COVID 19 Tech

Health officials rail against Pfizer’s push for COVID boosters—for many reasons

Rows of small glass vials.

Enlarge / Vials of undiluted Pfizer COVID-19 vaccine. (credit: Getty | BRENDAN SMIALOWSKI )

Pfizer has planned to privately brief US health officials on its case for COVID-19 booster shots, but US and global public health officials have not hesitated to publicly blast the idea, calling booster shots unnecessary at this time and unethical in the face of vast inequity in the global vaccine supply.

Pfizer and the vaccine partner, BioNTech, made headlines last Thursday with the announcement that it would seek authorization from the Food and Drug Administration in coming weeks for a booster shot to their two-shot regimen. The companies suggest that a third shot would be necessary between six and 12 months after the second dose. During this window, immunity to the pandemic coronavirus declines, the companies say, particularly in the particular elderly. A third shot, they say, can boost antibody levels five to 10 times what is seen after the first two.

But health officials were quick to push back on typically the booster talk last week, and this responses have only grown more intense in the days since.

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