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COVID-19 Vaccines: Access Challenges & Ongoing Risks

COVID-19 Vaccines: Access Challenges & Ongoing Risks
Aimee Cunningham 2025-09-16 18:00:00

traveling across state lines in search of an available shot. Scrambling to‍ get a doctor’s prescription. Showing‍ up for‌ a pharmacy vaccination​ appointment⁤ only to be denied. Those are some of the stories ​people have⁣ been describing to journalists and on social⁣ media as they share whether or ⁤not they could get the latest COVID-19 vaccine,updated to better match coronavirus strains in circulation.

This ⁤reality contradicts Health and‍ Human Services ​Secretary Robert Kennedy Jr.’s testimony in a Sept. 4 congressional hearing that everybody can get the vaccine. In May, the⁣ U.S. Food and Drug Management placed restrictions on ​who is eligible for the COVID-19 shot. Previously,the Moderna and Pfizer formulations were available for‍ anyone 6 months and older,with Novavax OK’d for those 12 and up. Now, the FDA has stated, those 6 months ‌to 64 years old can receive the⁤ vaccine only if they have ‍a medical condition ​that increases the risk of severe COVID-19 disease.

“There’s going to be a significant amount of chaos — unnecessary chaos — ⁢because of these changes,” says Eric Meyerowitz,an‍ infectious disease physician ⁣at Montefiore Medical Center in New⁤ York City. The ​new⁢ federal restrictions have lead to ‌widely⁤ varying access in the United ⁢States, sometimes dependent on state or pharmacy​ policies.

More restrictions are possible. The U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention’s Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices, or ACIP, is ⁢scheduled ‍to meet on September 18 and 19 and⁣ COVID-19 vaccines are on the agenda. The members of ⁣that committee ⁢— which historically has provided the evidence-based recommendations for ‍vaccine use — were fired earlier this year by Kennedy. His⁣ replacements​ included ‍people ⁤known for their anti-vaccine‍ stances. on September​ 15, Kennedy announced five more members, who have backgrounds in surgery, cardiology‌ and tuberculosis, not vaccines.

Up to now, in public health, “the whole idea has been to encourage access” to vaccines, says Gigi Gronvall, an immunologist and health security expert ⁤at the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg⁢ School of Public Health.“It’s all about how⁤ can we make this even easier,” she says, not harder.

given that there are new ⁢roadblocks‍ to getting ⁣a COVID-19 vaccine, Science News talked ⁢with three experts about what‍ might happen with this year’s expected surge in illness and ⁢future waves of infections of SARS-CoV-2, the ‍virus that causes COVID-19.

What’s expected ⁢to happen with COVID-19⁣ cases this fall and winter?

As of‍ September⁢ 6, U.S. wastewater surveillance data,which tends to trend with rising and falling cases, shows COVID-19 activity is moderate ⁢to very​ high in more than half the country. ‌The COVID-19 Scenario Modeling Hub,a consortium of researchers from numerous institutions, released in ‍June ‌its predictions on⁤ COVID-19 activity for the rest of this year and early next year. It projects a peak in ‍late⁢ August and another in January.

COVID-19‍ waves continue to ⁢occur due to a combination of waning immunity after infections and vaccination as well as ‍the coronavirus being “very ⁤adept at evading⁣ the⁣ immune response,” Meyerowitz says. The primary ​subvariant circulating ​as​ of August, called XFG, is ⁣another‌ descendant of‌ omicron, ​the SARS-CoV-2 variant that caused a massive spike in cases in⁤ the winter of 2021–22.

updated COVID-19 vaccines can definitely⁢ help the immune system counter the coronavirus in ‌its latest forms. The 2025–26 version is formulated against another ​omicron descendent called LP.8.1, which circulated widely in the spring. In⁢ its application⁣ for FDA approval, Pfizer ‍included data that showed that its ⁤updated vaccine elevated the ‍immune response to several strains, including ⁤XFG.

