Catholics can get the Johnson & Johnson vaccine, despite its link to cells from an aborted fetus, if that’s all that’s available, Vatican says.
Author: Elizabeth Weise, USA TODAY
America could soon be swimming in COVID-19 vaccine. The shift from scarcity to surplus could bring its own problems.
The abundance of vaccine will become a stagnating surplus that threatens to undermine the nation’s ability to move beyond the pandemic, experts say.
Want to hug again? ‘It’s up to you’: New ad campaign gets right to the point on COVID-19 vaccines
The ads are aimed at the 40% of Americans who haven’t made up their minds about getting vaccinated against COVID-19.
‘Don’t waste vaccine!’ After early confusion, experts say it’s always better to use leftover shots than toss them.
After early confusion, protocols for making sure leftover doses of COVID vaccine are used are largely in place. Experts say not to waste a shot.
‘Somewhere in there, the vaccine got overpromised’: How the COVID-19 vaccination process turned chaotic and confusing
A lack of transparency, coupled with a short supply, has complicated America’s COVID-19 vaccination efforts. Are things getting better now?
Pfizer expects to cut COVID-19 vaccine production time by close to 50% as production ramps up, efficiencies increase
As the nation revs up its coronavirus vaccination programs, the increase could help relieve bottlenecks caused by vaccine shortages.
Getting COVID-19 vaccine into the arms of Americans is off to a slow start; why the holdup?
More than 12.4 million doses of coronavirus vaccine have shipped to U.S. states but just over 2.5 million people received shots as of Wednesday.
Federal education campaign to emphasize power of COVID-19 vaccine set to launch in January
A long-delayed federal education campaign aimed at encouraging Americans to take the COVID-19 vaccine is set to launch in January.
Police, firefighters, teachers proposed in next phase of COVID-19 vaccine allocation
A CDC panel is weighing who would follow front-line health care workers and people in long-term care facilities in receiving COVID-19 vaccines.
States were left scrambling after finding out they’d get 20-40% less vaccine than promised. We now know why.
After days of confusion, the source of the problem was finally clarified Friday night: States were given estimates based on vaccine doses produced, not those that had been OK’d.