Andrew M. Cuomo – Fordham Now https://now.fordham.edu The official news site for Fordham University. Tue, 19 Nov 2024 19:12:24 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://now.fordham.edu/wp-content/uploads/2015/01/favicon.png Andrew M. Cuomo – Fordham Now https://now.fordham.edu 32 32 232360065 To Help End the Pandemic, Take the Vaccine an­­d Keep Taking Care, Experts Say https://now.fordham.edu/fordham-magazine/to-help-end-the-pandemic-take-the-vaccine-and-keep-taking-care-experts-say/ Tue, 22 Dec 2020 17:12:06 +0000 https://news.fordham.sitecare.pro/?p=144028 Image: ShutterstockWith vaccines making headlines and stirring public hopes for ending the reign of the coronavirus, a panel of Fordham-educated experts grappled with the next big challenge: persuading people to actually take the vaccine, and to do so in the numbers necessary to bring the COVID-19 pandemic to an end.

“Vaccines don’t save lives; vaccination saves lives,” said Ronald A. DePinho, M.D., FCRH ’77, a distinguished researcher at the University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center, during a virtual panel discussion on Monday, December 21. “It’s very important that when you have the opportunity to get vaccinated, please get vaccinated.”

He and fellow panelist Michael Dowling, GSS ’74, a Fordham trustee and president and CEO of Northwell Health, the largest health system in New York state, emphasized the safety and efficacy of vaccination, as well as the public health messages that need to be widely spread.

“The COVID crisis is not over,” said Dowling, who described a surge of COVID-19 patients in Northwell’s hospitals over the past three weeks. Both he and DePinho said that wearing masks, socially distancing, and washing hands will remain critical well into the new year to prevent the spread of the disease.

The two Fordham graduates were the panelists for “Our COVID-19 Odyssey: Vulnerabilities Revealed, Historic Scientific Progress Achieved, and a Nation Awakened,” hosted by the Fordham University Alumni Association (FUAA) as the inaugural event in its Insights and Impact speaker series. Fordham Provost Dennis C. Jacobs, Ph.D., moderated.

The event came exactly one week after Northwell made history by administering the first doses of the vaccine developed by Pfizer and granted emergency use authorization by the Food and Drug Administration on December 11. A second vaccine, developed by Moderna, got the same approval four days ago, on December 18.

Masking Up

With healthcare workers and other vulnerable groups getting first priority for the vaccines, the general public would probably be receiving the vaccine in the late spring, making continued precautions necessary, Dowling said.

Masks are a good idea even for those who are vaccinated, since it’s still not fully known whether they can transmit coronavirus after getting the shot, DePinho said. “I think it’s going to be very hard” for this to happen, he said, “but until we really know, the safe and proper thing to do, the compassionate thing to do to protect others, is to wear a mask.”

Dowling said he thinks masks are here to stay, not only because of uncertainty about how long the coronavirus vaccination lasts but also because of their potential for suppressing the seasonal flu.

An Astounding Advance

The Pfizer and Moderna vaccines were each found to be 95% effective in clinical trials, a rate that DePinho called “astounding,” noting that the FDA standard was just 50%.

Michael Dowling and Ron DePinho
Images of Michael Dowling and Ron DePinho from the virtual event, held via Zoom

“This is an extremely safe vaccine and a very effective one,” said DePinho, professor, past president, and Harry Graves Burkhart III Distinguished University Chair in the Department of Cancer Biology at MD Anderson.

“You’re more likely to get harmed driving on the way to the hospital to get the vaccine than you will actually getting the vaccine,” he said.

They both emphasized that aftereffects like a sore arm, fatigue, or low-grade fever are actually a good thing. “It means the vaccine is working,” Dowling said.

He and DePinho addressed safety concerns such as allergic reactions that might be brought on by ingredients within the vaccines. The medical profession is “very skilled at handling those allergic reactions,” DePinho said. “On the other hand, as Michael will attest to, you do not want to get this virus.”

“This is a virus that kills,” and brings long-term problems like diminished lung capacity, strokes, and cardiac problems, he said. “This is a bad virus with enormous capabilities.” Compared with the manageable side effects of vaccines, he said, “the decision should be quite clear.”

At Northwell, people have to stay for 15 to 20 minutes after being vaccinated, and staff members are there to address any negative reactions, Dowling said. Most recipients feel few side effects, he said.

Making the Case

Overcoming skepticism—which exists even among healthcare workers—and convincing enough people to get vaccinated to achieve the estimated “herd immunity” threshold of of 70% will be “one of our biggest challenges,” Dowling said.

