Medical Coding Jobs

Find your dream Job in Medical Coding

Medical Coding Jobs
News

Analysis: Necessary or Not, Covid Booster Shots Are Probably on the Horizon

The drugmaker Pfizer recently announced that vaccinated people are likely to need a booster shot to be effectively protected against new variants of covid-19 and that the company would apply for Food and Drug Administration emergency use authorization for the shot. Top government health officials immediately and emphatically announced that the booster isn’t needed right now — and held firm to that position even after Pfizer’s top scientist made his case and shared preliminary data with them last week.

This has led to confusion. Should the nearly 60% of adult Americans who have been fully vaccinated seek out a booster or not? Is the protection that has allowed them to see loved ones and go out to dinner fading?

Ultimately, the question of whether a booster is needed is unlikely to determine the FDA’s decision. If recent history is predictive, booster shots will be here before long. That’s because of the outdated, 60-year-old basic standard the FDA uses to authorize medicines for sale: Is a new drug “safe and effective”?

The FDA, using that standard, will very likely have to authorize Pfizer’s booster for emergency use, as it did the company’s prior covid shot. The booster is likely to be safe — hundreds of millions have taken the earlier shots — and Pfizer reported that it dramatically increases a vaccinated person’s antibodies against SARS-CoV-2. From that perspective, it may also be considered very effective.

But does that kind of efficacy matter? Is a higher level of antibodies needed to protect vaccinated Americans? Though antibody levels may wane some over time, the current vaccines deliver perfectly good immunity so far.

What if a booster is safe and effective in one sense but simply not needed — at least for now?

Reliance on the simple “safe and effective” standard — which certainly sounds reasonable — is a relic of a time when there were far fewer and simpler medicines available to treat diseases and before pharmaceutical manufacturing became one of the world’s biggest businesses.

The FDA’s 1938 landmark legislation focused primarily on safety after more than 100 Americans died from a raspberry-flavored liquid form of an early antibiotic because one of its ingredients was used as antifreeze. The 1962 Kefauver-Harris Amendments to the Federal Food, Drug and Cosmetic Act set out more specific requirements for drug approval: Companies must scientifically prove a drug’s effectiveness through “adequate and well-controlled studies.”

In today’s pharmaceutical universe, a simple “safe and effective” determination is not always an adequate bar, and it can be manipulated to sell drugs of questionable value. There’s also big money involved: Pfizer is already projecting $26 billion in covid revenue this year.

The United States’ continued use of this standard to let drugs into the market has led to the approval of expensive, not necessarily very effective drugs. In 2014, for example, the FDA approved a toenail fungus drug that can cost up to $1,500 a month and that studies showed cured fewer than 10% of patients after a year of treatment. That’s more effective than doing nothing but less effective and more costly than a number of other treatments for this bothersome malady.

It has also led to a plethora of high-priced drugs to treat diseases like cancers, multiple sclerosis and Type 2 diabetes that are all more effective than a placebo but have often not been tested very much against one another to determine which are most effective.

In today’s complex world, clarification is needed to determine just what kind of effectiveness the FDA should demand. And should that be the job of the FDA alone?

For example, should drugmakers prove a drug is significantly more effective than products already on the market? Or demonstrate cost-effectiveness — the health value of a product relative to its price — a metric used by Britain’s health system? And in which cases is effectiveness against a surrogate marker — like an antibody level — a good enough stand-in for whether a drug will have a significant impact on a patient’s health?

In most industrialized countries, broad access to the national market is a two-step process, said Aaron Kesselheim, a professor of medicine at Harvard Medical School who studies drug development, marketing and law and recently served on an FDA advisory committee. The first part certifies that a drug is sufficiently safe and effective. That is immediately followed by an independent health technology assessment to see where it fits in the treatment armamentarium, including, in some countries, whether it is useful enough to be sold at all at the price being offered. But there’s no such automatic process in the U.S.

When Pfizer applies for authorization, the FDA may well clear a booster for the U.S. market. The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, likely with advice from National Institutes of Health experts, will then have to decide whether to recommend it and for whom. This judgment call usually determines whether insurers will cover it. Pfizer is likely to profit handsomely from a government authorization, and the company will gain some revenue even if only the worried well, who can pay out-of-pocket, decide to get the shot.

To make any recommendation on a booster, government experts say they need more data. They could, for example, as Dr. Anthony Fauci has suggested, eventually green-light the additional vaccine shot only for a small group of patients at high risk for a deadly infection, such as the very old or transplant recipients who take immunosuppressant drugs, as some other countries have done.

But until the United States refines the FDA’s “safe and effective” standard or adds a second layer of vetting, when new products hit the market and manufacturers promote them, Americans will be left to decipher whose version of effective and necessary matters to them.

