Federal and state health officials have scrambled in recent days to
step up vaccination programs that had given shots to only 9.3
million Americans as coronavirus infections remain at record highs
in many U.S. states nearly two weeks into the new year.
Many U.S. states had strict rules in place giving shots to
healthcare workers and nursing home residents first, telling
"non-essential workers" they might wait months for their turn.
"We've already distributed more vaccine than we have healthcare
workers and people in nursing homes," U.S. Health and Human Services
Secretary Alex Azar told ABC News. "We've got to get to more
channels of administration."
Roughly 27.5 million doses have been distributed by the U.S.
government to states so far, according to the U.S. Centers for
Disease Control and Prevention.Azar said the outgoing
administration, which had been keeping doses in reserve to make sure
that all those who got a first inoculation receive their second shot
on schedule, was now confident enough in the supply chain to release
that stockpile.
Last week, a spokesman for Joe Biden said the president-elect, who
takes office on Jan. 20, would release more of the reserved doses.
The pace of vaccinations has risen to 700,000 a day nationwide and
was expected to hit 1 million a day within 10 days, officials said.
"Michigan and states across the country remain ready to get more
shots in arms, which is why the Trump Administration’s decision to
grant our request and release millions of doses of the vaccine is so
crucial,” Michigan Governor Gretchen Whitmer said in a statement.
Whitmer, who had backed the lower vaccination age, is seeking
permission from the U.S. government to purchase 100,000 vaccine
doses directly from manufacturer Pfizer Inc.
The U.S. Food and Drug Administration has authorized the vaccine
from Pfizer and partner BioNTech SE and a second vaccine from
Moderna Inc for emergency use.
As of Monday night, the United States had reported a total of 22.5
million coronavirus infections and 376,188 deaths during the
pandemic, the most of any country. Nearly 130,000 Americans were
hospitalized with COVID-19 at midnight on Monday.
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GRIM SCENES AT CALIFORNIA
HOSPITAL
A Reuters tally has shown that the number of
COVID-19 patients requiring hospitalization may
have leveled off, at least temporarily, although
public health officials warn that further spread
may still be seen from holiday gatherings.
California Health and Human Services Secretary
Dr. Mark Ghaly cited several promising trends in
COVID metrics statewide in recent days,
including a slowing in confirmed daily case
numbers and a leveling off in positive tests.
The number of new COVID hospitalizations statewide has fallen to
about 2,500 admissions a day over the past two days from a daily
average of about 3,500 admissions in previous days. Ghaly called
that “the biggest signal to me that things are beginning to flatten
and potentially improve.”
Despite the encouraging statistics, staff at Providence St. Mary
Medical Center in Apple Valley, California, said that the situation
was grim.
"Where in the beginning we were overloaded with a lot of patients -
we still have a lot of patients - but now it seems like they're
sicker than they've ever been before," said Mary Mendy, executive
director of acute care services at the hospital some 90 miles
northeast of Los Angeles.
"And every day there's Code Blues on the floor and more and more
patients are updated to ICU. It's devastating," Mendy said.
The latest surge has potentially been compounded by a more
infectious variant of the virus first seen in the UK and now found
in at least 10 U.S. states - California, Florida, New York,
Colorado, Georgia, Indiana, Connecticut, Minnesota, Pennsylvania and
Texas.
(Reporting by Peter Szekely, Barbara Goldberg and Maria Caspani in
New York, Anurag Maan in Bangaluru and Steve Gorman and Dan Whitcomb
in Los Angeles; Editing by Bill Berkrot, Peter Cooney and Cynthia
Osterman)
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