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White House says it can offer booster shots to Americans while sharing vaccines globally

White House says it can offer booster shots to Americans while sharing vaccines globally
this delta variant. That's no joke, it is out to get to harm and ultimately to kill as many people as it can. With the more contagious delta variant. Now accounting for nearly all covid cases in the US. The CDC's is projecting new hospitalizations and deaths will increase over the next four weeks. The agency predicting as many as 664,000 covid deaths by september 11th. New cases and hospitalizations are already back where they were in november before the first vaccinations began. The vast majority of hospitalizations occurring among the unvaccinated The country, now averaging more than 137,000 new cases a day with nearly 90,000 people now hospitalized In the hardest hit states Alabama taxes Florida, Mississippi and Georgia intensive care units are more than 90% full losing within a week. Three patients under the age of 40. Just very heartbreaking. Of course I'm gonna get emotional talking about this, which I think a lot of people would understand. But it was a very hard week. Here's the hospital Alabama reporting. It is out of iCU beds. We are truly now in uncharted territory in terms of our ICU bed capacity. New cases in texas rising nearly 40% over the past two weeks, hospitals in Houston flooded with covid patients. Meanwhile, Governor Greg Abbott is now isolating in the governor's mansion after contracting covid also want you to know that I have received the covid 19 vaccine And there may be one reason why I'm really not feeling any symptoms right now. His positive test coming a day after he attended a crowded indoor event where most were not wearing masks and with more than 121,000 new child covid cases reported in the US last week, texas and florida lead the nation in new pediatric cases. The new school year is just starting in many places. Yet thousands of students and staff are already quarantined due to covid cases in districts across the country, experts warning this is just the beginning. Even as the debate over masking in schools rages on, we wish more than anything that there could be better safety protocols and procedures in place to keep our unvaccinated students safe to keep our staff safe. I do not want mass to be forced on my Children.
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White House says it can offer booster shots to Americans while sharing vaccines globally
White House officials on Wednesday insisted the U.S. could begin offering COVID-19 booster shots to fully vaccinated Americans in the fall while also continuing its efforts to help vaccinate the rest of the world, stressing the importance of doing both simultaneously to end the global pandemic."Look, I do not accept the idea that we have to choose between America and the world," U.S. Surgeon General Dr. Vivek Murthy told reporters at a White House COVID-19 briefing on Wednesday.Murthy continued: "We clearly see our responsibility to both, and that we've got to do everything we can to protect people here at home while recognizing that tamping down the pandemic across the world and getting people vaccinated is going to be key to preventing the rise of future variants."The surgeon general was responding to a quote from the executive director of the World Health Organization's health emergencies program, Mike Ryan, who said the Biden administration's booster shot plan is like "planning to hand out extra life jackets to people who already have life jackets while we're leaving other people to drown without a single life jacket."White House COVID-19 response director Jeff Zients pushed back against this assertion and said at Wednesday's briefing: "We're already proving that we can protect our own people here at home as we help others.""This is a situation where we're going to do both. We're going to protect the American people and we're going to do more and more to help vaccinate the world," Zients said.Zients said the administration was planning to offer twice as many COVID-19 doses to countries abroad than booster shots in the U.S. in the coming months. He said in this time frame the U.S. was expecting to dole out about 100 million booster shots in the U.S. and more than 200 million shots to countries abroad.He noted as the U.S. continues to deliver vaccinations at home, the administration has already shipped more than 115 million COVID-19 vaccine doses abroad, which is more than what all other countries have donated combined. On Tuesday, the U.S. started shipping the first doses of the 500 million Pfizer vaccines President Joe Biden pledged to purchase and donate to countries around the world.The Biden administration announced a plan on Wednesday to offer booster shots for all fully vaccinated U.S. adults beginning the week of Sept. 20, subject to authorization from the Food and Drug Administration and sign off from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Americans 18 years or older would become eligible for a booster shot eight months after their second shot of Moderna or Pfizer.Officials noted they anticipate booster shots will likely be needed for people who received the Johnson & Johnson vaccine and said they expected more data on J&J in the coming weeks.The administration's booster announcement was also criticized by the ONE Campaign, an international nonprofit fighting extreme poverty and preventable diseases. The group was co-founded in 2004 by Grammy-award winning singer and songwriter Bono and activist and attorney Bobby Shriver."While we understand the Biden administration's goal to further protect Americans, today's decision will further exacerbate global vaccine inequities and prolong the pandemic at home and abroad. In order to save lives, reduce the emergence of variants, and stop the spread of COVID-19, the U.S. and other wealthy countries must immediately share more doses globally," said Sarah Swinehart, a spokesperson for the ONE Campaign.Swinehart said: "It's outrageous that a healthy, vaccinated individual will be able to get a third shot before the elderly and health workers in low-income countries can get a single dose."The Biden administration's plans to administer booster doses are an effort to "stay ahead" of the coronavirus, Murthy said at the briefing.Murthy emphasized that coronavirus vaccines still appear to be effective in protecting against severe COVID-19, hospitalization and death, but said data suggest that protection against mild and moderate disease appears to be declining over time.The move was also met with praise, including by Dr. David Holtgrave, the dean of the University at Albany's School of Public Health. Holtgrave helped lead a New York study released Wednesday that showed COVID-19 vaccine continue to provide strong protection against hospitalizations and deaths."I am supportive of the decision to recommend boosters especially if we can simultaneously increase our global vaccination efforts as well," Holtgrave told CNN.He continued: "I was pleased to see more data reviewed and made available quickly for the public. I was also pleased to see that the decision not only looked at where we are today but where we are very likely to be under reasonable assumptions in the weeks ahead, and that a recommendation was made that would help us get ahead of an even worse trajectory. This type of forward thinking is important in addressing an infectious disease."

