Uganda Extends Vaccination Campaign to Bars, Theaters

Uganda is scaling up coronavirus vaccinations with the arrival of another 1.6 million doses from the United States. But with many Ugandans still reluctant to get the shot, the Ministry of Health has taken the unusual move of reaching out to people at bars and entertainment venues.

This week, nurses dressed in white pitched white tents at two bars in Kampala to offer protection from the coronavirus. Some patrons, who appeared tipsy, said they had come to encourage others to get the vaccine.

The Ministry of Health says many people are avoiding hospitals and clinics, so it has partnered with beverage companies to set up the unusual vaccination sites.

Jackline Tahakanizibwa, spokesperson for Uganda Breweries Limited, said, “Many of our people out there resonate with certain places … our bars, our distributors, our patrons. We are trying to create locations that are convenient for them, where they feel comfortable going.”

Emmanuel Ainebyoona, the Ministry of Health spokesperson, says the ministry had to be creative to get past some people’s hesitancy toward vaccines, caused by misplaced fear of side effects or misinformation.

So the ministry will use “any readily accessible and available place in the city. It doesn’t matter the location,” Ainebyoona said.

Uganda has so far received more than 5 million doses of vaccines from abroad. This includes 1.64 million doses of the Pfizer vaccine and 647,000 doses of the Moderna product from the U.S. government.

Pride Onyango, a rugby player who was getting his first vaccine at the Kyadondo rugby grounds, known for its beer-loving revelers, said he became scared after someone he knew died despite getting the vaccine.

“Sometime back, we had a scenario here,” Onyango said. “One of our assistant club managers died after vaccine. We realized that he had pneumonia and typhoid. Those were the things that killed him.”

Bars are officially closed in Uganda, and in a speech Wednesday night, President Yoweri Museveni said they would remain closed until a targeted number of people have been vaccinated.

Some bars continue to operate on the sly, while some roadside locations are selling beer along with dishes of chicken and beef.

Since that is the case, the Ministry of Health is taking advantage of the opportunity to get more of the population inoculated.

Source: Voice of America

Americans React to FDA Decision on COVID-19 Booster Shots

Although the FDA announced Wednesday that it would not recommend a third shot of the Pfizer-BioNTech COVID-19 vaccine for most Americans younger than 65, Mississippi resident Jen Buckley, 50, said she and her husband decided to get their booster doses anyway.

“We received our second shot almost eight months ago,” she said, explaining their reasoning for obtaining third shots, “and I’m worried the effects of the [two-dose] vaccine might be waning. We don’t want to leave ourselves vulnerable.”

In addition to senior citizens, the U.S. Food and Drug Administration authorized booster shots for individuals aged 18 to 64 who are at high risk of severe COVID-19 or who work in high-risk places. Buckley and her husband feared they don’t meet the criteria even though she takes medication that weakens her immune system and her husband suffers from hypertension and asthma.

Exacerbating Buckley’s concern is that she lives in Jackson County, Mississippi, where only 37% of the population is fully vaccinated. Given that reality, she sees limiting booster doses as a missed opportunity.

“If people refuse to take the vaccine, then we probably have extra doses that will expire, right? Why not let people who actually want a booster get one?” she asked.

Dr. Anthony Fauci, chief medical adviser to President Joe Biden, said he would support a third dose for all Americans if future data show it is effective. Sufficient data don’t yet exist in the United States, but research from Israel suggests that while the coronavirus vaccine’s effectiveness diminishes over time, a third shot of the Pfizer-BioNTech vaccine can restore protection from infection to 95%.

Buckley said she didn’t see the point in waiting while vaccine doses were available now.

“I have two grandchildren who can’t get vaccinated, one of whom is immunocompromised,” she said. “We have a duty to do whatever it takes to protect those children, and I think this can help.”

Seeking out boosters

Kerry Compton is a pharmacist at Patio Drugs in Metairie, Louisiana, just outside New Orleans. He reported an uptick in individuals seeking booster shots last month after U.S. health officials announced those with compromised immune systems were eligible. His feeling, he said, is that most who reached out are the same proactive people who booked their vaccine appointments as soon as initial doses became available earlier in the year.

“I think some people are more concerned about the virus than others,” he said, “and I also think there’s some confusion about who’s eligible for a third dose and who isn’t.”

Compton blames the confusion on inconsistent messaging by U.S. officials. Before booster doses were approved for individuals with compromised immune systems, Biden said he expected booster shots would be available to the general public beginning September 20. The FDA’s recent announcement will make that impossible, at least for now.

“It’s a lot for the public to keep track of,” Compton said, “and — no judgment levied by me — but there might be some individuals who are getting their third dose even though they don’t qualify.”

Getting that booster, even among the ineligible, isn’t as hard as one might think. In Louisiana, for example, those receiving boosters must simply each complete an affidavit explaining why they are eligible. “But we weren’t instructed to verify that information, and we couldn’t even if we were,” Compton said. “We’re not the vaccine police. We simply follow the guidelines passed down to us.”