The stakes are high, DePinho said. “We’ve got to vaccinate about 5.6 billion people for herd immunity across the globe. Until we do that, this virus is going to keep coming back in waves, and as we just learned in the U.K., this virus mutates, it adjusts, it becomes more virulent, more infective.”

“So we have to really get ahead of this quickly and decisively, and it’s going to require worldwide immunization. No one’s safe until we do that.”

Dowling described the challenges of administering the vaccine, noting that the one from Pfizer has to be stored at minus 70 degrees Celsius and requires two doses 21 days apart.

DePinho said global vaccination efforts could be helped along by rapid scientific advances of recent years, like new messenger RNA-based therapeutics or nanotechnology that could be used to create dry powder vaccines that can be stored at room temperature. “Globally, those kinds of technologies are going to have a huge impact,” he said. “We’ve seen science really transform our ability to go from essentially a cold start to vaccinating people and protecting the public.”

Jacobs invited a comment about vaccines from Sally Benner, the vice chair of the FUAA advisory board who kicked off the event by introducing the panelists. Benner is the associate vice president of development for medical sciences at the University of Oxford, which developed a coronavirus vaccine that was licensed by AstraZeneca and is awaiting a trial in the U.S.

The speed of the vaccine’s development came from scientists having “a very long runway,” she said—they began working on a “Disease X” similar to the coronavirus five years ago at the urging of the World Health Organization, she said.

Community Leadership

In addition to vaccines, ending the pandemic requires a “strong, sophisticated communication mechanism and campaign to get people to understand [getting vaccinated] is the right thing to do … if you want to protect your community and yourself,” Dowling said.

He’s involved in statewide discussions about how to overcome people’s reluctance, particularly in African American and other minority communities that are disproportionately affected by the virus.

Clergy, pastors, and other leaders in those communities can play a valuable role by getting vaccinated, talking to others about it, and advising on how best to communicate the need to get vaccinated, he said.

Sandra Lindsay—the intensive care nurse who was the first Northwell employee vaccinated—is Jamaican, and has been “very vocal” in her community about the safety of the vaccine, Dowling said.

Celebrities could also play a role, he said, noting how Elvis Presley publicly took a vaccine for polio in 1956 to encourage young people to take it.

DePinho said the Catholic Church is “an incredible” platform for encouraging vaccination, since Pope Francis understands the importance of disease prevention and vaccination. Fordham and WFUV, the University’s public media station, could also spread the message, he said.

Education and Preparation

“Knowledge is disease’s greatest vulnerability,” DePinho said. “Vaccines have been one of the great triumphs of the last century,” he said, going through a list of maladies that people simply don’t think about anymore.

“We have to try to stay ahead of these viruses. We’re under constant assault,” he said. “This won’t be the last pandemic.”

“In much the same way we have ‘war games,’ we need to have ‘germ games’” to foster preparedness, he said.

Last spring, New York Governor Andrew M. Cuomo, FCRH ’79, named Dowling co-leader of a statewide council on expanding hospital capacity in the face of the pandemic.

Asked about lessons learned, Dowling said hospitals learned “to cooperate an awful lot more together” and constantly share information, with stronger hospitals backing up the weaker ones. Northwell has also formed reciprocal agreements with other large health systems around the country to share staff as needed when crises arise. He said he hopes for broad strategies to be developed in the U.S. and globally to prepare for future pandemics.

A Sputnik Moment

DePinho said the pandemic is “like our Sputnik moment,” referring to the 1957 satellite launch by the Soviet Union that spurred new technological, educational, and other advances in the United States. The pandemic has brought tragedies but also opportunities to improve health care delivery, infrastructure, “and the disparities that exist in our society.”

“We need to invest in health care and prevention, not just disease care, particularly for underserved communities,” he said. “In much the same way that we had our Sputnik moment, hopefully in the decades ahead we will look back on ‘the COVID moment’ where we transformed the way that we work together to serve the public good.”

In closing remarks, Joseph M. McShane, S.J., president of Fordham, said the event delivered a clear message: “We should be advocates for, ambassadors for, evangelists for the vaccination programs,” he said. “Tell people in all the worlds that you inhabit that this is the way toward a brighter future.”

He noted  the date, December 21, the winter solstice and the shortest day of the year. “Light will grow from this moment on,” he said, “and part of the light [that]will grow is the light that we derive from listening to you, sitting at your feet, and hearing all the experience-based wisdom that you had to offer.”

