Your weekly update from Kentucky Health News
Kentucky editors and news directors:
It’s vaccination time again, and not just because school has started. New vaccines are coming for respiratory illnesses, and you can get free vaccinations at the state fair. Here are the latest headlines on Kentucky Health News, as links to the individual articles:
Events, trends, issues, ideas and independent journalism about health care and health in Kentucky, from the Institute for Rural Journalism and Community Issues at the University of Kentucky
New vaccines being released next month for Covid-19, the flu and RSV are expected to curb ever-mutating respiratory viruses
Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health photo |
Kentucky Health News
Gottlieb said studies are underway “to look at whether the new vaccine also covers this BA.2.86 variant . . . and we’ll have that data by the time the new vaccines become available. So by the time these are out in September, consumers will know how well it covers that new variant. We’ll also probably know whether or not it’s spreading.”
They report, “An updated Covid booster should be available by late September. Flu shots are arriving at doctors’ offices. And for the first time, infants and seniors could be immunized against respiratory syncytial virus, a persistent foe that public health officials had few ways to prevent.”
“Doctors have to figure out how to explain the nuances and unknowns of new vaccines at a time of rampant misinformation,” the Post reporters write. “Patients perplexed by changing coronavirus vaccine guidance now have more shots to consider. Public health officials worry a messy rollout could further erode confidence in routine vaccination and risk overwhelming the health-care system with preventable cases of RSV, flu and Covid.”
The updated Covid booster, designed to work on the XBB strain of the virus,which became dominant this year, marks the shift to an annual vaccination for all age groups, similar to the fall flu vaccine.
And as for concerns about getting the three shots at once, the authors write, “The CDC says it has not seen data suggesting safety concerns co-administering covid and flu shots, which could improve uptake of both vaccines. But clinical trials for the RSV vaccines found rare instances of severe side effects in people who received an influenza vaccine at the same time. It’s unclear if it was a statistical fluke or a consequence of co-administering the vaccines. Still, providers must weigh the potential for rare side effects against the potential harm of seniors contracting a severe case of a virus they are not vaccinated against.”