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"Lightning's going to strike somewhere": Juneau health care worker hospitalized after COVID-19 vaccine - Alaska Public Media News

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A mostly empty hospital hallway
A nearly empty critical care unit at Bartlett Regional Hospital in Juneau in April. (Rashah McChesney/KTOO)

A Juneau health care worker had an anaphylactic reaction Tuesday and was hospitalized in the intensive care unit after being injected with the COVID-19 vaccine produced by drug companies Pfizer and BioNTech, officials said Wednesday.

The woman, who did not have a history of allergies, spent the night in the ICU at Juneau’s Bartlett Regional Hospital and was taken off epinephrine early Wednesday, officials said at a news conference. She remains in the ICU but is expected to be discharged later in the day, hospital officials said.

And in spite of her reaction, the woman was still enthusiastic about having received the vaccine, and was disappointed to lose her opportunity to be injected with a second dose a few weeks later, said Nobel Anderson, one of her doctors.

“She encouraged all of us to press on,” Anderson said at a Wednesday news conference.

The New York Times first reported the reaction Wednesday morning.

The woman’s anaphylactic reaction is the only one reported in the country so far, the CDC’s deputy director for infectious diseases, Dr. Jay Butler, said at the news conference. And the state is not planning any changes to its program for distributing the COVID-19 vaccine, said Dr. Anne Zink, Alaska’s chief medical officer.

“There were over 40,000 people in the trials and we did not see any reactions like this,” she said.

a person wearing a face shield and mask administers a shot to someone wearing scrubs and a mask
Alaska Native Tribal Health Consortium nurse Emily Schubert (right) injects nurse anesthetist David Kwiatkowski with the COVID-19 vaccine Tuesday. Kwiatkowski was the third Alaskan to receive the COVID-19 vaccine. (Jeff Chen/Alaska Public Media)

Zink summarized the event by relaying a comment made by one of the providers who treated the woman’s reaction: “Lightning’s going to strike somewhere.”

Regulators had already warned medical providers to be on the watch for allergies after reports that two British health care workers also experienced anaphylactic reactions when they were injected with the Pfizer/BioNTech vaccine last week. Alaska hospitals are keeping recipients of the vaccine under observation for a period of time after their injections.

Pfizer has said there were “no safety signals of concern” identified in its clinical vaccine trials, and anaphylactic reactions to vaccines in general are rare, estimated at just over one per million doses.

The woman’s symptoms began 10 minutes after she was injected with the vaccine, when she felt flush while she was still being monitored in the hospital’s foyer, officials said. She took a Benadryl, but still felt short of breath and was transferred to the emergency room, said Lindy Jones, the doctor who treated her there.

Related: COVID-19 vaccinations begin in Alaska

Jones was concerned about an anaphylactic reaction and gave the woman a “standard treatment” of epinephrine, and she “responded immediately,” he said. She was also given other antihistamines, including Benadryl and Pepsid, as well as steroids, which Jones described as another standard treatment for anaphylaxis.

Because the woman’s symptoms returned when she was taken off epinephrine, she was moved to the ICU for observation and kept overnight. Providers plan to discharge her Wednesday evening, “assuming there’s no further symptoms now that she’s off all medication,” Jones said.

CDC employees are now working with Bartlett clinicians to analyze results of lab tests given to the Juneau woman, “so that they can learn from this experience more,” Zink said.

“The system worked exactly as you would hope it would in this situation, to make sure that we’re able to respond and to learn,” she said.

Bartlett, along with Anchorage’s Alaska Native Medical Center, was one of the first places in the state to inject workers with the COVID-19 vaccine Tuesday. Bartlett officials said 96 people have been vaccinated at the hospital.

A spokeswoman for ANMC, Shirley Young, said no allergic reactions have occurred at the Anchorage hospital.

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