U.S. readies COVID-19 inoculation rollout as regulators OK first vaccine
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[December 12, 2020]
By Maria Caspani and Brendan O'Brien
NEW YORK/INDIANAPOLIS (Reuters) -U.S.
health authorities, shipping services and hospitals stood ready on
Friday to immediately launch a mass-inoculation campaign of unparalleled
dimension, as federal regulators granted emergency approval to the first
COVID-19 vaccine in the United States.
Last-minute preparations for the vaccine rollout came as the U.S. death
toll from the coronavirus pandemic approached 300,000 to date, capping
weeks of ominously surging infections and hospitalizations that have
strained healthcare systems to their limits.
Another 2,902 U.S. deaths were reported on Thursday, a day after a
record 3,253, a pace projected to continue over the next two to three
months even as distribution of available vaccine supplies ramps up.
The first shots are expected to be administered within days,
spearheading an effort widely seen as pivotal in ultimately vanquishing
a pandemic that has upended daily life in the United States and
devastated its economy. President Donald Trump said on Friday night that
vaccinations would begin in less than 24 hours.
Moving with unprecedented speed, the U.S. Food and Drug Administration
(FDA) on Friday approved emergency use of the coronavirus vaccine
developed by Pfizer Inc with its German partner BioNTech.
Britain, Bahrain, Canada, Saudi Arabia and Mexico have already approved
the Pfizer vaccine, and the U.S. advisory panel is due to review a
second vaccine, from Moderna Inc, next week.
Other vaccine candidates are in the works as the United States gears up
for a campaign evocative of the polio inoculations for children during
the 1950s and 1960s.
Delivery companies United Parcel Service and FedEx Corp stood ready to
ship millions of doses across the country, giving top priority to the
vaccines over other packages on their airplanes and trucks.
Plans call for U.S. marshals to provide security for vaccine shipments
from manufacturing facilities to distribution sites, including acting as
escorts for delivery trucks.
New York City officials announced plans to open a vaccine command center
across the street from City Hall on Monday to coordinate distribution
throughout the nation's largest city. Particular attention will be paid
to 27 hard-hit neighborhoods largely populated by ethnic minorities,
Mayor Bill de Blasio said.
"This is unprecedented because it's not just about logistics, it's about
making sure we win public trust, it's about ensuring equity," de Blasio
told a news briefing.
New York state expects to receive 346,000 doses of the Moderna vaccine
the week of Dec. 21, on top of the 170,000 Pfizer doses coming this
weekend, Governor Andrew Cuomo told a news conference.
VACCINE DRY-RUN
Healthcare workers and elderly people in long-term care facilities are
expected to be the main recipients of a first round of 2.9 million shots
this month, with initial limitations on supplies meaning most of the
general public will have to wait months for the vaccines to become
widely available.
The Indiana University Health center, one of the first hospitals
designated to administer the vaccine, rehearsed its vaccination
procedures on Friday, with pharmacists, nurses and doctors taking part
in drills for storing, transporting and giving actual shots to patients.
"We want to make sure that we are perfectly ready and open with a bang,"
Kristen Kelley, director of infection prevention at IU Health, told
Reuters.
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Healthcare workers take part in a rehearsal for the administration
of the Pfizer coronavirus disease (COVID-19) vaccine at Indiana
University Health in Indianapolis, Indiana, U.S., December 11, 2020.
REUTERS/Bryan Woolston
Elsewhere, many healthcare workers were struggling just to keep up
with a staggering caseload while facing shortages of staff and
personal protective equipment (PPE), including surgical gloves,
gowns and rapid diagnostic test kits.
"We don't have nearly enough. They're not readily available, they
take too long, and the supply chain isn't working consistently,"
Konnie Martin, chief executive officer for San Luis Valley Health,
which runs the Regional Medical Center in Alamosa, Colorado.
The Alamosa hospital serves six mostly rural counties in southern
Colorado that are home to some 50,000 residents.
The U.S. rollout faces significant logistical challenges to meet
President-elect Joe Biden's goal of inoculating 100 million people -
about a third of the U.S. population - within 100 days of his
inauguration on Jan. 20.
But any American who wants a vaccine should be able to get one by
May or June, Assistant U.S. Health Secretary Brett Giroir told Fox
News on Friday.
Still, there is cause for concern about Americans' skepticism of
vaccines, with only 61% saying they are open to getting inoculated,
a Reuters/Ipsos poll showed.
In the meantime, grim statistics continue to pile up as more than
200,000 U.S. cases per day were recorded for four straight days,
with another 220,815 cases on Thursday, according to a Reuters tally
of official data.
The United States has reported about 15.6 million known infections
as of Thursday.
State and local leaders have imposed a raft of constraints on social
and economic life in recent weeks to slow the contagion, even as
many Americans disregarded urgent pleas to limit travel, refrain
from unnecessary gatherings and wear masks in public.
Cuomo announced that indoor restaurant dining in New York City,
which resumed just over two months ago, will cease beginning Monday.
Compliance with such COVID-related shutdowns has proved to be far
from uniform.
A California youth basketball program whose leaders ignored
restrictions on sports practices and games was found to be the
source of a COVID-19 outbreak linked to at least 94 infections among
players, coaches and others, public health officials in Santa Clara
County near San Francisco said Friday.
U.S. COVID-related deaths are projected to surpass 500,00 by April
1, according to an influential model by the University of
Washington's Institute for Health Metrics and Evaluation.
(Reporting by Maria Caspani, Brendan O'Brien, Susan Heavey, Peter
Szekely, Sharon Bernstein, Ankur Banerjee and Anurag Maan; Writing
by Daniel Trotta and Steve Gorman; Editing by Nick Zieminski,
Jonathan Oatis, Tom Brown and Raju Gopalakrishnan)
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