KHN (Kaiser Health News) is a national newsroom that produces in-depth journalism about health issues. Together with Policy Analysis and Polling, KHN is one of the three major operating programs at KFF (Kaiser Family Foundation). KFF is an endowed nonprofit organization providing information on health issues to the nation.

USE OUR CONTENT

This story can be republished for free (details).

Syndicated from https://khn.org/news/article/commentary-covid-vaccine-booster-shot-pfizer/

New Jobs
Building careers, not just jobs: Dr. Guruvayurappan PV on talent, education, and lifel... Building careers, not just jobs: Dr. Guruvayurappan PV on talent, education, and lifel... No More Call Bells? New 'Silent Hospital' Tech Helps Patients and Nurses Alike 5 most in-demand AI jobs you've never heard of in 2025 - The Times of India 5 Most In-Demand AI Jobs You've Never Heard Of But Glad You Did - Forbes Healthcare Careers Prove a Strong Hedge Against AI Disruption 15 Short Certificate Programs That Can Open Doors to Higher-Paying Jobs Nurse Assaulted, Hospital Administration Reacts with Increased Security and Panic Buttons Netsmart launches AI-powered AlphaCoding to improve clinical coding accuracy Nurses Use LEGO to Ease Kids' Hospital Fears - Nurse.org Making Sure a Physician Advisory Program Improves Both Care and ROI Internship for Life Science Students at Labcorp - Apply Now - BioTecNika What employed physicians dislike most about their jobs - RamaOnHealthcare Goodwill program helps Georgians train for growing healthcare jobs - WSB Radio Labcorp Internship For MSc Life Sciences - Apply Online - BioTecNika Pennsylvania's Hospital Crisis: Why So Many Are Closing - Nurse.org MedesunÒ Medical Coding Academy — Hyderabad's Premier Destination for Future-Ready ... Nurses Are Winning Halloween With These Genius (and Totally Work-Safe) Costume Ideas Biotecnika Times Newsletter 29.10.2025 - Freshers Internships at Labcorp, Young ... Healthcare Billing Complexities Call For Consistency and AI Support DCB welcomes new healthcare faculty - Minot Daily News WWI Nurse Mary Nurney Finally Honored in Stamford, Makes History Can Blockchain Technology Make Medical Billing More Transparent? - PharmiWeb.com Is AI 'vibe-coding' transforming tech jobs or creating dangerous illusions? Certified Medical Coder - Optometry Clinic - (494798 ) job with University of Houston Home Health Nurse Held Hostage at Work by Patient's Grandson, Fights Back and Escapes Feather River Adult School offers free online classes | The Plumas Sun Senior Medical Coding Specialist job in US, Raleigh, NC - ICON Plc High-Demand Coding Jobs in Biotech: What Employers Look For Partnering to develop and expand the health care workforce - UnitedHealth Group Trump's $100K H-1B Visa Fee Could Worsen Doctor & Shortages - Nurse.org See today's jobs list for Saline County & Central Arkansas 09222025 - MySaline HGM Limited Announces Acquisition of Aidéo Technologies LLC - Healthcare IT Today HGM Limited Announces Acquisition of Aidéo Technologies LLC - Healthcare IT Today HGM Limited Announces Acquisition of Aidéo Technologies LLC - Healthcare IT Today The Future of Medical Billing: A Look at What's Next - PharmiWeb.com Beyond Coding: Future Engineering Skills Every Student Must Learn for 2030 Jobs The New Job Of Being A Vibe Coding Cleanup Specialist Is Intriguing And Stirring Ample... 10 Least Stressful Jobs for People Who Value Work-Life Balance - Money | HowStuffWorks Ardent Health Announces Enterprise Rollout of Ambience Healthcare's AI Platform for ... Postpartum Nurse's Double Heart Attack Sheds Light on Hidden SCAD Risk - Nurse.org Fake Aesthetic Nurse Who Injured Patients and Ran Illegal MedSpa Faces Felony Charges SAHIA to host two landmark health informatics events in October - Bizcommunity Catholic Health launches ambient AI to assist medical coding | Crain's New York Business Top 5 Jobs in Healthcare That Are Most at Risk from AI in South Africa - And How to Adapt Noah Wyle Wins Emmy in FIGS Tux, Honors Nurses & ER Workers Global Medical Billing Software Market to grow 10% CAGR, driven by telemedicine & cloud .... Top 5 Jobs in Healthcare That Are Most at Risk from AI in Tunisia - And How to Adapt Top 10 AI Prompts and Use Cases and in the Healthcare Industry in Qatar - Nucamp Top 5 Jobs in Healthcare That Are Most at Risk from AI in Philippines - And How to Adapt