A mother with her two daughters wearing masks to guard against spreading COVID-19 on a walk, May 9, 2020 in Salerno, Italy.Dana Goldman, David Conti, and Matthew E. Kahn are university professors and experts who have spent decades researching epidemiology and health economics.
Although a COVID-19 vaccine is unlikely to become widely available for some time, when it does, they say that it should be given first to 'superspreaders,' aka young, school-aged children. They explain that this strategy will best way protect the most vulnerable because it will curb the spread of new infections. Once safe and effective COVID-19 vaccines are available, tough choices will need to be made about who gets the first shots.
A committee of the National Academies of Sciences, Engineering, and Medicine — at the behest of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and National Institutes of Health — has proposed anThey recommend first responders and health care workers take top priority. Older adults in congregate living situations would also be part of a first vaccination phase, according to the plan.
We are faculty at Johns Hopkins University and the University of Southern California who have spent decades studying
Start giving it to anyone. Don't care who will be the first, just begin the whole thing already.
Just because they become immune, doesn’t mean they can’t spread it to high risk people. This doesn’t make a lot of sense to me.
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