Maragakis explained that, when the COVID-19 vaccine was first distributed, officials recommended that the shot be “separated from other vaccines by two weeks.”
“But that has since been revised, and now we know that you can get that vaccine safely along with other vaccines,” she said.
Dr. Priya Sampathkumar, head of infection prevention and control at the Mayo Clinic, told USA TODAY that “as we’ve given millions of doses in the U.S., we now know what sort of things to expect from the COVID vaccines.”