What A Day - Vaccine Mismatch Made In Heaven
Episode Date: June 29, 2021The Delta variant of coronavirus has been detected in 92 countries, leading to lockdowns and the reintroduction of limitations on border crossing. Additionally, researchers in India have identified a ...variant of the Delta variant they're calling Delta Plus, though it's so far unknown whether it's any more transmissible than the original variant.Mixing and matching the Pfizer-BioNTech and AstraZeneca-Oxford vaccines may increase immunity, according to early results from a study in the UK. If the CDC approves combining vaccine brands, it could increase access to the vaccine and avoid supply bottlenecks.And in headlines: Ethiopia declares ceasefire in Tigray, airstrikes and rocket attacks between U.S. forces and Iranian-backed militants, and SCOTUS upholds transgender bathroom rights.Show Notes:NIH clinical trial evaluating mixed COVID-19 vaccine schedules – https://bit.ly/3jot1FZFor a transcript of this episode, please visit crooked.com/whataday.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
It's Tuesday, June 29th. I'm Akilah Hughes.
And I'm Liz Plank in for Gideon Resnick.
And this is What A Day, the podcast teens are not allowed to listen to if they're on summer vacation.
Yeah, we really appreciate you spending your break with us.
But with all due respect, you should be hanging out somewhere or like swimming.
Yeah, just go stand in a
fast food parking lot for three hours. All right, go loiter. We'll see you in August.
On today's show, a new study hints at promising results if some of the two-dose vaccines are
mixed and matched, plus some headlines. But first, the latest. And we're going to start
today with the Delta variant
of the coronavirus. By now, we've all heard about it. But Akilah, across the globe,
countries are responding to the latest variant. What's going on? So yes, the Delta variant is
continuing to spread. And the World Health Organization said last week that it's been
detected in 92 countries already. And now even more countries are imposing lockdowns and limiting border crossing as a result. Sydney, Australia last Friday started a partial lockdown
after a cluster of 65 cases arose suddenly. Throughout the pandemic, Australia had been a
bubble and proof of what happens when mitigation efforts are taken seriously. So it does seem like
they know what they're doing here. And other cities across that country have started locking
down as well. Let's hope they don't last too long. So where else in the world have lockdown efforts restarted?
So South Africa, they've instituted a nightly curfew, re-upped bans on gatherings and halted
domestic travel for the next two weeks. And in Bangladesh, all public transportation is on hold
to stop the spread. And in Israel, they reinstated their indoor mask mandate after news of this more contagious variant.
Oh, my gosh, that stinks.
And then there's this more troubling development.
Researchers in India have identified a variant of the Delta variant.
So they're calling it Delta Plus.
What do we know about it?
Yeah, so you probably saw that joke on Twitter that Delta Plus is just
the Delta variant without ads. It's a good joke. Delta Plus is not exactly a laughing matter. So
the variant emerged from India because as we said, when viruses are able to linger, that's when they
mutate. And the Delta variant has been in India the longest. Not much is known yet about the latest
variant, mostly because of lagging research in India at the moment. But suffice it to say that scientists are trying to figure out if this variant is more deadly or more transmissible than any that we've seen before.
And really, none of this bodes well for the U.S., where there are still loads of Americans who can but will not get vaccinated, especially in conservative areas.
It's going to be a long summer. There's no telling if we will actually get to enjoy all of it or most of it out of our houses until the end. So please just stay safe and try to make good
choices. But on vaccines, Liz, there is some hopeful news. Yes. If you mixed up your two-part
doses, you are in luck. There's new research that says it might be more than fine. It might
actually make you more immune. So early results from a new British
study found that mixing and matching the Pfizer BioNTech and AstraZeneca Oxford vaccines showed
extremely positive results. As a person who both lost my first vaccine card and almost missed my
second appointment due to a severe case of being a space cadet. I am personally very, very relieved.
So the subjects in the study were purposely given a dose of each vaccine and were given them a bit further apart, four weeks to be exact.
So while the people in the study had side effects that were more pronounced, they were also more short-lived. And what's even more impressive is that this
check-mix approach to the vaccine and this intentional delay between the two doses wasn't
just fine, it was actually better. And it produced a higher immune cell response to attack the
coronavirus and keep people immune to it. Yeah. And do we know why?