“We’re in a situation where people should think about getting an ⁤updated‌ vaccination to help ‌give their immunity a boost …⁤ to⁤ top⁤ it up and give people as much protection as⁢ possible,” says Aubree Gordon, ‌an infectious diseases epidemiologist at the University of Michigan in Ann Arbor. The protection from vaccination, while it might not fully stop an infection, can temper⁢ the symptoms and is key⁣ to prevent severe COVID-19 illness.

The COVID-19​ Scenario Modeling hub predicts that shots for all age groups would ⁢ reduce hospitalizations by 116,000, or 17 percent, and deaths by 9,000, or ‌19 percent, compared with ​not getting vaccinated, for the ⁢period ​covering April 2025 to April 2026.

What⁤ are the concerns with restricting access to⁤ COVID-19 vaccines?

Generally speaking,⁢ if it’s harder for people to get vaccinated, there⁣ is the opportunity for more symptomatic cases and more severe cases. There are a lot of ‌factors that influence people’s vulnerability to COVID-19’s⁣ harms,⁣ including the fact that preexisting immunity from infections and vaccination eventually wanes. And things can shift.For example, “your​ ability‌ to withstand ‌the effects ⁤of getting infected are going ⁣to change over time as you get older or if you’re having other health problems,” Gronvall ​says.

Even for people⁣ who are generally healthy,​ if they don’t get vaccinated and then ​get infected, it’s more likely that “people are ⁣going to feel ​worse,” Gordon says. Rather than a two- to three-day illness, perhaps a⁤ cough persists for weeks. If ⁢people get ⁣sicker,‍ that can mean more⁤ days of missed school or⁢ work. ⁤It’s more disruptive for life,‌ she says.

There’s also‌ a risk of more hospitalizations, which could strain hospital​ systems. Research has found that COVID-19 vaccination reduces ‍hospitalizations due ⁣to the⁢ disease. One study⁤ that covered⁣ early 2022, when omicron dominated, reported that COVID-19 hospitalization rates were just over 10 times as high in ⁢unvaccinated people ⁤compared with people‍ who had been vaccinated and boosted

If the ability to get COVID-19 vaccines deteriorates further ​over time, “what we’ll ‍see is surges in ⁢hospitalizations and ⁣surges ​in deaths,” ⁢Meyerowitz says, and “largely‍ in the groups where we know that the risk is highest.” that’s older ​adults, especially those over⁢ 75, and children and ​infants under the age of 2. “If ​you‌ continue to ​drive down‌ vaccination rates,” he says, “those [hospitalization] rates ⁣are going to go up.”

Why does vaccination remain important?

“There is‍ no pathogen on the planet” for which‌ a natural infection is better than having the vaccine first,Gronvall⁢ says.Vaccines are “like a dress rehearsal for the main performance.”‍ They give the immune system some training in a safe‍ way before ‌the main infection⁢ event,⁢ she says, “so your immune‌ system ⁢has a‌ leg up.”

There has already been a ‍ large measles outbreak in ⁢the United States this year due to ‌under-vaccination against the disease in some areas. ​“There’s a⁣ real fear that we could have large outbreaks‍ of these incredibly dangerous infectious diseases that are really quite easy ‍to ⁣prevent,” Gordon says. ​“That’s what ⁤public health is ⁤there ​for, so ‍we don’t have ​babies born with congenital ‍defects from rubella, so that‌ our ⁢kids⁣ can go ‌to school without some of them⁢ getting ​measles.”

the ‍recent⁢ restrictions ‍at‍ the‌ federal level on⁣ eligibility for COVID-19 vaccination means “there is‍ a divergence now of standard of care medicine from federal policy,” meyerowitz ⁢says. “that doesn’t mean‍ the standard of care has changed.”

Medical associations like the American Academy of⁤ Pediatrics and ⁣the American College of obstetrics and Gynecologists have put out evidence-based recommendations for vaccination. “I would look to the medical societies who are putting out their own guidelines,” Meyerowitz says. ‌“Our duty is not to ​advance some dubious federal policy but ​rather to do right by our patients and to make sure that ​we are sharing actual evidence-based recommendations.”

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