'I believe in it:' Many in central North Carolina sign up for booster shot

Monday, September 27, 2021
Health officials from Triangle facilities are seeing an "an impressive response" to the Pfizer booster shot rollout.

There is some eagerness with the new offering and a few people have been on the hunt.
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"I'd love to get the third shot," said Raleigh resident Yvonne Lays-Walters.

Who's eligible for Pfizer booster shots? What if I got Moderna? Everything to know about 3rd dose

She has been trying to book a booster appointment.

Lays-Walters has an underlining health condition and is ready to roll up her sleeve for the third time.



"I believe in it. To me, I go by what the scientists say," she said. "Whatever layers (of protection) they can give me, I'm going to take."

WakeMed Hospital is offering the third shot by appointment at the Cary location. The booster clinic is open every Monday, Wednesday and Thursday. Staff can administer 2,200 shots each week.

Duke Health is offering the booster at all three of its locations.

Duke officials says 500 appointments were booked between Monday and Tuesday.
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Some folks are curious if they can do a crossover. Perhaps they initially received the Moderna series, but now want the Pfizer booster.

Medical professionals from WakeMed and Duke Health say the same thing.



"We are not crossing series at this time," said WakeMed Critical Care Physician Assistant Amanda Edwards.

"I think very much stick to what you've had," said Duke Health Infectious Disease Specialist Dr. Cameron Wolfe, who says a crossover wasn't studied during the original trials. "Folks, who were initially dosed with the Johnson & Johnson or the Moderna, the data for those boosters is coming. We're seeing preliminary drafts of that. It just has to be put in front of the FDA still."

Health care workers are encouraging people to get the booster shot, as well as primary vaccines if they haven't already.

WakeMed says around 90 percent of COVID-19 patients being treated in the hospital right now are not vaccinated.

Who should get the Pfizer booster?


People who got two Pfizer shots at least six months ago and who fall into one of these groups should get the booster:

  • People 65 and older, nursing home residents and assisted living residents.
  • Others ages 50 to 64 with a long list of risky health problems including cancer, diabetes, asthma, HIV infection and heart disease. Being overweight or obese is a category that qualifies roughly 70% of people in this age group.


Who else can consider getting it?


The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention says these people may get a booster, but stopped short of a full recommendation:

  • People 18 to 49 who got their Pfizer shots at least six months ago with risky health problems can consider the booster based on their individual benefits and risks.
  • Anyone 18 to 64 with a risky job, such as health care, can consider boosters. Prisoners and people living in homeless shelters are also in this group.


What are the side effects?


Serious side effects from the first two Pfizer doses are exceedingly rare, including heart inflammation that sometimes occurs in younger men.

Weren't some people already eligible for a third dose?


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Yes, people with severely weakened immune systems were already eligible to get a third dose of Pfizer or Moderna. This group includes people taking immune-suppressing medications and those with diseases that tamp down their immune systems. They didn't have to wait six months to get a third dose.

What if I got Moderna? Can I get a Pfizer booster?


Not yet. Health officials say they don't have enough data on mix-and-match vaccinations. Moderna has applied to U.S. health regulators for its own booster, one that would be half the dose of the original shots. The Food and Drug Administration is considering that application.

What if I got J&J?


People who originally got the single-dose Johnson & Johnson also must wait. The government doesn't recommend mixing-and-matching. J&J hasn't yet filed a booster application. But earlier this week, the company released data showing two doses of its vaccine provided stronger immunity than one - whether the extra dose was given either two months or six months after the first.

The Associated Press contributed.
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