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Pfizer COVID-19 vaccine sales tumble after government guidance on the shots narrows

TECH

Pfizer COVID-19 vaccine sales tumble after government guidance on the shots narrows
TECH

TECH

Pfizer COVID-19 vaccine sales tumble after government guidance on the shots narrows

2025-11-05 01:21 Last Updated At:01:30

The fall COVID-19 vaccine season is starting slowly for Pfizer, with U.S. sales of its Comirnaty shots sinking 25% after federal regulators narrowed recommendations on who should get them.

Approval of updated shots also came several weeks later than usual, and Pfizer said Tuesday that hurt sales as well.

Many Americans get vaccinations in the fall, to protect against any disease surges in the coming winter. Experts say interest in COVID-19 shots has been declining, and that trend could pick up this fall due to anti-vaccine sentiment and confusion about whether the shots are necessary.

The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention last month stopped recommending COVID-19 shots for anyone, instead leaving the choice up to patients. The government agency said it was adopting recommendations made by advisers picked by U.S. Health Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr.

Before this year, U.S. health officials — following the advice of infectious disease experts — recommended annual COVID-19 boosters for all Americans ages 6 months and older. The idea was to update protection as the coronavirus evolves.

But that sentiment started to shift earlier this year when Kennedy, who has questioned the safety of COVID-19 vaccines, said they were no longer recommended for healthy children and pregnant women.

Dr. Amesh Adalja said vaccine rates have been “suboptimal” in recent years even for people considered a high risk for catching a bad case of COVID-19.

“That’s only going to fall off more this season,” the senior scholar at the Johns Hopkins Center for Health Security said recently.

The shifting guidance caused some confusion in September, once updated shots began arriving at drugstores, the main place Americans go to get vaccinated. Some locations required prescriptions or started asking customers if they had a condition that made them susceptible to a bad case of COVID-19.

The change in government guidance also created questions about whether insurance coverage would continue. A major industry group, America’s Health Insurance Plans, has since clarified that its members will cover the shots.

CVS Health announced earlier this month that it will not require prescriptions at its stores and clinics.

Pharmacy owner Theresa Tolle says this fall has probably been one of the more confusing seasons for her customers. Tolle runs the independent Bay Street Pharmacy in Sebastian, Florida.

She said her COVID-19 vaccine business has been busy because she has an older patient population. Many still want the shots. But she’s also had more customers tell her this year that they don’t want them.

“There’s just so many messages out there, they don’t know who to believe,” she said. “I’ve had people tell me they are afraid of it when they’ve had it many times.”

Pfizer saw U.S. Comirnaty sales drop to $870 million in the recently completed third quarter from $1.16 billion in the same time frame last year. That came after vaccine sales rose the first two quarters of the year.

Pfizer also said Tuesday that sales of its COVID-19 treatment, Paxlovid, dropped more than 50% in the quarter both in the U.S. and internationally due to lower infection rates.

Wall Street analysts also expect sales of the COVID-19 vaccine Spikevax from Moderna to tumble about 50% in the third quarter, according to the data firm FactSet.

Moderna will report its third-quarter results on Thursday.

FILE - The Pfizer logo is displayed at the company's headquarters, Friday, Feb. 5, 2021, in New York. (AP Photo/Mark Lennihan, File)

FILE - The Pfizer logo is displayed at the company's headquarters, Friday, Feb. 5, 2021, in New York. (AP Photo/Mark Lennihan, File)

FILE - A healthcare worker prepares a shot of the Pfizer COVID-19 vaccine in La Paz, Bolivia, Jan. 7, 2025. (AP Photo/Juan Karita, File)

FILE - A healthcare worker prepares a shot of the Pfizer COVID-19 vaccine in La Paz, Bolivia, Jan. 7, 2025. (AP Photo/Juan Karita, File)

LAS VEGAS--(BUSINESS WIRE)--Apr 1, 2026--

Senzing, developers of industry-leading entity resolution technology, today announced that Stephen Gilderdale has joined the company as President & Chief Commercial Officer. In this role, Gilderdale will lead the company’s global commercial organization, with responsibility for sales, partnerships, marketing, and revenue operations.

This press release features multimedia. View the full release here: https://www.businesswire.com/news/home/20260401899657/en/

Gilderdale brings deep experience building and scaling customer-facing teams across enterprise technology. Before joining Senzing®, he served as Executive Vice President of Global Customer Solutions and Services at Collibra, where he led a global organization focused on helping enterprises build greater confidence in their data and turn that confidence into business results. Earlier in his career, he held senior go-to-market leadership roles at Dell Technologies and also gained formative experience in financial markets.

At Senzing, Gilderdale will work closely with customers and partners to help organizations across banking, insurance, and AI agentic deployments unlock greater value from identity intelligence and trusted data. This work is increasingly important as enterprises look to strengthen AI, analytics, and real-time decisioning with more accurate, connected, and explainable entity data.

“Stephen is a proven growth leader who knows how to align teams, sharpen execution, and keep the customer at the center of the business,” said Jeff Jonas, Founder and CEO of Senzing. “He brings the commercial discipline, global operating experience, and leadership maturity that will help Senzing scale its next phase of growth as enterprises rise to meet both the opportunities and risks of agentic AI.”

“I am excited to join Senzing at such an important stage of growth, as demand for identity intelligence continues to rise across AI and agentic markets,” said Gilderdale. “Organizations everywhere are under pressure to turn complex data into trusted insight they can act on. Senzing brings a unique ability to help customers do exactly that. I look forward to working with the team, customers, and partners to build on that momentum.”

About Senzing

Senzing delivers the identity intelligence organizations need to achieve their agentic AI aspirations. As the creator of Agentic Entity Resolution, Senzing enables AI agents to autonomously identify and act on real-world entities in real time or batch—keeping all data secure within customer infrastructure. Backed by 40+ years of innovation and 300+ years of combined team experience, Senzing is trusted by organizations worldwide to ensure their AI agents operate on accurate and trustworthy data. Senzing is headquartered in Las Vegas, Nevada. For more information, visit www.senzing.ai.

Stephen Gilderdale

Stephen Gilderdale

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