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The
Covid-19 vaccine is here: first Americans receive their injections |
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What seemed
impossible months ago is now a reality:
The first doses of a Covid-19 vaccine have been given to the American public,
less than a year after the disease was first identified in the United States. Among the first people
in the United States to get a shot of the coronavirus vaccine authorized by
the US Food and Drug Administration was a critical care nurse in
New York City. Sandra
Lindsay, an ICU nurse at Long Island Jewish Medical Center in Queens, New
York, was administered the vaccine during a live video event at about 9:20
a.m. ET on Monday. Dr. Michelle Chester, the corporate director of employee
health services at Northwell Health, delivered the shot. "She
has a good touch, and it didn't feel any different than taking any other
vaccine," Lindsay said immediately afterward. The
vaccine is, of course, more than just symbolic. With the shot, and a second
dose in 21 days, Lindsay will be able to more safely visit family, friends,
colleagues and patients. But it
will be several months before
most Americans can get a Covid-19 vaccine. In the
meantime, thousands of Americans are dying from the virus every day. And the
rates of new infections and
deaths are accelerating at unprecedented rates, meaning Americans
must hunker down this winter before rolling up their sleeves. |

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