Is the US Quietly Ending COVID-19 Vaccination for the Young and Healthy
As the FDA limits COVID-19 vaccine approvals to high-risk groups, healthy adults and pregnant individuals are being left behind. Learn how these changes could impact insurance coverage, long COVID prevention, and public health strategies.
This year, we are seeing a severe narrowing of COVID-19 vaccine recommendations, with an apparent objective of effectively
The updated
So far,
Unlike other treatment recommendation processes, COVID-19 vaccination approvals have undergone a myopic approach, mainly focusing on preventing COVID-19 deaths and avoiding the vaccine complication of myocarditis. Although the latter occurs
The European Commission (EC) appears to be taking a different approach with the
The FDA’s elimination of COVID-19 vaccine approvals for healthy adults has significant real-world implications. Even if replaced by “shared decision making”, insurance coverage may be lost, costing patients hundreds of dollars and creating a significant barrier for vaccine utilization. All payers, except Medicare Part B, are
The restricted approval of the COVID-19 vaccines appears to be based on exaggerated and irrational statements regarding their risks, as illustrated by
In actuality, billions of doses of COVID-19 vaccines have been administered, and they are
Justifying the recommendations by focusing on the perceived low death rates in young adults is not consistent with advisements given for other vaccines. For example, COVID-19 has a higher death rate than
However, the prevention of death is only one benefit to consider when making COVID-19 vaccination recommendations. COVID-19 all too often causes long-term damage in a myriad of other organ systems, and
Vaccination of children is of utmost importance. Children have a lower incidence of long COVID than adults, but lower does not mean low. One study found that
mRNA vaccines are just first generation COVID-19 vaccines. Many have pointed to their drawbacks, from frequent local reactions to the uncertainty of the delivered dosage of the spike protein. In actuality, the spike protein is not delivered but is produced by the injected mRNA, which creates another variable in dosage administration. The COVID-19 vaccine, Novavax, avoids this problem since it is protein-based, not mRNA-based. Novavax
No one knows the long-term effects of vaccinating every 5 to 6 months in high-risk individuals. But one can argue it is much preferable to getting COVID-19 once or twice a year, with a much higher exposure to the spike protein, along with the massive cellular destruction produced by the viral infection.
Vaccines with greater durability and ones that can elicit an IgA immunological response to help stop viral spread are desperately needed. Although
The continued accumulation of data regarding the societal toll of long COVID, along with the massive second-generation COVID-19 vaccine development initiative by BARDA, are testaments to the seriousness of COVID-19 infections. But this contrasts with our current underwhelming approach in vaccine recommendations, which appears not to take COVID-19 seriously.
Until second-generation vaccines become available, we need to use the tools that we have. I, for one, will continue to recommend COVID-19 vaccinations for all healthy adults, but the loss of FDA approval will make vaccines unaffordable for many, creating an insurmountable barrier. Until this changes, the US is placing the health of its population along with the long-term viability of its workforce at risk.
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