Not yet. But the tactic has been used in vaccines for other
diseases like Ebola. The idea is that you're priming your immune system to recognize different
aspects of the virus. And that means it'll be better at identifying an infection. While most
of the people who have received the vaccine so far got the same kind. Notorious trendsetter Angela
Merkel. Ever heard of her? She's a worldwide influencer. She has been rumored to have received
two separate doses, but we don't know which brands yet. So it's only a matter of time before,
you know, getting the two same doses is choogy or becomes the side part of the pandemic. However, this isn't without controversy.
When the UK started allowing mix and match doses last January, the CDC got pretty mad
and warned Americans that vaccines were not interchangeable because they said that the
safety and the efficacy had not been measured yet. But since then, other studies on mixing
and matching have already taken place in
Spain and in Canada. And this new study shows how science can really evolve. If this research
becomes more solid, mixing could have a lot of benefits. For example, you could increase the
access to the vaccine, right, if you avoid supply bottlenecks, because there's no need to wait for
a specific brand for your second shot.
Yeah. So if I'm ready for that second dose right now, can I just plan to get a different brand?
Can I just go on in and be like, give me something else?
No, you can't pull a Merkel. Not yet. The CDC has not signed off on the practice. And actually, they still say that it should be avoided. It's important to specify here that the study is preliminary, so we need more research on it.
However, countries like Canada, Spain, South Korea already allow the mixing and matching to happen.
Prime Minister Justin Trudeau famously got a first dose of AstraZeneca right in his upper left bicep,
right into his tattoo of the planet Earth inside a heyday raven.
Don't ask me how I know this. I read it on the internet.
No, I saw it on the internet. Okay. And while he said he would probably get a second dose
of the same brand, it hasn't been confirmed yet. But if you really want to help out,
the National Institute of Health is recruiting volunteers to be part of its own research on
mixing and matching vaccine doses. And both people who are fully vaccinated or unvaccinated can sign up.
We'll put a link in our show notes if you want to be part of this exciting study.
Yeah. And if the practice gets the green light in the U.S.,
this could be especially good with that threat of variants we keep talking about.
But for those of us with two shots in the arm already, are we still OK?
Like, what about us?
Tell me about me.
You're going to be fine.
A new study in the science journal Nature found that people who got a two-part vaccine
got such a strong immune response that they could be protected for years,
meaning that you don't need a booster shot anytime soon.
And for my J and J fam out there, we love you. Research is still being
conducted on what might be recommended for you, but the FDA and the CDC don't recommend topping
off that shot with a Pfizer or a Moderna chaser. But anecdotally, Reuters reported that some
medical experts who got the J&J said that they've been sneaking in a dose of either the Pfizer or Moderna shots
themselves. Although if you do want a booster, you should just join that NIH study I just mentioned
because you are eligible for that too, and you'll help America out with its research.
And that's the latest for now. It's Tuesday WOD Squad and for today's temp check, we're talking about advanced
theme park financial strategies. So on TikTok, where our most hard news comes from,
someone went viral this summer for demonstrating a technique for scoring a $75 shirt at Disney World for free.
Basically, the hack requires you to go to Disney World
with clothes that violate the dress code.
In this case, the woman's outfit broke a rule against underboob.
And then Disney will write you a ticket
that lets you get a free shirt at the nearest gift shop.
The move has since been confirmed to work by at least one other person on TikTok, though
no one's counting the number of failed underboob for merch attempts.
So we really don't know.
Liz, are you a supporter of this fight for free T-shirts?
Yeah.
Well, look, I'm a big fan of underboobs.
I'm not so much of a fan of dress code.
So I respect the feminist kind of Robin Hood energy that she is bringing to this
you know stealing from corporate America uh and and when I grew up we had a dress code in our
high school and they had a big t-shirt a big extra large like fritillum like giant shirt and they
called it the le chandail de l'indécence the indecent uh t-shirt and oh wow. I know. It was pretty major.
But then we kind of did the TikTok trend at our high school
in the sense of we made it really cool.
Like every time one of my friends would get it,
we'd do like a photo shoot and we'd have as much fun with it.
And then they ended up getting rid of it.
So I think it's a good screw you to dress codes
that are just sexist and horrible. What do you think, Akilah? I mean, you know, I think it's a good, like, it's a good screw you to dress codes that are just sexist and horrible.
What do you think, Akilah?
I mean, you know, I think it's good.
I think, you know, I understand in ways where Disney is coming from.
It's a family theme park.
They already let you get drunk.
All right.
How much more are they going to give us?
