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Dr. Melanie Swift: COVID-19 vaccine urgency as delta variant continues to spread

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    We really need to take advantage
    of this time right now
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    when we have the vaccines,
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    they are freely available
    for everyone to get vaccinated
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    so that we can stop the spread
    of the Delta variant
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    but also we can prevent
    the development of new variants.
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    The situation with the Delta variant
    can't really be understated at this point.
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    We are really at a pivotal moment
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    in the pandemic right now.
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    We were on the down trend
    in the United States
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    with increasing vaccination rates
    and decreasing new cases,
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    and what has happened is that
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    we've gone from having our first case
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    of the Delta variant
    in the United States in March
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    to it now being the vast majority
    of our sequenced cases.
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    The Delta variant which was first seen
    in December in India
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    is more contagious
    than the previous strains
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    that we've had in the United States,
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    but it's also causing more severe illness,
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    so that is causing
    hospitalizations to increase
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    icu admissions to increase,
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    and we're looking at another wave
    of the pandemic.
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    So it's more contagious,
    and that's concerning;
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    it's more serious, and that's concerning.
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    The messenger rna vaccines
    are highly effective against this variant,
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    so we have that information
    from clinical studies
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    as well as from laboratory tests
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    of what we think
    the immune response should be.
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    And so they're showing
    clinically, in the UK,
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    where the Delta variant
    has been taking hold for many months now
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    that those mRNA vaccines
    are still highly effective
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    so over 80% for infection
    and 90% or so for severe disease
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    90% or so for severe disease.
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    So it's still very important
    to take those vaccines.
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    The Johnson & Johnson vaccine
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    is probably also going
    to be very effective.
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    There are some early studies
    looking at the laboratory measurement
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    of our immune system response
    that are that are very promising
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    and show really good response
    to the Delta variant.
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    But we don't yet have large numbers
    of people in clinical studies
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    to see what the impact
    of the Johnson & Johnson vaccine is
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    on the Delta variant just yet,
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    but we're very hopeful that
    that's going to be positive as well.
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    We want everyone who is able
    to get vaccinated to get vaccinated.
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    We've sort of stalled out
    in the United States
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    with our vaccination rates
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    and nationally only half of the population
    has been fully documented,
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    a little less than half,
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    and there are some states
    that are doing better
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    and some states that are lagging behind,
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    and we're seeing that those states
    that have lower vaccination rates
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    is where the Delta variant
    is spreading the most.
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    People have often been waiting to see
    how people respond to the vaccines
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    and what kind of side effects happen.
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    If people have been waiting to see,
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    now's your chance
    to go ahead and get vaccinated
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    because you've
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    we've seen that people do very very well.
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    Side effects are mild; they're self-limited.
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    These vaccines are incredibly safe.
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    Now is the time
    for people to get vaccinated.
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    That's really the only way
    that we're going to stave off
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    what could be a really devastating
    next wave of this pandemic.
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    There have been a couple
    of more serious adverse events
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    that were so rare
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    that they didn't occur
    in those large clinical trials
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    of more than 40000 people
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    So when we're talking
    about things that are so rare,
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    it's a few in a million.
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    You can't detect those
    even in very large clinical trials,
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    so what we have done is we have
    these really robust surveillance systems
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    to detect more rare problems,
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    and we have detected a few of those.
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    Now, the first one was the bleeding
    and clotting problem
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    that was associated
    with the Johnson & Johnson vaccine,
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    which is also seen with other vaccines
    in that same platform--
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    the AstraZeneca vaccine,
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    and that primarily affects women under 50.
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    And it's still incredibly rare,
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    and it is still safe for women
    to take either kind of vaccine.
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    The second condition that we found
    through this vaccine surveillance system
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    is myocarditis, which is associated
    with the mRNA vaccines
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    in predominantly males,
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    and it appears to be more common
    in younger males.
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    But adults, including older adults,
    have also experienced it,
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    and myocarditis
    is an inflammation of the heart,
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    People don't often talk about it
    or know about it,
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    but it actually is a complication
    of COVID infection.
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    It's also a complication
    of other viral infections,
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    and when people have this
    they often don't know the cause of it.
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    But unlike those clotting
    and bleeding disorder
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    that was found in women associated
    with the Johnson & Johnson vaccine,
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    this is a condition that's pretty
    straightforward to identify.
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    Standard treatment is conservative care
    with some medications,
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    like anti-inflammatory medications,
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    and people do very well
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    and go home from the hospital
    and recover fully.
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    I would say it is still safe
    and recommended
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    for everyone to be vaccinated,
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    even with these rare conditions
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    that have been found
    to be associated with the vaccines,
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    because the risks are far outweighed
    by the benefits of vaccination.
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    We have not seen any concerns
    for reproductive side effects
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    from any of the COVID vaccines,
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    and that includes fertility
    as well as birth outcomes.
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    these concerns arose
    out of an internet rumor
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    which is actually a complete fabrication.
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    There is no concern for safety
    of women who are pregnant,
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    women who are trying to conceive,
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    or for future reproductive development.
Title:
Dr. Melanie Swift: COVID-19 vaccine urgency as delta variant continues to spread
Description:

Dr. Melanie Swift: COVID-19 vaccine urgency as delta variant continues to spread

Viruses constantly change through mutation, and new variants of viruses are expected to occur. Multiple variants of the virus that causes COVID-19 have been documented, including a highly transmittable form of COVID-19 known as the delta variant.

The delta variant, which was first seen in December 2020 in India, is spreading globally. It's more contagious than the previous strains that have been detected in the U.S. It's also causing more severe illness.

Dr. Melanie Swift, co-chair of Mayo Clinic's COVID-19 Vaccine Allocation and Distribution Work Group, says now is the time to get vaccinated for COVID-19.
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Video Language:
English
Team:
Amplifying Voices
Project:
COVID-19 Pandemic
Duration:
06:55

English subtitles

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