Two straight weeks of good news: COVID cases are declining, hospitalizations are down, and the daily pace of vaccinations is on the rise nationwide. But hold the champagne. There’s trouble ahead.
The nation’s leading infectious disease experts are warning us the situation is dire because new, more dangerous strains of the virus threaten the success of the U.S. vaccination effort. They caution we’re in a race to vaccinate before the virus becomes vaccine-resistant.
Message to the Biden administraton: the public doesn’t want to see any more presidential press conferences announcing climate day, racial equity day, immigration reform day, or any other themes. Every day needs to be vaccination day. The urgency needs to be translated into action.
A variant dubbed B.1.1.7 appeared in the UK in September.
It’s at least 50% more contagious than original COVID, and forced the entire British nation into lockdown. The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention predict it will be the dominant strain here by March.
A new strain from South Africa blasts right through the antibody drugs used to treat former President Trump, and may also resist some vaccines.
An especially lethal Brazilian strain is producing carnage in the Amazon region, even causing serious illness in young people.
The threat from these new strains "changes everything," warns Peter Hotez, of Baylor College of Medicine, including the vaccine timetable.
Biden’s goal is the end of summer, but that’s too late, says Hotez, explaining "we’re going to have to figure out a way to vaccinate the American people by late spring. That’s a tall order."
Hotez admits that "to get there we need a rate of immunization two or three times higher” than Biden’s plan. Most experts agree. Jennifer Nuzzo of Johns Hopkins says “we are in a race against time." Dr. Ashish Jha from Brown University insists "there is zero justification for not vaccinating around the clock. We are in a race against the variants."
Biden claims his administration is waging "war" against the virus. Don’t believe it. He’s making open borders a higher priority. That’s deadly. Mexico is overwhelmed by COVID.
Mexican farm workers cross the border, decline to be tested, and spread the infection along the border towns, the New York Times reports. Yuma County, Arizona, where migrants harvest lettuce, has the highest infection rate in the U.S.
Biden has put tight restrictions on international air travel, while halting the Remain in Mexico program and border wall construction. Air travelers must test negative before embarking, quarantine on arrival, and test negative again. But what’s the point, if people from dozens of countries walk through Mexico and enter the US with none of those restrictions?
As for getting vaccine shots into people’s arms, Biden has instructed the Federal Emergency Management Agency to help 11 states so far set up and operate vaccination sites. He needs to expand this effort.
Recently, Pfizer failed to deliver doses as promised, slowing the pace of vaccinations in many places including New York City.
A shortage of raw materials was partly to blame.
That’s a lesson for the future. America needs a medical supply chain with active ingredients made in the U.S.
The US is also pitifully behind in identifying germ threats before they become widespread. Many countries routinely sample positive COVID tests for unusual mutations. The UK samples 10% of its tests. The US shockingly samples less than 1%, far less than any other developed country.
The Trump administration called on the CDC to boost surveillance testing last spring, and the Biden administration should make it a priority. Now and for the future. Surveillance testing is vital to identify future germ threats or even a biological attack.
The experts warn that Biden has a half-year window to vaccinate and conquer the pandemic. Our return to normal life depends on it. Yet instead of focusing on this one urgent mission, as he promised before he was elected, Biden is rolling out the left’s wish list.
So who cares about our lives?
Betsy McCaughey, Ph.D., is Chairman of the Committee to Reduce Infection Deaths. Read more of Betsy McCaughey's reports — Here Now.
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