However, I'm like, is it worth going into the park, you know, with Underboob?
Unless you wanted to have under boob, right.
To get this shirt,
because I don't find the shirt to be extremely attractive.
Like just cause it's expensive doesn't mean that it's cute.
And also the resale value is not there.
Like if you told me I walked around Disney in 90 degree heat in humidity,
in a sweater, and now I'm selling you the shirt.
I'm like, ah, y'all you've been sweating in that. That's worth 10 selling you the shirt. I'm like, y'all, you've been sweating
in that. That's worth 10 bucks now. So really, you know, maybe it is more of the like, we can
take a photo shoot together. You know, we can all laugh about this experience. That's why you would
go out to get this shirt. Not, you know, because it's such a great shirt and it's too expensive.
The truth is like, it's expensive because they know nobody wants it. Right, right, right. Well,
just like that, we have checked our temps.
Stay safe.
I don't know, maybe flash a little underboob
for a free shirt if you're feeling frisky.
And we'll be back after some ads.
Let's wrap up with some headlines.
Headlines.
Ethiopian troops retreated from the capital of Tigray yesterday, declaring a ceasefire in the region.
This is one of the latest developments coming out of Tigray, which has been occupied by Ethiopian forces since their November invasion.
For almost eight months, Ethiopia has blacked out communications from the region, leaving the rest of the world with only scattered reports of atrocities being committed by Ethiopian troops.
This past week, rebel Tigray defense forces have been leading a counter-attack,
progressing towards the capital city, Mekelle. Residents there were reportedly
celebrating the return of Tigray forces for the first time since the invasion.
Ethiopia said that the ceasefire will last until the end of a crucial crop season in Tigray,
allowing civilian farmers to at least tend to their land in peace.
U.S. forces in Iraq were the targets of rocket attacks yesterday following U.S.
airstrikes on Iran-backed militia targets in Syria and Iraq.
No casualties were reported following the attacks.
Since the spring, Iranian-backed militias have mounted a campaign of drone attacks on the American military presence in Iraq.
That led Biden to authorize airstrikes yesterday morning against facilities alleged to be involved in the attacks.
Militias said those strikes killed four of their members.
The Iraqi government described the airstrikes as a, quote,
blatant and unacceptable violation of Iraqi sovereignty and national security
and said Iraq did not want to become a, quote,
area for settling accounts between the U.S. and Iran.
The Supreme Court proved that it's not too late to celebrate Pride Month yesterday
by handing a small victory to trans students.
The court affirmed that students in mid-Atlantic states
can use the bathroom that corresponds with their gender identity
by declining to hear an appeal from a Virginia school board
that wanted to ban trans boys from using men's bathrooms.
LGBTQ advocacy groups have worried that the Supreme Court
would take up the case and reverse the opinion of a lower court, which also ruled in the students' favor.
Ultimately, the issue remains unsettled in other states, and conservatives haven't even begun to work through their obsession with bathrooms.
So we can expect similar appeals to return to the Supreme Court soon.
Oh, my goodness.
Well, good for the trans kids.
That's what's up.
The social media death star called Facebook evaded another attack yesterday when a federal judge threw out two lawsuits filed by the Federal Trade Commission and 48 state attorneys general
that accused Facebook of antitrust violations. The suits accused Facebook of wielding a social
media monopoly and acquiring apps to crush competition, which all seems true to me. But
a judge of the U.S. District Court for the District of Columbia ruled that they provided
insufficient evidence of a monopoly and additionally said the states had let too much time pass
before challenging Facebook's purchase of Instagram in 2012 and WhatsApp in 2014.
Lawyers continue to be too relaxed.
This case was one of the most promising antitrust lawsuits against big tech.
So the ruling is a setback for anyone who's worried that apps for sharing status updates
are now more powerful than most countries.
Already, lawmakers in D.C. are using the ruling as an opportunity to call for reform of antitrust laws.
I hope they do it. Reform them. Take it back.
Let's do it.
And those are the headlines.
That's all for today.
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I'm Akilah Hughes.
I'm Liz Plank.
And don't buy us, Facebook.
Leave us alone, okay?
I'm a free bitch, baby.
What A Day is a production of Crooked Media.
It's recorded and mixed by Charlotte Landis.
Sonia Tun and Jazzy Marine are our associate producers.
Our head writer is John Milstein,
and our executive producers are Leo Duran, Akilah Hughes, and me. Our theme music is by Colin Gilliard and Kashaka.