Health & Fitness

De Blasio Gets COVID-19 Vaccine Booster, Mixes And Matches Doses

"Putting my shoulder where my mouth is," Mayor Bill de Blasio joked as he got the Moderna vaccine to top off his Johnson & Johnson dose.

"Putting my shoulder where my mouth is," Mayor Bill de Blasio joked as he got the Moderna vaccine to top off his Johnson & Johnson dose.
"Putting my shoulder where my mouth is," Mayor Bill de Blasio joked as he got the Moderna vaccine to top off his Johnson & Johnson dose. (NYC Mayor's Office)

NEW YORK CITY — Mayor Bill de Blasio joined the 200,000 New York City dwellers who've so far rolled up their sleeves for a coronavirus vaccine booster shot.

But de Blasio did so in a way only recently given the green light by federal health officials — he "mixed and matched" vaccines.

The mayor first received one dose of Johnson & Johnson's COVID-19 vaccine. He then topped it off Monday with a shot of Moderna's vaccine.

Find out what's happening in New York Cityfor free with the latest updates from Patch.

"I'm putting my shoulder where my mouth is," he said, before acknowledging: "Wait a minute, that doesn't make sense."

Roughly 227,000 booster doses of COVID-19 vaccine have been administered in New York City so far, according to data.

Find out what's happening in New York Cityfor free with the latest updates from Patch.

Those numbers likely will swell after CDC Director Rochelle Walensky allowed booster shots of Moderna's and Johnson & Johnson's vaccines last week. Boosters for the Pfizer vaccine had already been approved.

Moderna and Pfizer recipients who are people 65 and older, 18- to 64-year-olds with underlying health conditions and workers in high-risk settings can receive boosters so long as they're six months after their last doses, according to the guidance.

All Johnson & Johnson recipients are eligible for a booster.

And Walensky also allowed eligible recipients to do as de Blasio did — get a booster shot of any vaccine regardless of what they received for their last dose.

City-run vaccination sites since last week have administered booster doses to all eligible recipients.

Dave Chokshi, the city's health commissioner, said even more at-risk New Yorkers can get an added layer of protection. He gave de Blasio his booster.

“This guy is a really, really very subtle shot giver,” de Blasio said.

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