White House officials on Wednesday insisted the U.S. could begin offering COVID-19 booster shots to fully vaccinated Americans in the fall while also continuing its efforts to help vaccinate the rest of the world, stressing the importance of doing both simultaneously to end the global pandemic.

"Look, I do not accept the idea that we have to choose between America and the world," U.S. Surgeon General Dr. Vivek Murthy told reporters at a White House COVID-19 briefing on Wednesday.

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Murthy continued: "We clearly see our responsibility to both, and that we've got to do everything we can to protect people here at home while recognizing that tamping down the pandemic across the world and getting people vaccinated is going to be key to preventing the rise of future variants."

The surgeon general was responding to a quote from the executive director of the World Health Organization's health emergencies program, Mike Ryan, who said the Biden administration's booster shot plan is like "planning to hand out extra life jackets to people who already have life jackets while we're leaving other people to drown without a single life jacket."

White House COVID-19 response director Jeff Zients pushed back against this assertion and said at Wednesday's briefing: "We're already proving that we can protect our own people here at home as we help others."

"This is a situation where we're going to do both. We're going to protect the American people and we're going to do more and more to help vaccinate the world," Zients said.

Zients said the administration was planning to offer twice as many COVID-19 doses to countries abroad than booster shots in the U.S. in the coming months. He said in this time frame the U.S. was expecting to dole out about 100 million booster shots in the U.S. and more than 200 million shots to countries abroad.

He noted as the U.S. continues to deliver vaccinations at home, the administration has already shipped more than 115 million COVID-19 vaccine doses abroad, which is more than what all other countries have donated combined. On Tuesday, the U.S. started shipping the first doses of the 500 million Pfizer vaccines President Joe Biden pledged to purchase and donate to countries around the world.

The Biden administration announced a plan on Wednesday to offer booster shots for all fully vaccinated U.S. adults beginning the week of Sept. 20, subject to authorization from the Food and Drug Administration and sign off from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Americans 18 years or older would become eligible for a booster shot eight months after their second shot of Moderna or Pfizer.

Officials noted they anticipate booster shots will likely be needed for people who received the Johnson & Johnson vaccine and said they expected more data on J&J in the coming weeks.

The administration's booster announcement was also criticized by the ONE Campaign, an international nonprofit fighting extreme poverty and preventable diseases. The group was co-founded in 2004 by Grammy-award winning singer and songwriter Bono and activist and attorney Bobby Shriver.

"While we understand the Biden administration's goal to further protect Americans, today's decision will further exacerbate global vaccine inequities and prolong the pandemic at home and abroad. In order to save lives, reduce the emergence of variants, and stop the spread of COVID-19, the U.S. and other wealthy countries must immediately share more doses globally," said Sarah Swinehart, a spokesperson for the ONE Campaign.

Swinehart said: "It's outrageous that a healthy, vaccinated individual will be able to get a third shot before the elderly and health workers in low-income countries can get a single dose."

The Biden administration's plans to administer booster doses are an effort to "stay ahead" of the coronavirus, Murthy said at the briefing.

Murthy emphasized that coronavirus vaccines still appear to be effective in protecting against severe COVID-19, hospitalization and death, but said data suggest that protection against mild and moderate disease appears to be declining over time.

The move was also met with praise, including by Dr. David Holtgrave, the dean of the University at Albany's School of Public Health. Holtgrave helped lead a New York study released Wednesday that showed COVID-19 vaccine continue to provide strong protection against hospitalizations and deaths.

"I am supportive of the decision to recommend boosters especially if we can simultaneously increase our global vaccination efforts as well," Holtgrave told CNN.

He continued: "I was pleased to see more data reviewed and made available quickly for the public. I was also pleased to see that the decision not only looked at where we are today but where we are very likely to be under reasonable assumptions in the weeks ahead, and that a recommendation was made that would help us get ahead of an even worse trajectory. This type of forward thinking is important in addressing an infectious disease."