An FAQ that deserves an answer:

Do the COVID-19 vaccines contain aborted fetal cells?

A: NO!!! And the Catholic Church and other religious leaders & faiths have weighed in and said if recommended by your provider, you should get the vaccine. See🧵 and links below for more...
The mRNA #COVID19 vaccines from Pfizer & Moderna don’t
use any fetal cell cultures for manufacture.

Early in the development of mRNA vaccine technology, fetal cells were used for “proof of concept” (ie to prove a cell could take up mRNA and produce the SARS-CoV-2 spike protein).
The Pfizer and Moderna vaccines were found to be ethically uncontroversial by the pro-life policy organization the Charlotte Lozier Institute, and the Catholic Health Association of the United States...

health.nd.gov/sites/www/file…
In response to requests for guidance on the use of vaccines which, “in the course of research employed cell lines from two abortions occurring in the last century,” the Vatican and Pope have said, current COVID-19 vaccines are morally acceptable:

catholicnews.com/vatican-withou…
This topic is incredibly important within faith communities, and everyone deserves to feel like they made a fully informed decision. Those with concerns should weigh risks and benefits of #COVID19 vaccines with their doctor and have a personal conversation with a faith leader!
Nebraska Med has a deeper dive here:

nebraskamed.com/COVID/you-aske…

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More from @JeromeAdamsMD

24 Jan
We’re in a race against #covid19.

It’s our mitigation & vaccination vs viral proliferation & mutation.

We’re all tired, but we mustn’t stop running, and can’t make it to the finish line alone- if one of us drops the baton, we all lose...

So run all the way to the tape!🙏🏽
On mitigation: new federal mask policy will help change culture (👍🏽), but have little immediate impact as contact tracing data suggests most new spread is occurring in households & communities.

What’s the plan for outreach- especially to rural & conservative America?
On vaccinations: Hesitancy likely a bigger hurdle than supply in the long run. What’s the plan (beyond talking) to leverage trusted gatekeepers and new settings- like faith organizations, HBCUs, employers, and outpatient health providers? They are often trusted > hospitals.
Read 4 tweets
5 Dec 20
This week @cdcgov’s advisory committee on immunization practices met to discuss who should get a #COVID19 vaccine 1st- & it sparked some new questions. Here’s a🧵with some info on key groups.

ACIP recommended nursing home residents be first in line, & I STRONGLY agree... 1/?
1)Nursing home & long-term care facility residents are <1% of the population but 40% of the #COVID19 deaths, so this is truly the MOST at risk group.
2)We can more easily vaccinate them in 1 place.
3)There’s also only 1.5 million in this group vs 20 million vaccine doses.
2/?
Concerns about prioritizing nursing homes:
-Older people often don’t have as robust a response to vaccines (I’m not personally worried about this as older people were in trials, & vaccines tested showed greater than 90% efficacy- even if it drops to 75%- that’s still great).
3/?
Read 14 tweets
8 Aug 20
1/ Some #SaturdayMorning #SaturdayThoughts on masks. 😷

Most people still don’t understand the term and concept of “asymptomatic spread” of #covid19, and why we now recommend that everyone who can, wear a mask as a way to facilitate safee reopening. See thread 👇🏽 for more info.
2/ The coronavirus currently causing our global pandemic- SARS COV2, is actually from a family of viruses, including SARs, MERs, & the common cold.

For those other related viruses, it’s very rare for a person who doesn’t feel sick, or look sick, to be able to spread disease.
3/ Put another way, most people spreading the common cold for instance, have symptoms - like a fever, a runny nose, or a cough.
🤧🤒

And when you have such symptoms or come across someone who does, you know to keep your distance in order to prevent the spread of those germs.
Read 7 tweets

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