A new study has revealed that more lives could have been saved in the U.S. in the last three years if the Covid-19 booster vaccine was approved sooner. Researchers estimate that through June 30, 2022, the U.S. could have saved 29,000 lives among already vaccinated people.
Since Covid-19 vaccines became available in early 2021, and a booster dose became available in late 2021, the United States has had a difficult time trying to convince its citizens to get vaccinated and then to obtain a booster dose.
(Source: Pixabay)
Chicago/USA – A new Northwestern University study — led by Bernard Black of Northwestern’s Pritzker School of Law and Kellogg School of Management — suggests that the U.S. could have saved many lives by authorizing a Covid-19 booster dose sooner, along with stronger public health messaging. The study uses Israel as a counterfactual example of what the U.S. might have achieved.
Since Covid-19 vaccines became available in early 2021, and a booster dose became available in late 2021, the United States has had a difficult time trying to convince its citizens to get vaccinated and then to obtain a booster dose. Some other countries, including Israel, have achieved higher take up rates. For boosters, U.S. public health messaging was muddled, leading many older people — the ones who needed a booster dose — not to get one.
The study was published recently in the December issue of the journal Health Affairs. The researchers estimate that through June 30, 2022, the U.S. could have saved 29,000 lives among already vaccinated people by authorizing boosters sooner, and matching Israel’s uptake level and uptake speed. Moving more slowly on boosters than the U.S. actually did, as some advocated, would have cost many additional lives. “Every week mattered,” Black said. Booster rollout saved 41,000 lives through June 2022, compared to no booster authorization.
To compare the two nations, researchers used U.S. national data on vaccination and mortality rates, data on vaccine effectiveness from Milwaukee County, Wisconsin, (where they were able to link vaccination and mortality records) and Israeli data on vaccination rates.
The initial two-dose series of mRNA vaccines were highly effective initially, but their effectiveness waned over time, against both Covid-19 infection and severe disease. Israel was one of the first countries to vaccinate its population in early 2021, and was, therefore, also first to see the effects of waning. In mid-2021, Israel faced an exponential rise in infections, hospitalizations and deaths, many among the already vaccinated. In response, Israel authorized a booster dose of the Pfizer-BioNTech vaccine in late July 2021, with strong public health messaging on the importance of the booster dose.
“The booster campaign reversed the Israeli infection wave,” Black said. “Israel became a laboratory for the rest of the world on vaccine waning and the value of a booster dose in reducing hospitalization and mortality rates for persons aged 60+. Israeli evidence showed that boosters were both effective and highly safe.”
The U.S. moved more slowly to authorize boosters. It authorized boosters almost two months later — with boosters largely restricted to those age 65 and older or with major health complications. Senior U.S. policymakers wanted to move more quickly, but the U.S. regulatory system requires FDA approval before vaccinations and boosters can be readily available. The FDA, however, resisted acting quickly, with substantial internal opposition to approving boosters at all.
“The FDA is a science agency,” Black said. “They are accustomed to moving slowly and carefully vetting new drugs and vaccines and approving them only if benefit and safety are firmly established.”
The study illustrates the risks of regulatory caution in the middle of a pandemic. “Israel had highly credible data, which it shared with U.S. regulators, but the FDA wanted to see more U.S. data and not rely primarily on Israel,” Black said. “That U.S. data did not yet exist, because the U.S. vaccinated its population more slowly than Israel, and lacked Israel’s ability to collect real-time data.”
The study is titled “Covid-19 Boosters: If the U.S. Had Matched Israel’s Speed and Take-Up, an Estimated 29,000 U.S. Lives Would Have Been Saved.”
Black is the Nicholas D. Chabraja Professor at Northwestern, with positions in the Pritzker School of Law, the Kellogg School of Management and the Institute for Policy Research. In addition to Black, co-authors of the study include Israeli coauthors Aharona Glatman-Freedman, Lital Keinan-Boker, Amnon Reichman, and U.S. coauthors Vladimir Atanasov, Lorenzo Franchi, John Meurer, Qian Luo, David B. Thaw and Ali Moghtaderi.
Date: 08.12.2025
Naturally, we always handle your personal data responsibly. Any personal data we receive from you is processed in accordance with applicable data protection legislation. For detailed information please see our privacy policy.
Consent to the use of data for promotional purposes
I hereby consent to Vogel Communications Group GmbH & Co. KG, Max-Planck-Str. 7-9, 97082 Würzburg including any affiliated companies according to §§ 15 et seq. AktG (hereafter: Vogel Communications Group) using my e-mail address to send editorial newsletters. A list of all affiliated companies can be found here
Newsletter content may include all products and services of any companies mentioned above, including for example specialist journals and books, events and fairs as well as event-related products and services, print and digital media offers and services such as additional (editorial) newsletters, raffles, lead campaigns, market research both online and offline, specialist webportals and e-learning offers. In case my personal telephone number has also been collected, it may be used for offers of aforementioned products, for services of the companies mentioned above, and market research purposes.
Additionally, my consent also includes the processing of my email address and telephone number for data matching for marketing purposes with select advertising partners such as LinkedIn, Google, and Meta. For this, Vogel Communications Group may transmit said data in hashed form to the advertising partners who then use said data to determine whether I am also a member of the mentioned advertising partner portals. Vogel Communications Group uses this feature for the purposes of re-targeting (up-selling, cross-selling, and customer loyalty), generating so-called look-alike audiences for acquisition of new customers, and as basis for exclusion for on-going advertising campaigns. Further information can be found in section “data matching for marketing purposes”.
In case I access protected data on Internet portals of Vogel Communications Group including any affiliated companies according to §§ 15 et seq. AktG, I need to provide further data in order to register for the access to such content. In return for this free access to editorial content, my data may be used in accordance with this consent for the purposes stated here. This does not apply to data matching for marketing purposes.
Right of revocation
I understand that I can revoke my consent at will. My revocation does not change the lawfulness of data processing that was conducted based on my consent leading up to my revocation. One option to declare my revocation is to use the contact form found at https://contact.vogel.de. In case I no longer wish to receive certain newsletters, I have subscribed to, I can also click on the unsubscribe link included at the end of a newsletter. Further information regarding my right of revocation and the implementation of it as well as the consequences of my revocation can be found in the data protection declaration, section editorial newsletter.