New Orleanian Lauren Castorena said that even though she doesn’t qualify for the booster, she planned on requesting one soon when she gets her flu shot. “And if I’m turned down,” she said, “I’ll talk to my doctor about giving me a note because of a recent surgery I had, or I’ll call local pharmacies to try to get a dose nearing its expiration date. Having a booster will help me feel more safe as I go about enjoying my life, so why not get one?”

To boost or not to boost

Kyle Carson has been watching closely as discussions about boosters have progressed. He’s happy the FDA has approved boosters for some portions of the population, but asked, “If it’s necessary for some groups to receive a booster, why wouldn’t it be advantageous for others as well?”

Before this week’s FDA announcement, Carson said he planned to seek out a third dose. Now, however, he said that despite his concern about the delta variant, he would wait for the FDA to authorize shots for the general public.

Rachel Sonn feels much the same. “I’m fairly confident in my own immune system and I’m fully vaccinated,” she said, “but if it takes too long for the FDA to approve a booster for the rest of us, I have no moral issue lying that I have an underlying condition or that I smoke or something.”

For some, the availability of boosters in the U.S. brings up a more global concern. Despite the fact that more than 3.2 billion COVID-19 vaccine doses had been administered around the world as of July 4, only 1% of individuals in low-income countries had received even a single dose, according to the website One World in Data. Experts have suggested, despite promises of more vaccine donations by richer nations like the United States, most residents of poorer countries will need to wait until 2023 to get vaccinated.

“I won’t get one until they’re allowed for me,” said Chance Simoncelli, a bartender in New Orleans. “Besides not wanting to be greedy, the more countries lacking vaccines, the more variants we’ll all have to deal with in the future.”

Others don’t see how delaying a booster shot would make a difference on a global scale.

“It makes me feel terrible because it is terrible,” Sonn said, “but me opting out of something that’s available as a citizen of the U.S. isn’t going to change that [global vaccine shortages].”

As younger Americans grapple with how to proceed, many who are 65 or older are relieved the FDA has approved a third dose for them.

“At my age, it’s frightening to become ill,” said Mary Chaput, 66. “The time I have left is shortening, frankly, and I feel robbed by those who aren’t vaccinated and are letting the virus mutate. Protection from this booster is the best way I have to reclaim a sense of normalcy.”

Source: Voice of America

Australia Plans to Reopen International Borders by Christmas

After more than 18 months of COVID-19 isolation, Australia is preparing to reopen its international borders by Christmas “at the latest.” Trade, Tourism and Investment Minister Dan Tehan said some of the world’s toughest coronavirus travel restrictions would be relaxed when 80% of Australians are fully vaccinated. From Sydney, Phil Mercer reports.

Australia has some of the world’s toughest coronavirus travel restrictions. Since March 2020, entry has been banned for most foreign nationals, while quotas have been put on returning citizens and permanent residents, who face two weeks’ mandatory hotel quarantine when they arrive.

Australians wanting to leave the country need government permission under strict rules implemented in an effort to curb the spread of COVID-19.

Under a national reopening plan, Australians would be allowed to freely travel overseas again once 80% of people over 16 have been fully vaccinated. Just under half of the population has received two doses of a vaccine currently. The government also plans to allow returning Australians who have received approved vaccines — AstraZeneca, Pfizer, Moderna and Johnson & Johnson — to quarantine at home.

Australia plans to begin a trial of vaccine passports to facilitate travel to various countries including the United States, Britain, Singapore and Japan. The digital documents, which would indicate that the holder has been fully inoculated, would be linked to so-called QR Codes, or type of bar code on a phone app. When scanned they would show a copy of a passenger’s passport and their vaccination status.

Trade, Tourism and Investment Minister Dan Tehan hopes to have the system ready by late December.

“We continue to do all that preparatory work so that when those international borders open, and as I said in my speech, hopefully at the latest by Christmas, that Australians will be able to travel with a QR code linked to their passport, which will be able to show a proof of vaccination,” said Tehan.

Fully immunized foreigners would also be allowed to travel to Australia if they can prove their COVID-19 vaccination status. As an alternative to mandatory hotel quarantine, international travelers could self-isolate with family, friends or at their holiday accommodation.

Australia’s strict COVID-19 travel regulations have left many citizens and permanent residents stranded overseas. More than 44,000 Australians have registered to come home with the Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade.

Many airlines, including Singapore airlines, recently cut commercial flights to Australia because of cuts to the number of Australians allowed home each week.

Australia is the only democratic country to refuse entry to its citizens due to capacity constraints in the hotel quarantine system and impose restrictions on those wanting to leave the country.

Australia has recorded about 90,000 coronavirus infections and 1,186 fatalities since the pandemic began.

Source: Voice of America