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Millions more Americans just became eligible for COVID-19 boosters but figuring out who’s eligible and when can be confusing — and adding to the challenge is that this time around, people can get a different type of vaccine for that extra dose.
A number of factors, including the vaccine you started with and when your last dose was, help determine when you qualify. Just like the initial shots, boosters are free and will be available at pharmacies, doctor offices and clinics.
Here are some things to know:
People who are fully vaccinated still have strong protection against hospitalization and death from COVID-19. But immunity against infection can wane over time, and the extra-contagious delta variant is spreading widely. U.S. health authorities want to shore up protection in at-risk people who were vaccinated months ago — although the priority remains getting the unvaccinated their first shots.
Yes, Pfizer boosters began last month and this week the government cleared extra doses of the Moderna and Johnson & Johnson vaccines, too. But who’s eligible — and when — differs depending on which vaccine you got first.
If you got Pfizer or Moderna shots first, you’re eligible if your last dose was at least six months ago and you’re 65 or older, or are a younger adult who has health problems, a job or living conditions that put you at higher risk of either severe illness or exposure to the coronavirus. The main goal is to give an extra layer of protection to older and medically fragile people. But factors such as jobs are included because health care workers, for example, are regularly exposed to the coronavirus and can’t come to work with even the mildest of infections.
Anyone who got a J&J shot at least two months ago is eligible — regardless of age or other factors.
A single shot of the J&J vaccine is less effective than two doses of Moderna or Pfizer vaccines, and health authorities decided it was important for the J&J recipients to achieve a similar level of protection. As for the timing, J&J simply had tested more people with a two-month booster than one at six months. For recipients of Moderna or Pfizer vaccinations, there’s not clear data that everybody needs another dose but immunity against infection in at least some people appeared to wane around six months.
Experts agree that getting a booster too soon can reduce the benefit. Timing matters because the immune system gradually builds layers of defenses over months, and letting that response mature improves the chances another, later dose will provide even stronger protection.
It means a booster that’s different than your original vaccination. That gives flexibility in situations such as nursing homes where health workers on booster visits may bring only one type. It also gives people at risk of a rare side effect linked to one kind of vaccine the option of switching to a different shot.
The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and Food and Drug Administration didn’t recommend that people switch but left open the option. Preliminary results of a government study found an extra dose of any vaccine triggered a boost of virus-fighting antibodies regardless of what shots people got to begin with. For people who originally got a J&J vaccination, the Moderna and Pfizer shots appeared to offer a stronger boost. But researchers cautioned the study was too small to say one combination was better than another, and only measured antibodies when the immune system forms additional layers of protection.
No, the CDC says people still are considered fully vaccinated starting two weeks after the second dose of the Moderna or Pfizer vaccines, or the single-dose J&J shot.
Nobody knows. Some scientists think eventually people may get regular COVID-19 shots like we get annual flu vaccinations but researchers will need to study how long protection from the current boosters lasts.
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