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Ohio Gov. Mike DeWine, First Lady Receive COVID Vaccine

Ohio Gov. Mike DeWine receives his first dose of the Pfzier coronavirus vaccine on Tuesday, Feb. 2. [Office of Gov. Mike DeWine]
Ohio Gov. Mike DeWine receives his first dose of the Pfzier coronavirus vaccine on Tuesday, Feb. 2.

Gov. Mike DeWine and his wife, First Lady Fran DeWine, received the Pfizer coronavirus vaccine Tuesday at the Kettering Health Network Rural Health Center in Jamestown

 At age 74 the governor is eligible for the shot, according to the state's vaccination rollout plan. Currently, those age 70 and older can sign up to get inoculated.

Dr. Kevin Sharrett gave the vaccine to the DeWines, insisting that "house rules, ladies go first." 

"I'm ready," Fran DeWine responded.

As Sharrett gave her the injection, he said the Pfizer vaccine is 95 percent effective in preventing infection and 100 percent effective in preventing serious illness. 

As he moved on to the governor, Sharrett said after about 12 days of the first dose, the protection of the vaccine goes up at 60 to 70 percent and one week after the second dose of the vaccine — roughly 21 days after the first — is when a patient receives "the peak immunity of 95 percent."

The vaccine also covers variants of the coronavirus, he said. 

After the first shot, Sharrett said the couple may experience some soreness and redness at the injection site. There's also the possibility of having a low-grade fever and some body aches, but he said, "that is not a negative, that's a positive. That indicates that your immune system is intact and the vaccine is doing what it is expected to do and your immune system is responding properly."

When it was over, both DeWines got a lollipop.

Before receiving his shot, DeWine asked the doctor what he tells those skeptical of the vaccine. 

Sharrett responded that the vaccine is "extremely safe."

"The number one question I'm faced with is, 'I'm afraid of this vaccine,' " he said. "'I'm afraid it's new. It's been developed very quickly; I'm concerned about side effects; I'm concerned about long term effects;' the list goes on and on... I tell patients this: at the end of the day, you have to decide, am I safer with the vaccine or am I safer with the virus?"

Those who aren't vaccinated will sooner or later catch the virus, he said, "because it's not going to go away." 

"In my mind, the decision is very straightforward and very clear," he said. 

The governor plans to hold his regular coronavirus briefing at 2 p.m. and will take questions from media. 

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