White
House to finish allocating 80 million U.S.-made COVID-19 shots for
shipment abroad
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[June 18, 2021]
By Carl O'Donnell and Michael Erman
(Reuters) -The White House will finish
allocating 80 million U.S.-made COVID-19 shots that it has pledged to
ship abroad in the coming days, with shipments going out as soon as the
countries are ready to receive them, a top U.S. official said on
Thursday.
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The United States has already begun shipping doses, said White House
COVID-19 response coordinator Jeff Zients, adding that some shots
were meant to go to Canada on Thursday and some will go to Brazil in
the coming weeks.
Canada said it expected to receive about one million Moderna Inc
shots from the United States on Thursday. Later, U.S. Secretary of
State Antony Blinken said on Twitter that the United States had
delivered a million doses to Canada.
The Biden administration earlier this month announced plans for how
it will allocate 25 million shots and said it would allocate the
remaining 55 million shots by the end of June.
The United States has been increasing shot shipments abroad as it
progresses quickly in its vaccination campaign for its own
residents. The White House announced last week that it was
purchasing 500 million Pfizer Inc shots to donate to poorer
countries in 2021 and 2022.
More than 175 million Americans have received at least one COVID-19
vaccine dose so far, and nearly 65% of U.S. adults have received one
shot. Meanwhile, countries such as India and Brazil have continued
to face severe outbreaks of COVID-19 and are still in desperate need
of shots.
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Zients said U.S. cases and
deaths are down more than 90% since late January
and are at their lowest level since the start of
the pandemic.
But he cautioned he is concerned about low
vaccination rates in some U.S. communities,
especially as a dangerous new variant first
identified in India, known as the Delta variant,
is spreading in the United States.
Rochelle Walensky, the director of the U.S.
Centers for Disease Control and Prevention
(CDC), said her agency will present details on
Friday about more than 300 confirmed cases of
heart inflammation reported among the more than
20 million young adults and adolescents who have
received COVID-19 vaccines.
(Reporting by Carl O'Donnell and Michael Erman;
Additional reporting by Kanishka Singh; Editing
by Chizu Nomiyama and Jonathan Oatis)
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