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Friday, November 22, 2024

COVID-19 vaccine has been approved and soon to be available to Michigan frontline workers

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The COVID-19 vaccine will require two doses within about one month of each other. | Shutterstock

The COVID-19 vaccine will require two doses within about one month of each other. | Shutterstock

A COVID-19 vaccine has been advanced to the level of approval by an advisory committee to the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA), according to Michigan Capitol Confidential.

The Pfizer vaccine was given approval this week, which will result in 250,000 doses being delivered from Pfizer and Moderna to the state of Michigan. There are concerns, however, over the demand for the vaccine, which far outnumbers the supply, as over 10,000 Michigan residents have died from the virus and almost 438,000 have been infected, according to Michigan.gov.

The vaccine was voted 17-4 to be recommended by the members of an FDA advisory committee, but given the accelerated time line in which the vaccine was developed, questions are being raised over the risks to those who would receive the vaccine. 

One consumer advocate for drug safety, Kim Witczak, said that the long- and short-term effects of the vaccine are unknown, given that only two months’ of data was submitted. 

Individuals on the other side of the argument, however, point to the 1.5 million deaths globally, claiming that the risks of adverse effects of the vaccine are far outweighed by its potential to save lives. 

While the state of Michigan has reported, through the Department of Health and Human Services, that it will receive 84,825 doses of the vaccine from Pfizer and 173,600 doses of the vaccine from Moderna, the exact details of when the vaccine will be available are unknown. Additionally, it is possible that the estimates of the number of vaccines available may differ. 

Michigan is home to 45 local health departments, all of which will jump in and do their part to distribute the vaccine.

Ingham County Health Department reported that they will use the systems that were set up with the H1N1 pandemic in 2009 to ensure that the delivery of vaccines is handled in an expedited and professional manner.

Pfizer will be supplying over 33 million doses in the U.S. by the end of the year. Distribution will begin as soon as the final approval is granted by the FDA, Pfizer officials told Bridge Michigan.

A person's risk category will determine the speed with which the vaccine will be available. Health care workers and the most vulnerable -- including elderly, homeless, rural community dwellers and other marginalized individuals -- will be prioritized in getting the vaccine as soon as possible.

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