Pharmacist Aaron Sun prepares Pfizer’s recent Covid vaccine Comirnaty at CVS Pharmacy in Eagle Rock, California.
Irfan Khan | Los Angeles Times | Getty Images
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Good afternoon! It’s almost that point of the yr again.
A recent round of Covid shots will likely reach Americans in the approaching months. Here’s what we all know in regards to the newest vaccines thus far.
The Food and Drug Administration on Friday advised vaccine manufacturers to develop monovalent Covid shots targeting a highly contagious strain of the virus called JN.1 to be used within the U.S. starting this fall.Â
Omicron variant JN.1 first emerged within the U.S. last summer and have become the dominant strain in circulation by January. However the strain accounted for less than around 3% of all recent U.S. cases as of Saturday, in accordance with the most recent data from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.Â
Several spinoffs of JN.1.11.1, a direct descendant of JN.1, have since taken over as the first strains circulating within the U.S. That features KP.3, KP.2 and KP.1.1, that are also often called FLiRT variants.Â
KP.3 accounted for 1 / 4 of all recent U.S. cases as of June 8, while KP.2 made up 22.5% of cases, CDC data shows.Â
Federal health officials have long told Americans to expect annual updates to Covid shots because the virus churns out recent strains that may dodge the immunity people have from previous vaccinations or infections — protection that also wanes over time. It’s just like how the U.S. rolls out recent flu vaccines every yr.Â
Here’s what the three Covid vaccine makers have said thus far.Â
- Pfizer has filed for FDA approval of an updated messenger RNA Covid vaccine targeting JN.1, with the goal of constructing the vaccine available for the autumn season pending a advice from the CDC, a spokesperson said.Â
- Moderna has filed for FDA approval of its own updated mRNA shot targeting JN.1, in accordance with a release. The corporate said manufacturing is underway and doses of the brand new vaccine might be able to ship within the U.S. as early as August.
- Novavax expects to be able to deliver a protein-based Covid vaccine targeting JN.1 within the U.S. in September, pending authorization from the FDA and CDC, the corporate said in a release.Â
The businesses each presented data last week showing that a JN.1 Covid vaccine should produce higher levels of protective antibodies against the circulating variants of the virus compared with their currently approved shots available on the market targeting one other omicron variant called XBB.1.5. That strain isn’t any longer in circulation.Â
Once the FDA approves their respective vaccines, the shots will need recommendations from an advisory panel to the CDC and the agency itself before they’ll roll out to Americans. The CDC advisory committee is scheduled to satisfy at the top of the month to vote on who should get the brand new round of vaccines this fall.Â
The larger query is, what number of individuals are actually going to roll up their sleeves and get vaccinated later this yr?Â
Only about 22.5% of U.S. adults received the most recent round of shots that rolled out last fall, in accordance with CDC data through early May.Â
Many Americans who got previous rounds of Covid shots cited an absence of worry in regards to the virus as a reason they didn’t get the most recent booster, in accordance with a November survey from health policy research organization KFF. Others said that they had been too busy to get their shot, the survey said.
Covid cases within the U.S. have plunged from their peak earlier within the pandemic, but seem like creeping up. The weekly test positivity rate within the U.S. was 4.5% as of June 1, up from 4.1% the previous week and three.4% the week before that, in accordance with CDC data.Â
We’ll proceed to look at the brand new round of Covid vaccines as we catch up with to the autumn. Â
Be at liberty to send any suggestions, suggestions, story ideas and data to Annika at annikakim.constantino@nbcuni.com.
Latest in health-care technology
White House partners with Microsoft, Google on cybersecurity for rural hospitals
An American flag flies outside OSF Saint Paul Medical Center in Mendota, Illinois, April 14, 2020.
Daniel Acker | Bloomberg | Getty Images
The White House on Monday announced Microsoft and Google have agreed to supply free and low-cost cybersecurity resources for rural hospitals across the U.S. because the health-care sector works to fend off growing numbers of attackers.Â
Cyberattacks against the health-care system climbed 128% from 2022 to 2023, in accordance with a release, and the number of huge security breaches within the sector soared to a record last yr. The attacks have shown no signs of stopping, as major health systems and firms have been affected by breaches in recent months.Â
For example, UnitedHealth Group’s subsidiary Change Healthcare suffered a debilitating cyberattack in February that left 1000’s of doctors unable to fill prescriptions, check advantages or receives a commission for his or her services. The White House said the breach was “one of the significant healthcare-related cyberattacks so far.” Â
Maintaining cybersecurity infrastructure is complex and expensive, and breaches often require “staffing-intensive manual workarounds” that might be particularly hard on small rural hospitals, the White House said. In consequence, the Biden administration has called on tech corporations corresponding to Microsoft and Google to supply additional support.Â
Microsoft said it’s going to provide rural emergency hospitals and demanding access hospitals with as much as a 75% discount on its security products which might be tailored to smaller organizations, in accordance with a release. The corporate said it’s going to offer its “most advanced” security suite to some larger rural hospitals free of charge for a yr, and participating rural hospitals may also receive free Windows 10 security updates.
Rural hospitals can access free cybersecurity assessments and training through Microsoft and its partners to assist discover risks and gaps inside systems, the corporate said.
Google said it’s going to provide “endpoint security advice” to rural hospitals and nonprofits free of charge, which suggests the corporate will help organizations make devices corresponding to their laptops and desktops tougher to attack.
Taylor Lehmann, director of the Office of the Chief Information Security Officer at Google Cloud, said Google can be helping organizations get arrange with platforms corresponding to Google Workspace and systems corresponding to Chrome and ChromeOS which have safety features in-built. The corporate is offering funding to assist organizations make the switch, Lehmann added.Â
“The idea that this problem will simply go away, or that the bad guys just have greater targets [is] not correct,” he told CNBC in an interview. “Hope shouldn’t be a technique, especially when the marketplace for attackers is so indiscriminate.”Â
Lehmann said Google can be putting together a pilot program with a handful of rural hospitals to develop a free or low-cost package of tools it might probably offer to similar organizations at a greater scale in the long run.Â
“It’s pretty encouraging to see this activity. I feel it has been a protracted time coming, and I feel there’s still more to do here,” he said. “It’s type of trending in the best direction, I might say, so far as getting attention to a few of these really critical problems that we’re seeing.”
Read the complete release from the White House here.
Be at liberty to send any suggestions, suggestions, story ideas and data to Ashley at ashley.capoot@nbcuni.com.
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