Health & Fitness
J&J Vaccine: Panel Recommends Lifting Pause In VA, Nationally
A key federal committee recommended the CDC lift the pause of the Johnson & Johnson single-dose COVID-19 vaccine in Virginia and nationally.
VIRGINIA — A federal committee voted Friday to recommend that the FDA and CDC lift the pause on the Johnson & Johnson single-dose coronavirus vaccine that officials in Virginia had put on hold after rare cases of blood clots emerged in some people who had taken the vaccine.
Federal health officials still have to formally adopt the recommendation.
At its meeting Friday, the Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices reported that there had been nine new confirmed cases of the rare blood clots, bringing the total to 15. The 15 cases were reported out of nearly 8 million vaccine doses given as of April 21, the committee reported. All the cases were in women and two of the cases were in women older than 50 while the rest were in women between the ages of 18-48.
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At the time the pause was recommended, the FDA and CDC said in a joint statement that there were six reported cases of the rare and severe type of blood clot all in women between the ages of 18-48. At least 6.8 million people had received the single-dose vaccine when those numbers were reported.
The CDC is also investigating two deaths as part of its investigation into the vaccine, according to health officials in Virginia and Oregon.
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The committee voted 10-4, with one abstention, to recommend lifting the pause and allow the vaccine to be used under its emergency use authorization in those 18 and older and adding a warning label about the rare blood clots. The vote came 10 days after the initial pause.
Health officials in Virginia stopped administering the vaccine April 13 after the recommendation from federal officials. About 72,000 doses of the vaccine were shipped to the state for the week of April 12.
SEE ALSO: More Than Half Of VA Adults Have Received At Least 1 Vaccine Dose
To date, officials in Virginia have administered 5,667,951 doses of the vaccine, while 2,310,843 Virginians, or 27.1 percent of the state's population, have been fully vaccinated.
As of Friday, 3,555,281 people, or 41.7 percent of the state's population, have received at least their first dose of the vaccine. The seven-day average on Friday was 75,984 doses administered in Virginia.
The Johnson & Johnson vaccine was the third vaccine approved for emergency use in the U.S. against COVID-19. The vaccine uses an inactivated adenovirus to deliver instructions to cells and mount an immune response against COVID-19. In clinical trials, the vaccine was found to have an efficacy of 66.3 percent and people had the most protection from the shot two weeks after getting vaccinated. According to the CDC, the vaccine had a high efficacy in preventing people from being hospitalized and dying.
The vaccine has an advantage as it requires just a single dose and can be stored at normal temperatures unlike like the Moderna and Pfizer vaccines. Because of its advantages, the vaccine is a key part of state efforts to reach rural and other hard to reach populations.
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