Posted on 12/27/21
| News Source: Washington Post
An Israeli hospital on Monday began administering fourth coronavirus vaccine doses to a test group of health-care workers, in what it’s calling the world’s first trial of its kind, as the country weighs approval for a wider campaign for at-risk Israelis in efforts to stem the rapid spike in infections by the omicron variant.
The trial at Sheba Medical Center in central Israel involves 150 medical workers who received third doses before Aug. 20 and have antibody counts below 700, signifying low protection, according to a statement from the hospital. The trial is being carried out in conjunction with Israel’s Health Ministry.
“It’s one jab in the shoulder, but one giant leap for mankind,” said Jacob Levee, director of the hospital’s heart transplant unit and the first recipient of the fourth vaccine at Sheba.
He said that he wanted to get vaccinated to protect his heart transplant patients, whose “immunity following the third dose has diminished significantly, so they’re exposed,” according to research done at Sheba, he said.
On Tuesday, Israeli Prime Minister Naftali Bennett announced that Israel would be the first in the world to offer fourth Pfizer-BioNTech vaccine doses to citizens over the age of 60, people with compromised immune systems and health-care workers. He called on health-care facilities across the country to prepare to roll out the campaign, but the decision has not yet been approved by Health Ministry Director Nahman Ash.
The Sheba study will produce initial results within the coming days and weeks, which may help steer the next steps in the fourth-dose immunization campaign, said its head researcher, Gili Regev Yochai.
“This research is very important because then we will have initial data about the safety,” said Regev Yochai.
The advisory board to Israel’s coronavirus cabinet last week concluded that the potential benefits of a fourth vaccine dose far outweighed its risks, pointing to early signs that immunity has waned since the first Israelis received their third shot last summer. They warned that, with the omicron variant spreading rapidly throughout the country and the globe, they could not afford to wait.
“We can’t close our eyes and think happy thoughts,” Health Minister Nitzan Horowtiz said in an interview with the public broadcaster Kan on Monday, pointing to the uptick in infection and serious illness, mostly among the unvaccinated, caused by omicron. “We have to prepare.”
According to data by the Israeli Health Ministry, 1,760 people tested positive on Sunday for the coronavirus, accounting for almost 2% of all tests performed. There are 87 people hospitalized in serious condition, including 38 on ventilators.
Early data from South Africa, where the omicron variant first surged and has in recent days been receding, suggests that omicron may cause 80% fewer hospitalizations and instances of severe symptoms than the delta and other previous variants.
But the head of the Africa Centers for Disease Control and Prevention warned that this might not be the case in all other countries.
“Let’s be careful not to extrapolate what we [are] seeing in South Africa across the continent or across the world,” said Africa CDC director John Nkengasong on Thursday.
On Friday, the United Kingdom reported 122,186 cases, a record high. 1 in 20 – which has perhaps grown to as many as 1 in 10 people – are believed to be carrying the virus in London, according to the Office for National Statistics.
Israeli health experts have said that even if omicron cases are milder than in previous waves, the sheer number of infected people could overwhelm hospitals.
“In the past ten days the number of people who have tested positive for the omicron variant rose from 20 a day to 450. That is more than a twenty-fold rise within ten days,” Eran Segal, a professor at the Weitzmann Institute of Science and consultant to the Israeli coronavirus cabinet, said in an interview on Sunday with the Israeli news site Ynet. “I anticipate that within a week we’ll see thousands of people testing positive for Omicron, and within two weeks we may cross the record high since the beginning of the pandemic-around 10,000 people testing positive daily.”