Full vaccination definition

Full vaccination means two weeks have passed after the second dose in a two-dose COVID-19 vaccination series or two weeks have passed after
Full vaccination means two weeks have passed after the second dose in a two-dose COVID-19 vaccination series or two weeks have passed after a single-dose COVID-19 vaccination which has been authorized for emergency use or approved by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration or the World Health Organization, regardless of whether a COVID-19 vaccine booster has been received.
Full vaccination means at least two weeks have passed after a person received a single-dose of an FDA- or WHO- approved one-dose COVID-19 vaccine or the second dose of an FDA- or WHO-approved two-dose COVID-19 vaccine, except that, for the purposes of this Order, a staff member who provides documentation of having received one dose of any COVID-19 vaccine before August 16, 2021 will be considered fully vaccinated even though two weeks have not passed since their final dose, so long as, if such staff member received a two-dose vaccine, the staff member provides documentation that the second dose has been administered before September 16, 2021�

Examples of Full vaccination in a sentence

  • Full vaccination has been shown to be effective in reducing COVID-19 virus transmission and protecting vaccinated individuals from severe consequences of COVID-19 and COVID-19 variants including the Delta variant currently circulating in Ontario.

  • Full vaccination of this cohort, combined with the other risk mitigation measures currently implemented, will greatly mitigate this serious public health risk.

  • Full vaccination shall be defined as a completed course of shots 6 such as one shot of the Johnson and Johnson vaccine or two shots 7 of the Moderna or Pfizer vaccines.

  • Full vaccination includes receiving all follow- up booster shots.

  • Contreras, Full vaccination against COVID-19 suppresses SARS-CoV-2 delta variant and spike gene mutation frequencies and generates purifying selection pres- sure, medRxiv at 2 (preprint, posted Aug.


More Definitions of Full vaccination

Full vaccination means having received the full series of a COVID-19 vaccine or combination of COVID-19 vaccines approved by Health Canada (e.g., two doses of a two-dose vaccine series, or one dose of a single-dose vaccine series); and having received the final dose of the COVID-19 vaccine at least 14 days ago.
Full vaccination or "fully vaccinated" – shall mean an attendee who has received a full series of a Health Canada approved COVID-19 vaccine (or a Health Canada approved vaccine combination) no less than fourteen (14) calendar days prior to entry to the Union Office and who also maintains their full vaccination status by receiving any Health Canada approved and public health authority directed vaccination booster shots as may be identified from time to time;
Full vaccination means that the final dose of the vaccine must have been administered at least 14 days prior to entry to the conference.
Full vaccination means at least two weeks have passed after a person received a single‐dose of an FDA‐ or WHO‐ approved COVID‐19 vaccine or the second dose of an FDA‐ or WHO‐ approved two‐dose COVID‐19 vaccine.
Full vaccination means that either two weeks have passed since receiving the second dose of FDA- or WHO-authorized, double-dose vaccines or that two weeks have passed since receiving the FDA- or WHO-authorized, single-dose vaccines. Attendees must be able to provide the official vaccination card or vaccination record QR code.
Full vaccination means 2 weeks after taking of the single dose of Johnson and Johnson, and 2 doses for Astra Zeneca, Sinopharm, Sinovac, Moderna, and Pfizer.
Full vaccination means that (i) at least two weeks have passed prior to the event since the attendee received either (a) one dose of the Johnson & Johnson vaccine or (b) a second dose of the Pfizer or Moderna vaccines and (ii) if at least seven months have passed since the occasion of (i)(a) or (i)(b), as applicable, that the attendee has received an authorized booster. (If CDC changes the definition offully vaccinated,” we will update our protocols accordingly.)