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US proposes once-a-year COVID-19 shots for most Americans

US proposes once-a-year COVID-19 shots for most Americans

A nurse prepares a syringe of a COVID-19 vaccine at an inoculation station in Jackson, Mississippi, on Jul 19, 2022. (File photo: AP/Rogelio V Solis)

WASHINGTON: United States health officials want to make COVID-19 vaccinations more like the annual flu shot.

The US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) on Monday (Jan 23) proposed a simplified approach for future vaccination efforts, allowing most adults and children to get a once-a-year shot to protect against the mutating virus.

This means that Americans would no longer have to keep track of how many shots they have received or how many months it has been since their last booster.

The proposal comes as boosters have become a hard sell. While more than 80 per cent of the US population has had at least one vaccine dose, only 16 per cent of those eligible have received the latest boosters authorised last August.

The FDA will ask its panel of outside vaccine experts to weigh in at a meeting on Thursday. The agency is expected to take their advice into consideration while deciding future vaccine requirements for manufacturers.

In documents posted online, FDA scientists said that many Americans now have “sufficient preexisting immunity” against the coronavirus because of vaccination, infection or a combination of the two.

That baseline of protection should be enough to move to an annual booster against the latest strains in circulation and make COVID-19 vaccinations more like the yearly flu shot, according to the agency.

For adults with weakened immune systems and very small children, a two-dose combination may be needed for protection. FDA scientists and vaccine companies would study vaccination, infection rates and other data to decide who should receive a single shot versus a two-dose series.

The FDA will also ask its panel to vote on whether all vaccines should target the same strains. That step would be needed to make the shots interchangeable, doing away with the current complicated system of primary vaccinations and boosters.

The initial shots from Pfizer and Moderna - called the primary series - target the strain of the virus that first emerged in 2020 and quickly swept across the world. The updated boosters launched last fall were also tweaked to target Omicron relatives that had been dominant.

Under FDA's proposal, the agency, independent experts and manufacturers would decide annually on which strains to target by the early summer, allowing several months to produce and launch updated shots before the fall. That is roughly the same approach long used to select the strains for the annual flu shot.

Ultimately, FDA officials say that moving to an annual schedule would make it easier to promote future vaccination campaigns, which could ultimately boost vaccination rates nationwide.

The original two-dose COVID-19 shots have offered strong protection against severe disease and death no matter the variant, but protection against mild infection wanes.

Experts continue to debate whether the latest round of boosters significantly enhanced protection, particularly for younger, healthy Americans.

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Source: AP/ec/kg

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