About COVID-19 vaccines
Read this page to learn more about how COVID-19 vaccines protect you and how we know they’re safe. And get more information about COVID-19 vaccines during pregnancy and breastfeeding.
Why to get a COVID-19 vaccine
It’s always your choice if you want to get a vaccine or not. Your decision won’t affect your VA health care or any of your VA benefits in any way.
Here are some reasons to get a COVID-19 vaccine:
- Vaccination is the safest way to protect you and your family from severe illness and death from COVID-19. Vaccination provides a safer and more predictable immune response than infection. Getting sick with COVID-19 can offer some protection against future illness, but the level of protection may vary. COVID-19 vaccines can provide additional protection, even in people who have already been infected with COVID-19.
- The COVID-19 vaccines are safe. Scientists studied all the original Food and Drug Administration (FDA) authorized vaccines in at least 3 phases of clinical trials to ensure they are safe and effective. They continue to study the updated vaccines. Hundreds of millions of people have safely received COVID-19 vaccines in the U.S.
- There is no cure for COVID-19 at this time. There are treatments for COVID-19. But the risk of severe illness and death are still high in certain groups of people. Talk to your health care provider before taking any medications to prevent or treat COVID-19.
Learn more about COVID-19 treatments on the CDC website - Some people report long-term effects of COVID-19. Most people get better in weeks. But some people have effects that last for a longer time. These effects may include symptoms like dizziness, depression, or feeling very tired. They may also include effects on vital organs like your heart or lungs. The effects can happen even after a mild illness.
Learn more about long-term COVID-19 effects on the CDC website - When you’re up to date on your COVID-19 vaccines, you can do more. This may include visiting with family and friends or going to different activities. Staying up to date with your vaccines reduces your risk of severe illness or death from COVID-19.
- You can get a free COVID-19 vaccine—even if you don’t have health insurance.
Find out how to get a COVID-19 vaccine at VA
Find COVID-19 vaccines near you on the CDC website
Vaccine effectiveness
Scientists studied the original FDA authorized COVID-19 vaccines in tens of thousands of people in clinical trials. The trials included people of all ages, genders, races, and ethnicities. Scientists continue to monitor the effectiveness of the vaccines over time.
Results show that the vaccines work well in these ways:
- The vaccines help protect you from getting COVID-19. Vaccines help train your body’s natural immune system to recognize and fight a specific disease by stimulating a response to the virus that causes that disease. Over time, this protection decreases. So you may need additional vaccine doses to stay protected.
- Even if you get COVID-19, the vaccines help protect you from getting severe illness. Severe illness may mean having to go to the hospital, needing a ventilator to breathe, or having an illness that results in death. This protection is one of the main benefits of vaccination.
- The vaccines may protect you from developing long-term effects of COVID-19. People who get COVID-19 after vaccination are less likely to report these long-term effects.
Learn more about long-term COVID-19 effects on the CDC website - The vaccines offer good protection against most COVID-19 variants. Variants are new forms of the virus that causes COVID-19. Updated vaccines protect against newer variants.
We’re still learning about how long vaccines protect you from COVID-19. We’re also still learning how well vaccines protect you from spreading the virus that causes COVID-19.
Learn more about how COVID-19 vaccines work on the CDC website
Vaccine safety
Here’s how we know that COVID-19 vaccines are safe:
- Scientists studied the original COVID-19 vaccines in tens of thousands of people in clinical trials. These trials showed no serious safety concerns. The trials included people of all ages, genders, races, and ethnicities.
- All the current vaccines have met the FDA’s high safety standards. Before the FDA approves or authorizes a vaccine for use, they review all safety data and clinical trial results. They also review the process a company uses to make the vaccine. They make sure the process follows quality and safety standards.
- Hundreds of millions of people in the United States have now received COVID-19 vaccines. Serious safety problems are rare.
Learn more about these rare problems on the CDC website - COVID-19 vaccines continue to undergo the most intense safety monitoring in U.S. history. The FDA and CDC respond right away if data shows a vaccine may cause health problems—no matter how rare.
