Vaccine policy ‘woke up’ is killing cancer patients

While the COVID-19 vaccines are being launched, an extremely vulnerable group is being overlooked – millions of cancer patients.

Doctors across the country are warning that many state governments and the federal advisory committee charged with prioritizing who is vaccinated must move cancer patients to the front of the line, right after nursing home residents and frontline health professionals.

At the moment, they are considered lowest priority than “essential workers,” such as firefighters, mass transit workers, and possibly even supermarket workers.

However, cancer patients are being wiped out by COVID-19.

New Dice 360 US hospitals show that cancer patients are more at risk of contracting COVID than the rest of the population.

Once infected, they are almost twice as likely to require hospitalization.

Worse, they are three times more likely to die than other hospitalized patients with COVID, according to the new findings from the journal JAMA Oncology.

New York pulmonologist Daniel Libby explains that cancer patients are likely to be infected frequently because they tend to visit doctors’ offices.

In addition, their “defenses are low”, which means that their immune systems are weaker.

This week, the COVID Lung Cancer Consortium – a group of oncologists – asks the feds to reexamine priorities and pay “specific attention to this vulnerable population”.

Governor Cuomo must do the same. Last week, Cuomo launched the “Vaccine Equality Task Force”, including immigrant advocates, civil rights leaders, tenant associations, labor groups and churches, many of whom are political governors of the governor. But no cancer organization made the list.

“We are now talking about who will be vaccinated, and let me be clear, there is no policy in the vaccination process, “says Cuomo. It is hard to believe, Governor, considering who is on the task force and who is missing.

In New York and most states, cancer patients are being ignored. The American Society of Clinical Oncology and The American Cancer Society urged the federal advisory committee to make vaccination of cancer patients a priority, but the committee’s recommendation, announced on December 20, prioritized essential workers and people aged 75 and over to be next in line.

This means that in most states, which are following the committee’s recommendations, cancer patients will have to wait more months.

Fred Hirsch, a renowned lung cancer specialist at Mount Sinai Medical Center, is

investigating whether the weakened immune system of cancer patients will make them produce less antibodies when vaccinated. They may need more vaccines – three injections or even four, instead of two shots currently prescribed for Pfizer and Moderna vaccines. One more reason to start.

Meanwhile, in New York, politically connected unions representing transit workers and supermarket workers are calling state officials and pushing to be considered “essential workers”. (See The New York Times article dated December 20, 2020).

But cancer doctors complain that they don’t know who to call or when to get the vaccines.

The same goes for doctors who treat patients with other illnesses.

A woman from Westchester told me that she is concerned about her husband. He is 71, has type one diabetes and two cardiac stents, and he travels to New York City on Metro North. Their doctors do not know when they will receive the vaccines. She says, “I don’t believe that 20-year-old supermarket workers will make it before him.”

Both the federal vaccine committee and Cuomo advocate prioritizing “essential” workers because that will mean vaccinating more minorities. Cuomo says that “Black, Hispanic, Asian and low-income communities paid the highest price during COVID-19. “This is a politically convenient exaggeration.

Minorities were only slightly more affected by COVI-19 than other people, according to the data. In the state of New York, excluding New York City, Hispanics make up 12% of the population and 12% of COVID-19 deaths, while blacks represent 9% of the population and 15% of deaths.

Similarly, in New York City, black and Hispanic minorities suffered more fatalities proportionality than whites, but only by a few percentage points. Asians had fewer deaths (7%) than their share of 14% of the population.

The truth is that COVID-19 is an equal opportunity killer. He’s slaughtering cancer patients, no matter what their skin color, and politicians are zipping about it.

Betsy McCaughey, Ph.D., is Chair of the Committee to Reduce Infection Deaths. Read more about Betsy McCaughey’s reports – here now.

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