, protection against severe disease remained high at 6 months after vaccination despite lower efficacy in protection from
COVID-19 infection. An international panel of scientists affiliated with the
FDA,
WHO, and several universities and healthcare institutions, concluded that there was insufficient data to determine the long-term protective benefits of a booster dose (only short-term protective effects were observed), and recommended instead that existing vaccine stock would save most lives if made available to people who had not received any vaccine.
Israel first rolled out booster doses of the
Pfizer–BioNTech COVID-19 vaccine for at-risk populations in July 2021. In August this was expanded for the rest of the Israeli population. Effectiveness against severe disease in Israel was lower among people vaccinated either in January or April than in those vaccinated in February or March. During the first 3 weeks of August 2021, just after booster doses were approved and began to be deployed widely, a short-term protective effect of a third dose (relative to two doses) was suggested. After further data about long-term
vaccine efficacy and the delta variant came to light, the CDC ultimately made recipients eligible for boosters 6 months after the second shot, in late October. Subsequently, vaccinations in the country surged. In September 2021, the UK's
Joint Committee on Vaccination and Immunisation recommended a booster shot for the over-50s and at-risk groups, preferably the
Pfizer–BioNTech vaccine, meaning about 30 million adults should receive a third dose. The UK's booster rollout was extended to over-40s in November 2021. Russia's Sputnik V COVID-19 vaccine, using similar technology to AstraZeneca's COVID-19 vaccine, in November 2021 introduced a COVID-19 booster called
Sputnik Light, which according to a study by the
Gamaleya Research Institute of Epidemiology and Microbiology has an effectiveness of 70% against the delta variant. It can be combined with all other vaccines and may be more effective with mRNA vaccines than mRNA boosters. Booster shots can also be used after infections. In this regard, the UK's National Health Service recommends people to wait 28 days after testing positive for COVID-19 before getting their booster shots. Evidence shows that getting a vaccine after recovery from a COVID-19 infection provides added protection to the immune system. In 2025, researchers from Switzerland reported that COVID-19 booster injections increased the risk of having influenza-like respiratory illness (ILI) and being absent through sickness, performing
negative binomial regression analysis. Their research indicated that ILI frequency was significantly higher in those who got three (adjusted incident rate ratio (aIRR) 1.59, p-value0.05) doses. The third or fourth doses of
the vaccines led to 49 percent (p-value 0.011) or 50 percent (p-value 0.028) increases respectively in sick leave compared to unvaccinated. ==References==