Vaccines during pregnancy or breastfeeding
The CDC and other experts strongly recommend that people who are pregnant, planning to become pregnant, or breastfeeding get a COVID-19 vaccine.
Risks of COVID-19 during pregnancy
Here’s what we know about the risks of COVID-19 during pregnancy and how vaccines can help:
- Pregnant people are at increased risk of severe illness from COVID-19. Severe illness may mean having to go to the hospital, needing a ventilator to breathe, or having an illness that results in death. Pregnant people also have an increased risk of preterm birth.
- COVID-19 vaccines can help protect you from COVID-19. Even if you do get COVID-19, a vaccine can help protect you from severe illness.
- COVID-19 vaccination in a pregnant or breastfeeding person may provide some protection to their newborn. Some immunity may pass to the newborn through the placenta and through human milk.
COVID-19 vaccine safety during pregnancy and breastfeeding
Here’s what we know about COVID-19 vaccine safety in people who are pregnant, planning to become pregnant, or breastfeeding:
- You don’t need to get a pregnancy test before you get a COVID-19 vaccine. The FDA approved or authorized COVID-19 vaccines don’t have ingredients that we know to be harmful people who are pregnant or to a developing fetus.
- Experts believe that COVID-19 vaccines are safe for people who are pregnant or planning to become pregnant and their babies. Safety data for mRNA COVID-19 vaccines (Pfizer-BioNTech and Moderna) suggest that there are no increased risks of miscarriage or harm to pregnant people or their babies.
- COVID-19 vaccination before and during pregnancy is safe and effective. COVID-19 vaccination during pregnancy is beneficial to both the pregnant person and the baby.
Learn more about COVID-19 vaccines while pregnant or breastfeeding on the CDC website - Experts believe that COVID-19 vaccines are safe for people who are breastfeeding and their babies. Safety data for mRNA COVID-19 vaccines (Pfizer-BioNTech and Moderna) suggest that there are no increased risks to people who breastfeed or chestfeed. You do not have to delay or stop breastfeeding to get the vaccine.
- Experts recommend people who are breastfeeding get a COVID-19 vaccine and stay up to date with their vaccines. People who receive COVID-19 vaccines while breastfeeding have antibodies in their breastmilk, which may help protect their babies.
Learn more about COVID-19 vaccines while pregnant or breastfeeding on the CDC website - There’s no evidence that COVID-19 vaccines affect fertility among the millions of people who’ve received the vaccines so far. If you’re planning or trying to get pregnant, experts recommend you get a COVID-19 vaccine. If you find out you’re pregnant after you get your first dose of a vaccine that requires 2 doses, you should still get the second dose.
- If you have a fever after you get your vaccine, you should take acetaminophen (Tylenol®). Fever, for any reason, during pregnancy has been associated with adverse pregnancy outcomes.
More information about COVID-19 vaccines and pregnancy
Download our COVID-19 and women’s health fact sheet (PDF)
Learn more about COVID-19 vaccines, pregnancy, and breastfeeding on the CDC website
You can also talk with your health care provider about getting your vaccine. Your provider is always the best person to answer questions about your unique health needs.
More facts about COVID-19 vaccines
The Novavax vaccine is the same type of vaccine as some of our current shingles and flu vaccines
The Novavax COVID-19 vaccine is a “protein subunit” vaccine, like some of our current shingles and flu vaccines. We’ve used this type of vaccine in the U.S for more than 30 years.
The Novavax COVID-19 vaccine injects the coronavirus spike protein itself into the body to induce an immune response. In contrast, mRNA COVID-19 vaccines (Pfizer, Moderna) teach our body how to make the spike protein to induce an immune response.
mRNA COVID-19 vaccines don’t change your DNA
mRNA vaccines that protect you from COVID-19 don’t alter your DNA. These vaccines work outside of your cell’s nucleus (where your DNA is kept). The vaccines teach your cells how to make a protein that triggers an immune response. Your cells then break down the mRNA and get rid of it soon after they’ve finished using the instructions.
