U.S.
to make 400 million N95 masks available for free to fight COVID-19
pandemic -official
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[January 19, 2022]
By Jeff Mason
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The U.S. government
will make 400 million non-surgical N95 masks from its strategic national
stockpile available for free to the public starting next week, a White
House official said, marking the Biden administration's latest effort to
help curb the COVID-19 pandemic.
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The face masks will be shipped to pharmacies and community health
centers this week, the official said, and available for pickup late
next week.
The move comes after President Joe Biden and his team faced
criticism for not doing enough to foster masking or bolster testing
as the Omicron variant raged across the country.
Addressing that criticism and the wave, the administration has made
free tests available via a website that launched officially on
Wednesday in addition to its announcement about deploying masks from
the strategic reserve.
"This is the largest deployment of personal protective equipment in
U.S. history," the official said.
"To ensure accessing these masks is easy and convenient, the
administration is leveraging the federal retail pharmacy program and
the federal community health center program, so that free masks are
available at many of the same convenient and trusted locations
Americans go to get vaccinated and boosted," the official said.
The masks will be available at tens of thousands of pharmacies and
thousands of community health centers with supplies available by the
end of next week, the official said. "The program will be fully up
and running by early February."
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Masks like the N95 that form a
seal around the nose and mouth are considered
especially effective at preventing virus spread.
Last week the U.S. Centers for Disease Control
and Prevention (CDC) recommended that Americans
wear the "the most protective mask" that they
can. Biden's team previously
said there is ample supply to share the masks.
Hospitals have recovered from the desperate N95 shortages of the
early pandemic, but several executives told Reuters that healthcare
supply chains remain fragile and that small and poorly funded
hospitals are at most risk if Americans make N95s their "everyday"
masks.
U.S. mask makers told Reuters they have the machines to make
millions of N95s each month.
(Reporting by Jeff Mason; Additional reporting by Lisa Baertlein;
Editing by Kenneth Maxwell)
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