COVID vaccine: Experts debate best timing for booster shots for America

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With COVID-19 vaccines showing signs of waning effectiveness over time, the focus in the U.S. has shifted towards booster shots, and experts are now debating the best time to implement boosters to the general American population.

Government officials are in strong support of distributing boosters to protect the public from the Delta variant, which has been shown to cause breakthrough infections in vaccinated individuals (as well as ravaging unvaccinated individuals).

Some health experts object to widespread boosters, arguing that the U.S. should first assist the global vaccination effort since many countries have yet to administer the first doses of the vaccine.

“The more that we allow people to go unvaccinated, the more likely it becomes that the virus spreads and new mutations emerge,” Dr. Sejal Hathi, faculty at Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health, said on Yahoo Finance Live recently (video above). “And those mutations — because we live in a globalized society — will inevitably infiltrate our borders and could make this pandemic much more protracted than it already is.”

A vaccinator draws a coronavirus disease (COVID-19) vaccine at a clinic run by the Philadelphia Department of Public Health in partnership with the Black Doctors COVID-19 Consortium to encourage all eligible teenagers to get vaccinated in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, U.S., May 18, 2021. REUTERS/Hannah Beier
A vaccinator draws a coronavirus disease (COVID-19) vaccine at a clinic run by the Philadelphia Department of Public Health in partnership with the Black Doctors COVID-19 Consortium to encourage all eligible teenagers to get vaccinated in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, U.S., May 18, 2021. (REUTERS/Hannah Beier) · Hannah Beier / reuters

The World Health Organization (WHO) has publicly pleaded with the U.S. and other first-world countries to hold off on booster shots until global vaccination rates improve.

“We're planning to hand out extra life jackets to people who already have life jackets, while we're leaving other people to drown without a single life jacket,” said Dr. Michael Ryan, the emergencies chief at WHO.

Only 0.3% of shots have been administered in low-income countries, according to the New York Times, compared to 82% administered in high- and middle-income countries. Some countries in Africa have yet to even start giving out vaccinations.

While Hathi said she understands that President Biden’s top priority is to keep Americans safe and healthy, she also spoke of the larger global implications.

“I am entirely aligned with the World Health Organization here,” Hathi said, adding that “our health has never been more inextricably intertwined with the health of the millions of people across the globe who have yet to be vaccinated.”

And, Hathi added, “while the United States has committed 600 million doses abroad, that is just a drop in the bucket of the billions more doses needed to vaccinate the world.”

'If we don’t build back the Delta immunity wall... we’re going to be in for trouble'

The U.S. is already distributing booster shots to health workers and immunocompromised Americans who are most at risk of getting seriously ill from COVID-19 as the highly contagious Delta variant now accounts for more than 99% of cases in the U.S.