Pfizer CEO Albert Bourla finally got his vaccine after waiting his turn to get the chance, and Axios said he feels “liberated” after getting the protection the vaccine offers. With another dose of Pfizer and another to go, Bourla is now eager for the rest of his family to be vaccinated. But there are now several COVID vaccines available, so which one would he recommend to his loved ones? Read on to find out which vaccine Bourla suggests if Pfizer is not an option, and for more vaccine news, says dr. Fauci. Your COVID vaccine protects you for the time being.

During his interview with Axios, Bourla said he would advise his family members to get any vaccine offered to them. “This is a pandemic. The vaccines approved by the FDA are all vaccines that meet the threshold,” he said. “If that was the case, I can get a vaccine now – now any vaccine – or a vaccine I prefer two months later, then I will go with everything I can get now.” And to make sure you prepared for your lap, doctors say the morning of your vaccination appointment do these two things.

During a Twitter question and answer on February 4, White House adviser COVID Anthony Fauci, MD, was asked: “Of all the vaccinations available, which one would you recommend based on trial results; effectiveness; length of immunity and number of doses required? “
“I urge everyone to receive the vaccine made available to you,” Fauci replied. He noted that the three vaccines – Pfizer’s, Moderna’s and Johnson & Johnson’s – “are all very effective in preventing serious diseases.”
Before Fauci got his shot, he said he was open to any vaccine available to him, although he and the National Institutes of Health (NIH) played an important role in creating the Modern vaccine. On December 16, the infectious disease expert told CNBCs Healthy returns that he was planning to get the vaccine that was first at the NIH offices. Fauci finally got the Moderna shot a few days later. And to note the vaccine reactions, The CDC has just warned of 3 new side effects of vaccines.

You can research extensively before your appointment and decide that you want a specific vaccine, but the chances are high that you do not have a choice – and waiting for the one you want would be unwise, as The New York Times explain. However, Bourla predicts that people will probably be able to get the vaccine they are getting in the future, when the vaccine supply is no longer limited. After the summer, “for boosters or for other situations, there will be enough vaccine so you can go to free choice,” he told Axios. And for more information on what happens after your admission, this is what it means if you have no side effects, doctors say.

In the future, boost shots of the coronavirus vaccine may be needed to reduce the risk of COVID variants. At the moment it is unclear who will pay the bill for these doses. Bourla told Axios that it would be ‘terrible for society’ if the price of COVID vaccines prevented people from getting it in the future.
Currently, Pfizer uses a low pricing system for the vaccines that pay higher-income companies more, according to Axios. The US government buys the vaccine directly from Pfizer for $ 19.50 per dose, then Americans get the chance for free. Bourla pointed out that this is a pandemic price and that it is unlikely to last. ‘We may see if we go to the open market [then] we see the price of vaccines much closer to the current vaccines that exist for flu or for other diseases with these high technologies, “he added, subscribing to our daily newsletter for more current information.