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1.
Florida Public Health Review ; 19(11), 2022.
Article in English | GIM | ID: covidwho-2270676

ABSTRACT

COVID-19 transmission rates among vaccinated persons attending large gatherings have not been reported widely. This research was intended to track the potential incidence of COVID-19 among physicians and their families who attended a large in-person gathering in Atlanta in August 2021. After the successful conclusion of a large-scale indoor gathering, we encouraged all attendees to self-report the incidence of COVID-19 illness. In addition, an online questionnaire was disseminated to collect basic information about age, gender, place of residence, vaccination status including the number of doses, type, and date of each dose as well as behavioral and convention factors that would have contributed to the infection rates. Information about current COVID-19 infection status, symptoms, and severity were also collected. We also contacted the attendees through telephone to gather pending information about their COVID-19 status, after attending the meeting. Most attendees were physicians, employees in the healthcare industry or family members of healthcare professionals. Among the 520 participants of the meeting, no COVID-19 illness was reported up to six weeks after attending the convention. As a sub-group analysis, we obtained demographic data from 143 attendees, through an online survey. Among the survey respondents, 43% were over the age of 60 years, 10% over the age of 70 years, 29% and 14% each between 31-45 years and 12-30 years. 53% were women. Almost 99% had received both doses of COVID-19 mRNA vaccine in January and February of 2021. Public health measures including the use of indoor masks, social distancing, and personal hygiene were followed by 76%. None of the convention attendees who responded had any symptoms or tested positive for COVID-19 infection six weeks after leaving the convention. None reported being diagnosed with COVID-19 for at least 30 days before attending the convention. This report confirms the efficacy of COVID-19 mRNA vaccines against protection from COVID-19 illness among participants of large scale indoor gatherings. Our findings support the notion that large-scale events can be successfully conducted among fully vaccinated persons who follow public health guidelines.

2.
Journal of the Indian Medical Association ; 120(6):29-33, 2022.
Article in English | GIM | ID: covidwho-2279164

ABSTRACT

Background and Aim: While India's vaccination drive against COVID-19 continues to progress, the number of Breakthrough Infections are also revealing an uptick due to Community spread of COVID-19. There is a dearth of data quantifying the extent of breakthrough infections, defined as infections following two doses of vaccine. We aimed to understand the occurrence of Breakthrough Infections among the public in the City of Thrissur, Kerala, India, during the recent surge of COVID-19 in Kerala. Methods: Patients visiting the Internal Medicine Outpatient Department (OPD) in a private hospital in the City of Thrissur in Kerala, India were selected for the study. Subjects above the age of 18 years presenting to the OPD between August 01, 2021 and September 30, 2021 were surveyed through a short interview on the COVID-19 infection history, symptoms, severity and vaccination status. Results: Of the 56 participants who tested positive for COVID-19, 38 had received both doses of vaccine and all had received their first dose of vaccine. 4 patients had no symptoms, 37 patients reported mild symptoms and nine patients reported moderate to severe symptoms. Conclusion: Our study demonstrates the occurrence and describes the epidemiology of COVID-19 breakthrough infections in a City from the Indian State of Kerala in a real-world setting. We conclude the occurrence of Symptomatic Breakthrough Infections of COVID-19 in patients who had received two doses of the vaccine were mild in the majority of the patients (87%). Further research is required to understand the mechanisms behind these Breakthrough infections.

3.
Journal of Education and Health Promotion ; 11(1):218, 2022.
Article in English | Scopus | ID: covidwho-2024741

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Vaccine hesitancy leads to an increase in morbidity, mortality, and health-care burden. Reasons for vaccine hesitancy include anti-vax group statements, misinformation about vaccine side effects, speed of vaccine development, and general disbelief in the existence of viruses like COVID-19. Medical students are future physicians and are key influencers in the uptake of vaccines. Hence, investigating vaccine hesitancy in this population can help to overcome any barrier in vaccine acceptance. METHODS: In this paper, we review five articles on COVID-19 vaccine hesitancy in medical students and consider potential future research. All published papers relevant to the topic were obtained through extensive search using major databases. Inclusion criteria included studies that specifically investigated COVID-19 vaccine hesitancy in medical students published between 2020 and 2021. Exclusion criteria included studies that investigated vaccine hesitancy in health-care professionals, allied health, and viruses apart from COVID-19. A total of 10 studies were found from our search. RESULTS: Based on our exclusion criteria, only five studies were included in our review. The sample size ranged from 168 to 2133 medical students. The percentage of vaccine hesitancy in medical students ranged from 10.6 to 65.1%. Reasons for vaccine hesitancy included concern about serious side effects, vaccine efficacy, misinformation and insufficient information, disbelief in public health experts, financial costs, and belief that they had acquired immunity. CONCLUSION: These results suggest that vaccine hesitancy is an important cause of the incidence and prevalence of COVID-19 cases. Identifying the barriers of vaccine hesitancy in prospective physicians can help increase vaccination uptake in the general public. Further research is necessary to identify the root cause of these barriers. © Shahad A. Hafez et al., 2022;Published by Mary Ann Liebert, Inc. 2022.

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