COVID-19 vaccines can’t give you COVID-19
The current COVID-19 vaccines, and the vaccines still in development, use one of these methods:
- An inactivated virus
- A harmless piece of the virus
- A gene from the virus
None of these can cause COVID-19.
Learn more about how COVID-19 vaccines work on the CDC website
Vaccines protect you, your family, and your community
How vaccines protect you
Vaccines help train your body’s natural immune system to recognize and fight a specific disease by stimulating a response to the virus that causes that disease.
When a virus is introduced to your body for the first time, your immune system mounts a defense. This includes making antibodies that help kill or neutralize the virus. If you’re exposed to the same virus again, these antibodies also help your immune system recognize and fight the virus quickly.
Learn more about how COVID-19 vaccines work on the CDC website
How vaccines protect the people around you
Protecting whole communities from diseases like COVID-19 is an important reason for everyone to get vaccines. We call this “community immunity.”
When enough people are vaccinated and develop immunity to a certain virus, that virus can’t spread as easily from person to person. This means that everyone in the community is less likely to get infected. Even if some people do still get infected, there’s less chance of an outbreak that causes many people in the community to get sick at the same time. This helps prevent issues like too many people needing care at once and not having enough hospital beds or health care providers.
Data shows that some communities have been disproportionately affected by COVID-19. These include Black, Hispanic, Native American, Pacific Islander, and Asian communities. Members of these communities can help protect their families and friends by getting vaccinated.
You should get a COVID-19 vaccine even if you’ve had COVID-19 before
Data from clinical trials show that COVID-19 vaccines are safe in people who’ve been infected with the virus that causes COVID-19 in the past.
If you’re currently sick from COVID-19, you should wait until you’ve recovered and you’re finished with isolation to get a vaccine.
Go to the CDC website for answers to more common questions about COVID-19 vaccines
Scientists created and tested COVID-19 vaccines quickly, but still followed FDA review steps
Here’s what you should know about how scientists created and tested COVID-19 vaccines so quickly:
- They built on earlier work. Scientists have been studying vaccines for more than 100 years. Scientists have been studying the technology for mRNA vaccines for more than 20 years. And the National Institutes of Health (NIH) was working on creating a coronavirus vaccine even before the COVID-19 pandemic.
- They got the funding they needed to work quickly. The COVID-19 pandemic was a public health emergency. So the U.S. government invested millions of dollars to help study and test vaccines.
- They used a faster review process with all the same steps. The FDA authorized the original COVID-19 vaccines under their Emergency Use Authorization (EUA). An EUA follows the same steps that full-term clinical trials take. This includes testing each vaccine on thousands of human participants. The only difference is that an EUA speeds up the FDA’s review process. This helps get critical vaccines to people faster while still making sure the vaccines are safe and that they work well.
- They involved many experts in reviewing data. Independent groups also reviewed trial results to make sure the vaccines are safe. These include groups like the National Medical Association, the leading professional society of Black doctors.
The FDA continues to monitor COVID-19 vaccines even after they’re approved.
Play this FDA video to learn more about the EUA process (YouTube)
It’s safe to get several vaccines in the same year
Vaccines have pieces of germs or viruses, killed germs, or weakened germs in them.
The goal of a vaccine is to teach your immune system to make antibodies to fight off the real virus if you’re exposed to it. In the natural state, your body is exposed to thousands of germs. Your body then makes antibodies in response. Vaccines are a safer way for your body to learn to make antibodies to some of the more dangerous viruses, like COVID-19. But vaccines use the same natural process of your immune system, which is already activated often by germs and viruses.
We know that COVID-19 vaccines work well to prevent severe illness and death from COVID-19. Scientists continue to study the effectiveness of the COVID-19 vaccines as new variants appear.
As the vaccine science evolves, the CDC may recommend additional updated vaccines. That shouldn’t prevent you from getting a dose of COVID-19 vaccine now if you’re eligible.