Moderna COVID-19 vaccine lasts at least 6 months, study finds
Moderna's COVID-19 vaccine also seemed to protect against the U.K. variant
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New research suggests the protection the Moderna vaccine gives against COVID-19 lasts for at least six months.
The report Tuesday in the New England Journal of Medicine echoes what Pfizer said last week about its vaccine, which works in a similar way.
Both reports were based on follow-up tests in dozens of people who received the shots during studies that led to the vaccines’ use. Those studies were done before troubling new variants, or versions of the coronavirus, had emerged and started to spread.
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BIDEN EXPECTED TO MOVE UP DEADLINE FOR ADULTS TO BE ELIGIBLE FOR VACCINES
A separate report in the medical journal adds to concern about the variants. Scientists measured antibodies that can block the virus in 50 people who had been given the Sinopharm or Sinovac vaccines that were developed in China. Many showed total or partial loss of effectiveness against a virus variant first detected in South Africa.
CDC: THERE'S A 1 IN 1,000 CHANCE OF GETTING COVID-19 FROM SURFACES
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The vaccines still seemed to protect against a variant first found in the United Kingdom that is now rapidly spreading in the United States and elsewhere.
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Pfizer and Moderna have said they are working to update their vaccines, or possibly design a booster shot, in case they’re needed against variants.