20.04.2024

Why now is the right time to get COVID-19 vaccines and boosters

That’s especially true as winter weather in many parts of the country keeps more people indoors, where it’s easier for the virus to spread. Like other health systems, 26-hospital Advocate Aurora has seen COVID-19 hospitalizations increase in recent weeks.

With COVID-19 hospital admissions on the rise nationwide and a new strain of the virus circulating, medical professionals say the importance of getting vaccinated and boosted is clear.

“The data shows that vaccination remains critically important and getting your booster should be a priority for those who have completed their initial series,” said Dr. Robert Citronberg, Advocate Aurora Health’s executive medical director of Infectious Disease and Prevention.

Of roughly 430 patients admitted due to COVID-19 as of Nov. 30, 92% were unvaccinated, partially vaccinated or due for a booster shot. Meanwhile, of the 8% that were fully vaccinated, many were immunocompromised and/or over the age of 65.

“Can you get COVID if you’ve been vaccinated? Yes. But your chances of getting severely ill or dying from it are extremely low,” Citronberg said.

Why now is the right time to get COVID-19 vaccines and boosters

Additionally, current COVID-19 vaccines are expected to protect against severe illness, hospitalizations and deaths related to Omicron, the latest virus variant, which has been detected in Illinois, Wisconsin and other states.

“The booster will help us a great deal to reduce the number of patients that become ill and crowd hospitals and emergency rooms,” said Dr. Raul Mendoza-Ayala, an Advocate Aurora pulmonologist in Green Bay, Wisconsin. “We’re all fatigued from the pandemic and we have to start living our lives, but we need to do it in a very smart way.”

Covid: UK reports highest weekly number of new cases since January

The UK has reported its highest number of weekly Covid-19 cases since January, new figures show.

A total of 336,893 new infections were recorded in the past seven days, including 45,691 on Tuesday, government data revealed.

This is the highest number for a seven-day period since the week to 16 January, when 339,956 were reported.

Weekly cases during the second wave of the virus peaked at 417,620, for the seven days to 9 January.

The latest data also showed a further 180 people had died within 28 days of testing positive for Covid.

Separate figures published by the Office for National Statistics show there have now been 171,000 deaths registered in the UK where Covid-19 was mentioned on the death certificate.

The data followed a warning from Boris Johnson that the omicron variant appeared to be “more transmissible” than delta.

The prime minister updated the cabinet on the latest situation on Tuesday morning, as a scientist warned cases of the omicron variant in the UK are soon expected to be higher than in some African countries placed on the travel red list.

Prof Spector, professor of genetic epidemiology at King’s College London, told BBC Breakfast there was “very little point” in having travel restrictions if case numbers exceeded those in red list countries.

A total of 437 cases of omicron had been confirmed across the UK as of Tuesday, including 333 in England, 99 in Scotland and five in Wales.

Dr Jeffrey Barrett, director of the Covid-19 genomics initiative at the Wellcome Sanger Institute, said he thought omicron would take over from Delta in the UK as the dominant variant of coronavirus “within a matter of weeks”.

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