The Fordham University Alumni Association (FUAA) launched the Insights and Impact speaker series to showcase Fordham alumni making a positive difference in society. On January 21, the FUAA will host its annual Recognition Reception. Visit the event page to learn more and register.

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Three Alumni Appointed to Prestigious State Fellowship https://now.fordham.edu/fordham-magazine/three-fordham-alumni-appointed-to-prestigious-state-fellowship/ Fri, 18 Nov 2016 21:49:10 +0000 http://news.fordham.sitecare.pro/?p=59124 Above: Kimberly Wedderburn, Kirk Dobson, and Hanna Reyes are serving as Empire State Fellows.Fordham alumni earned three of the eight spots in a very competitive New York state leadership program.

New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo, FCRH ’79, has appointed Kirk Dobson, PCS ’10, GSAS ’11; Kimberly Wedderburn, LAW ’16; and Hanna Reyes, who holds a certificate in nonprofit management from Fordham, to the 2016–2018 class of Empire State Fellows. The program prepares mid-career professionals to be New York state government leaders and policy makers.

“The fact that it’s something so competitive—in a class of eight people, to have three Fordham alums in the mix—I was so proud,” said Dobson, who started the fellowship this fall and was appointed to the state health department. He’s working with the deputy commissioner for the Office of Health Insurance Programs, helping to create new processes that will provide Medicaid patients with better access to care.

“I’m learning so much about these programs,” Dobson said. “It’s absolutely fascinating.” He added that the program goes beyond “just getting your feet wet” and gives fellows the chance to interact with senior staff.

Though the fellows come from many different professional backgrounds, Dobson happens to have some experience in the political arena. After earning bachelor’s and master’s degrees in political science from Fordham, he spent time working on various political campaigns in Massachusetts, New York, and Georgia, where he earned a doctorate in public administration from Valdosta State University.

Wedderburn, who was appointed to the Department of Labor, said attending Fordham Law in the evening while working as a special education teacher prepared her well for the program. “I began the fellowship equipped with the requisite legal education, work experience, and problem-solving skills needed to hit the ground running,” she said.

Reyes also credited Fordham for the “foundation that made it possible” for her to be selected, and said she’s “full of pride” to be able to say she’s both a Fordham alumna and an Empire State Fellow. She’ll be serving in the executive chamber.

While they’re in Albany, Dobson, Wedderburn, Reyes, and the other fellows will get the chance to participate in professional development activities, including mentoring by cabinet members. At the end of the program, qualified fellows are given the opportunity to continue to serve as leaders in New York state government.

“I absolutely think it’s going to be a great entryway for all of us,” Dobson said.

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Fordham Supports New York State Dream Act https://now.fordham.edu/politics-and-society/fordham-supports-new-york-state-dream-act/ Wed, 28 Mar 2012 18:55:20 +0000 http://news.fordham.sitecare.pro/?p=31186 Fordham University is urging New York Governor Andrew M. Cuomo and the state legislature to pass the New York State Dream Act, which would allow undocumented immigrant students who meet in-state tuition requirements in New York to access state financial aid for higher education.

Calling the immigration issue “the new civil rights movement of the 21st century,” Joseph M. McShane, S.J., president of Fordham, wrote to the governor on March 27, saying that the issue must be addressed, and that universities have a role to play in doing so.

Educational access and opportunity are “the keys to future success,” Father McShane wrote, and he called on the governor to pass the Dream Act to “help to alleviate the costs that arise from not addressing the issue of immigration in a comprehensive and compassionate manner.”

The bill, originally championed by the New York State Youth Leadership Council and introduced by Senator Bill Perkins and Assemblyman Guillermo Linares, was first introduced on March 22. The proposed law is supported by a large coalition of immigrants’ rights groups, the New York Board of Regents, Senator Kirsten Gillibrand, New York City Mayor Michael Bloomberg, the City and State universities of New York, and a number of private universities.

Since the federal Dream Act (which Fordham also supported) stalled in Congress, some states have passed their own versions of the bill to make college more affordable to undocumented students. Thirteen, including New York, allow undocumented immigrants to qualify for in-state tuition rates. Only three states allow them to receive state government tuition aid: Texas, New Mexico, and California.

“Since 1841, Fordham University has been the institution of the new immigrant experience,” Father McShane wrote. “Not only was Fordham built by immigrants, its very presence enduringly represents the collective dreams of the immigrant experience…. We recognize that the face of the immigrant movement has changed and that the movement itself has shifted and evolved with the developments of the 21st century.  Despite those changes and shifts, the collective dream of the immigrant movement remains the same: to do better, to thrive and to succeed once given the chance and opportunity to compete.”

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