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Delaying second dose eases pressure on world's vaccine-starved places

A delay in the second shot not only allows the existing supply of shots to be more widely distributed, it boosts their protective power by giving the immune system more time to respond to the

Research suggests that first dose primes the immune system, hence a longer response helps the reaction to the second booster shot that comes weeks or months later. (Photo: Bloomberg)
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Research suggests that first dose primes the immune system, hence a longer response helps the reaction to the second booster shot that comes weeks or months later. (Photo: Bloomberg)

Michelle Fay Cortez | Bloomberg
Faced with a limited supply of shots and anxious populations waiting their turn, more countries are turning to an initially controversial strategy that’s now been vindicated by scientific studies: doubling or tripling the intervals between the first and second Covid vaccine dose.

A delay in getting the second shot not only allows the existing supply of shots to be more widely distributed, it boosts their protective power by giving the immune system more time to respond to the first inoculation. Levels of antibodies produced to fight off the virus are 20% to 300% higher when the follow-up vaccine comes later,

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