivalent booster.

Data Reporting Changes

As COVID-19 activity continues to trend down in the region, and to align with the state’s reporting frequency, the County will transition to reporting COVID-19 data once a week.

Starting next week, local COVID-19 data will be updated on the coronavirus-sd.com page on Thursdays only, instead of twice a week on Mondays and Thursdays. The County’s regular COVID-19 news release will continue to be distributed once a week on Thursdays.

 Vaccination Progress:

  • Received at least one shot: More than 3.02 million or 90.4% of San Diegans age six months and older are at least partially vaccinated.
  • Fully vaccinated: More than 2.67 million or 80.0%.
  • Boosters administered: 1,447,477 or 59% of 2,455,439 eligible San Diegans.
  • More vaccination information can be found at coronavirus-sd.com/vaccine.

Deaths:

  • Nine additional deaths were reported since the last report on Sept. 8, 2022. The region’s total is 5,483.
  • Of the nine additional deaths, five were women and four were men. They died between Aug. 25, 2022 and Sept. 10, 2022; five deaths occurred in the past two weeks.
  • Five of the people who died were 80 years or older, three were in their 70s and one was in their 60s.
  • Five were fully vaccinated and four were not.
  • All had underlying medical conditions.

Cases, Case Rates and Testing:

  • 1,251 COVID-19 cases were reported to the County in the past three days (Sept. 12 to Sept. 14, 2022). The region’s total is now 918,279.
  • 2,840 cases were reported in the past week (Sept. 8 through Sept. 14) compared to 2,797 infections identified the previous week (Sept. 1 through Sept. 7).
  • San Diego County’s case rate per 100,000 residents 12 years of age and older is 17.59 for people fully vaccinated and boosted, 10.51 for fully vaccinated people and 35.77 for not fully vaccinated San Diegans.
  • 7,176 tests were reported to the County on Sept. 10, and the percentage of new positive cases was 4.6% (Data through Sept. 10).
  • The 14-day rolling percentage of positive cases, among tests reported through Sept. 10, is 5.7%.

More Information:

Data updates to the County’s coronavirus-sd.com website will be published Mondays and Thursdays around 5 p.m., with the exception of holidays.

 

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