Search

CDC: 10% of US Adult Population Fully Vaccinated for Coronavirus - msnNOW

Approximately 10% of the adult population in the U.S. has received both coronavirus vaccine doses, according to data from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

The Associated Press © The Associated Press The Associated Press

According to the CDC vaccine tracker, over 96 million doses have been delivered across the country and nearly 77 million administered. Of adults aged 18 or older, nearly 20% – over 50 million people – have received one or more doses.

The U.S. saw record levels of daily vaccinations over the weekend, according to Jeffrey Zients, the coordinator of the White House coronavirus response team. The seven-day average of doses administered has recovered to levels seen before winter weather disruptions.

It's a milestone that comes as the decline of key coronavirus metrics appears to be stalling, which the CDC director has said could be due to the spread of more contagious variants. The agency is urging states to keep mitigation measures in place.

Gallery: Vaccination Could Cut Transmission, National Study Shows (24/7 Tempo)

a person standing in front of a refrigerator: Among the biggest questions about the global vaccination process is whether vaccines protect both those who have received doses, and those who come in contact with them after the vaccination process is done. The Pfizer and Moderna vaccines have been described as 94% effective, in terms of protecting those who have had two doses, usually given three to four weeks apart.  However, if someone who has been inoculated carries the disease, but has no symptoms, can they spread it to others? A new major study, conducted in Israel, indicates that people who are vaccinated are unlikely to spread COVID-19.  The solution to the puzzle is very important. If vaccinations protect both those who are inoculated and many people they come into contact with, both new cases, and potentially, deaths, should fall. These are the states where the most people are vaccinated. The U.S. continues to be the hardest hit nation in the world, although the rate at which the disease is growing has dropped. Nevertheless, over 500,000 people have died in America, the largest total in the world, and about 20% of the global numbers. Confirmed cases in the U.S. now approach 30 million, about 25% of the global numbers.  And, the U.S. continues to be threatened by three new variants of the disease from the U.K., South Africa, and Brazil. The U.K. version, which hit that nation very hard, spreads more quickly than the one that has infected the U.S. population since January 2020. Coupled with the fact that vaccination rates in American are still low, there is ongoing anxiety about another rise in the rate of infections. 

"Please hear me clearly: At this level of cases with variants spreading, we stand to completely lose the hard-earned ground we have gained," CDC Director Rochelle Walensky said during a White House coronavirus briefing Monday.

The agency previously predicted that the variant first found in the U.K. would become the dominant strain circulating in the U.S. this month. Just last week, new variants were documented in California and New York.

The development also comes on the heels of a third coronavirus vaccine gaining regulatory approval in the U.S. The Biden administration expects nearly 4 million doses of the single-dose vaccine from Johnson & Johnson to be distributed this week.

The CDC defines a fully vaccinated person as someone who has waited two weeks after their last dose of the vaccine. Leading infectious disease expert Anthony Fauci last week said the agency would soon issue guidance on what activities fully vaccinated individuals can do.

"I believe you're going to be hearing more of the recommendations of how you can relax the stringency of some of the things, particularly when you're dealing with something like your own personal family when people have been vaccinated," Fauci told CNN.

The CDC has already updated some guidance for fully vaccinated individuals, saying they do not need to quarantine after exposure to an infected individual.

Copyright 2021 U.S. News & World Report

Continue Reading

Let's block ads! (Why?)

Article From & Read More ( CDC: 10% of US Adult Population Fully Vaccinated for Coronavirus - msnNOW )
https://ift.tt/3b8fH3Y
Health

Bagikan Berita Ini

0 Response to "CDC: 10% of US Adult Population Fully Vaccinated for Coronavirus - msnNOW"

Post a Comment

Powered by Blogger.