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NYC Expected to Roll Out Details on Second Booster for COVID-19 Vaccines

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New York City health officials are expected to release guidelines on Wednesday for how and where to get a second booster shot of the COVID-19 vaccine, following FDA and CDC approval for those over the age of 50.

The FDA authorized the added booster on Tuesday for those at least four months from their last booster shot. The CDC endorse it as an option, without quite fully recommending that people go get it immediately.

Nonetheless, demand popped up in the city immediately, especially with infection trends turning the wrong way yet again.

New cases and positivity rates are rising in New York City — nowhere near where they were three months ago, but still, on the rise.

COVID-19 in NYC

Transmission rates are rising, especially in Manhattan, up 40% in just the last week and nearly 100% in two weeks.

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In Tribeca, the positivity rate is now over 9%, and multiple other neighborhoods in the city are nearing 7%. In absolute terms, though, the number of infections is still a tiny fraction of what it was two or three months ago.

The BA.2 variant, sometimes called “stealth omicron,” has now become dominant in the United States, fueling the rise in cases.

Ultimately, officials say BA.2’s dominance was expected and it’s expected that some other COVID variant will take its turn, too. That doesn’t necessarily exacerbate community risk. In the city, the alert level is still “low.” 

BA.2 symptoms are similar to those experienced by people who contract other COVID strains, including fever or chills, runny nose and fatigue, among others.

But much remains unknown about the subvariant to date.

While the World Health Organization has said BA.2 is “inherently more transmissible” than the strain that came before it, there is no evidence at this point to indicate it is more vaccine-resistant or linked to more severe infections, which are far more critical benchmarks to city leaders. They’re not in “alarmist” mode.

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Source: NBC New York

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