Analysis: Rising cases, Omicron highlight holes in Biden's COVID
strategy, experts say
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[December 20, 2021]
By Jeff Mason
(Reuters) - Amid a new surge in COVID-19
cases and deaths ahead of the Christmas and New Year holidays, President
Joe Biden is drawing criticism from health experts, who are calling for
more urgency, testing, masking and global vaccine sharing.
Biden, a Democrat, took office in January pledging to get the
coronavirus under control. He presided over a massive vaccine rollout
and passed a $1.9 trillion pandemic relief package, a sharp contrast
with his predecessor, Republican Donald Trump, who downplayed the
pandemic's severity, dismissed many preventive measures and undermined
health experts.
Eleven months into Biden's term, however, the United States has recorded
800,000 COVID-19 deaths, over 300,000 of those on his watch, the highest
total and per capita of the Group of Seven (G70 wealthiest nations. As
the Omicron variant bears down and people gather for the holiday season,
hospitals in some areas are seeing record high numbers of COVID-19
patients.
Biden's vaccination push has led to 65.2 percent of the eligible
population being fully vaccinated, according to the U.S. Centers for
Disease Control and Prevention. Republican-led opposition means that
figure is less than 50% on some states. Less than 30% of the population
has an additional booster shot believed necessary protect against
Omicron.
The administration needs to push mask wearing, increase pressure on
companies to bring down the cost of tests, share technology on vaccines
globally and secure more funding to fight the pandemic on a broad scale,
health experts said. Many said the White House had let such measures
slide while focusing on getting people inoculated.
"Where's the leadership that asks for national sacrifice at a time of
emergency?" said Gregg Gonsalves, an associate professor of epidemiology
at Yale University. Biden should "get on TV tonight and say: 'I want you
to mask up.'" he said.
The White House has repeatedly said it has the tools to fight Omicron
without shutting schools and businesses, while promising more free tests
and widespread booster distribution.
Biden will speak on Tuesday about new plans, including driving home his
message to unvaccinated Americans to get a shot and for those who are
vaccinated to get a booster.
Broadway theaters, universities and professional sports leagues are
already canceling or postponing events, reflecting the reality of a new
COVID-19 wave.
UGLY U.S. POLITICS ON COVID
Biden's toughest challenge fighting the pandemic has been political.
Despite the abundance of free and safe vaccines, misinformation spread
through social media platforms and pushback on health measures, driven
largely by Republican politicians and conservative media, have thwarted
his efforts to persuade pockets of the U.S. population to get
vaccinated.
The administration vowed early on to crack down on private companies
spreading vaccine-related misinformation, but it persists.
"I think they underestimated the fact that the anti-vaccine movement was
first and foremost a political movement," said Dr. Peter Hotez, dean of
the National School of Tropical Medicine at Baylor College of Medicine.
A leading killer of young and middle-aged adults in the United States is
"anti-science aggression from the far right," he said.
The White House has sought to depoliticize the issue, sending health
officials onto Fox News, even as the cable channel's conservative
commentators sow doubt about vaccines and masks.
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President Joe Biden meets with members of the White House COVID-19
Response Team on the latest developments related to the Omicron
variant in the Roosevelt Room in the White House in Washington,
U.S., December 16, 2021. REUTERS/Evelyn Hockstein
Despite their sometimes significant differences, the White House
sees Fox News as an important outlet to disseminate public health
information, including on Biden’s Omicron strategy, a White House
official said. The president has sparred with Republican governors
whose policies clash with his. More recently, his rhetoric has been
less political, focused directly on urging people to get a shot. On
Thursday, he sounded a grim warning, predicting a winter of "severe
illness and death" for those who are unvaccinated.
TEST, MASK SUPPLIES AN ISSUE
Biden said earlier this month the government would require private
health insurers to reimburse their 150 million customers for the
cost of over-the-counter, at-home COVID-19 tests and make 50 million
tests available free through rural clinics and health centers for
the uninsured.
Critics call that insufficient.
"There's more uninsured Americans than that, and what we were only
supposed to take one rapid test ever? These policies are completely
inadequate," said Angela Rasmussen, an American virologist at the
Vaccine and Infectious Disease Organization at the University of
Saskatchewan in Canada.
Surging demand for COVID-19 tests from U.S. employers bringing
employees back to work exacerbated a nationwide shortage of rapid
tests in the fall, driving up costs for state and local testing
programs.
The recent spike in cases has led to long testing lines across the
country and left Americans scrambling to secure at-home tests at
pharmacies and online. The White House said there are tens of
thousands of free testing sites across the country, the supply of
at-home tests has quadrupled, and a dozen new rapid tests have been
authorized to come to the market.
"We’re working with governors and state and local health officials
to add more capacity," a White House official said. "We’re also
working with manufacturers to expand capacity."
Former CDC Director Tom Frieden told Reuters the administration also
needs to step up the promotion of mask wearing and that subsidizing
the costs of masks or distributing them could help.
"Masks ... and vaccination are by far the two most important
interventions, and it's still far too hard for someone to find out
the quality of a mask they're buying, to get masks at a reasonable
price. It's still too much of a Wild West out there in terms of the
market," he said.
The Omicron variant that is prolonging the global crisis may not be
the last, as vast majorities of people in less-developed nations
remain unvaccinated, giving the virus room to mutate.
Experts said the Biden administration could have done more to get
vaccines to the rest of the world, protecting other populations and
Americans as well.
"There's been sort of an ongoing battle with the White House to do
more," said Gonsalves, noting the new Omicron variant came from
abroad.
(Reporting by Jeff Mason; Additional reporting by Julie Steenhuysen
and Trevor Hunnicutt; Editing by Heather Timmons)
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