How to get a vaccine in N.J.: Who is eligible, how to sign up, do I have to pay?
Updated Jan 14, 2021;
Posted Jan 14, 2021
Residents at Juniper Village at Chatham receive their first dose of the Pfizer-BioNTech COVID-19 vaccine. Juniper Village is an assisted living facility. Monday, January, 11, 2021
Patti Sapone | NJ Advance Media
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The newly eligible groups can start to get vaccinations Thursday.
“Today we are announcing that all New Jersey residents ages 65 years and older, plus those between the ages of 16 and 64 with medical conditions, as defined by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, that increase the risk of severe illness from the virus, may begin to receive their vaccinations as of tomorrow,” Murphy said at his Wednesday coronavirus briefing.
Getting the COVID vaccine protects you and others from coronavirus infection and is the biggest step yet toward getting the world back online. Still, because of the newness of the disease and the speed of the vaccine development, there are lots of concerns and theories floating around the web regarding the vaccines side effects and safety, some of which are more valid than others.
One major topic circulating on social media that s been a source of misinformation: A claim that the vaccine causes infertility. (Before we go any further, to set the record straight, doctors and scientists say this is NOT TRUE more on why below.) One such Facebook post even shared an article that alleged a Pfizer researcher likened the vaccine to “female sterilization.” The post has now been marked as “false information” by the platform.
No, the COVID Vaccine Doesn t Cause Infertility Shape 1/8/2021
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Getting the COVID vaccine protects you and others from coronavirus infection and is the biggest step yet toward getting the world back online. Still, because of the newness of the disease and the speed of the vaccine development, there are lots of concerns and theories floating around the web regarding the vaccines side effects and safety, some of which are more valid than others.
One major topic circulating on social media that s been a source of misinformation: A claim that the vaccine causes infertility. (Before we go any further, to set the record straight, doctors and scientists say this is NOT TRUE more on why below.) One such Facebook post even shared an article that alleged a Pfizer researcher likened the vaccine to “female sterilization.” The post has now been marked as “false information” by the platform.
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