More
therapeutics but no surge in vaccine for Michigan, Biden administration
says
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[April 13, 2021]
By Jeff Mason and Carl O'Donnell
WASHINGTON (Reuters) -The White House said
on Monday it was prepared to send additional therapeutic treatments to
the state of Michigan, which is experiencing a worrying number of
COVID-19 cases, but declined to promise more vaccine as the state has
sought.
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White House coronavirus adviser Andy Slavitt told reporters the U.S.
government would work to ensure that states such as Michigan were
ordering the full amount of vaccine that was available to them but
said that shifting distribution was not in line with the
administration's public health strategy.
"We have to remember the fact that in the next two to six weeks, the
variants that we've seen ... in Michigan, those variants are also
... present in other states," he told reporters on a conference
call.
"So our ability to vaccinate people quickly ... (in) each of those
state rather than taking vaccines and shifting it to playing
Whack-a-Mole isn't the strategy that public health leaders and
scientists ... have laid out," he said.
Michigan Governor Gretchen Whitmer, a Democrat, has pleaded with the
federal government to increase the number of vaccines allotted to
her state to address a dangerous surge in cases but, despite close
ties to the White House, has been rebuffed.
Whitmer was on President Joe Biden's list of potential running mates
before he chose now Vice President Kamala Harris. Michigan is a
political battleground state that Biden won in 2020, helping to
secure his victory over former President Donald Trump, a Republican.
It is likely to be decisive in the 2024 White House race as well.
The Biden administration has highlighted an increase in vaccination
rates across the country while warning Americans to continue wearing
masks, maintain social distance, and follow other health protocols
to prevent another major COVID-19 surge.
U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention Director Dr.
Rochelle Walensky said more vaccine was not the answer to Michigan's
problem. She said the state needed to "go back to basics" and shut
down.
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"I think if we tried to
vaccinate our way out of what is happening in
Michigan we would be disappointed that it took
so long for the vaccine to work," she said.
"Similarly we need that vaccine in other places.
If we vaccinate today we will have, you know,
impact at six weeks and we don't know where the
next place ... is going to be that is going to
surge." Whitmer has faced fierce
political backlash from conservatives in her Midwestern state for
her COVID-19 restrictions, including armed groups entering the state
capitol and a foiled plot to kidnap her. She was a frequent target
of criticism from Trump.
Slavitt said that Johnson & Johnson is on track to deliver around 24
million COVID-19 shots to the United States in April whether or not
it receives U.S. regulatory clearance for its Baltimore vaccine
production plant, which is owned by contract manufacturer Emergent
BioSciences Inc.
J&J has faced delays on vaccine shipments because of challenges at
its Emergent plant, which ruined 15 million doses in recent weeks
due to manufacturing error.
Jeff Zients, the White House’s COVID-19 response coordinator, said
last week J&J would ship relatively few shots each week until the
Emergent plant received authorization from the U.S. Food and Drug
Administration.
(Reporting by Jeff Mason and Carl O'Donnell; additional reporting by
Susan Heavey and Caroline HumerEditing by Chizu Nomiyama and
Marguerita Choy)
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