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Delta Variant Not Driving Hospitalization Surge in England, Information Reveals

The Delta variant, which is now responsible for most coronavirus infections in England, is not driving a surge in the rate of hospitalizations there, according to data released by Public Health England on Thursday.

Although the number of coronavirus infections has risen sharply in recent weeks, hospitalization rates remain low. Between June 21 and June 27, the weekly hospitalization rate was 1.9 per 100,000 people, the same as it was the previous week.

The hospitalization rate has increased slightly over the past month, rising from 1.1 admissions per 100,000 people in early June, according to the agency’s data. But it remains considerably lower than during England’s surge last winter, when the hospitalization rate peaked at more than 35 admissions per 100,000 people.

The data suggest that countries with high vaccination rates are unlikely to see major surges in hospitalization rates from Delta. Nearly 75 percent of adults in England — including 95 percent of those who are 80 or older — have had at least one shot, according to the agency’s numbers.

Earlier this month, England had delayed its plans to reopen after Delta caused a spike in new cases.

Case rates are highest among young adults, who are the least likely to be vaccinated, Public Health England reported. (Among those under 40, just 34 percent have been at least partially vaccinated.) Young people are less likely to develop severe Covid-19, which could explain why the spread of Delta has not resulted in a wave of hospitalizations.

Breakthrough infections, or those that occur in people who are fully vaccinated, tend to cause mild or no symptoms.

At a separate news conference on Thursday, the European Medicines Agency noted that vaccination should provide good protection against Delta.

“We are aware of the concerns that are caused by the rapid spread of the Delta variant and all the variants,” Marco Cavaleri, the head of biological health threats and vaccine strategy at the agency, said at the briefing. Given the research that has been done so far, the four vaccines that are approved in the European Union — Pfizer-BioNTech, Moderna, AstraZeneca and Johnson & Jonson — all seem to protect against the Delta variant, he said.

In one recent study, for instance, researchers found that the Pfizer vaccine was 88 percent effective at protecting against symptomatic disease caused by Delta, a performance that nearly matches its 95 percent effectiveness against the original version of the virus. A single dose of the vaccine, however, is much less effective.

“Expediting vaccination and maintaining public health measures remain very important tools to fight the pandemic,” Dr. Cavaleri said. “In particular, making sure that vulnerable and elderly people complete their vaccination course as soon as possible is paramount.”

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1,000 counties within the U.S. have vaccination protection of lower than 30%

FEMA members greet the public on their way to high school to be vaccinated on April 26, 2021 at a FEMA-operated Covid-19 mobile vaccination clinic at Biddeford High School in Bidderford, Maine.

Joseph Precious | AFP | Getty Images

About 1,000 counties in the United States have less than 30% vaccination coverage, the director of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention said Thursday.

The counties in question are mainly in the Southeast and Midwest and are, according to CDC Director Dr. Rochelle Walensky most susceptible to Covid infection. The authority already sees rising disease rates in these districts due to the further spread of the more transmissible Delta variant, said Walensky.

The Delta variant currently accounts for about 25% of the new cases sequenced in the US, and officials believe it will become the dominant strain in the country, dwarfing the currently dominant Alpha variant.

In some counties, the delta variant rates are up to 50% according to the CDC. “We expect increased transmission in these communities when we can’t vaccinate more people,” said Walensky.

According to the Institute for Health Metrics and Evaluation, an independent global health research center at the University of Washington, zip codes with the highest rates of vaccination hesitation are in states such as North Dakota, Idaho, and Alabama.

During the briefing, Dr. Anthony Fauci, Medical Advisor to the President, a study in The Lancet that showed mRNA vaccines were about 80% effective against confirmed Delta variant infection. The study also showed that two doses of an AstraZeneca vaccine provided 60% protection.

As for symptomatic disease, another study cited by Fauci showed that two doses of the Pfizer vaccine produced 88% protection against the Delta variant. A study by Public Health England showed that the Pfizer vaccines with the Delta variant offered 96% protection against hospitalization and the AstraZeneca vaccine offered 92% effectiveness after two doses.

“Preliminary data for the past six months suggests that 99.5% of deaths from Covid-19 in the states have occurred in unvaccinated people … the suffering and loss we see now are almost entirely preventable,” Walensky said .

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Stress and Burnout Nonetheless Plague Entrance-Line Well being Care Staff as Pandemic Eases

The interactions she has with Covid patients, many of them African American, often leave her shaken. She recalled a recent exchange with a woman in her 40s who was struggling to breathe. When Dr. Chopra asked whether she had been vaccinated, the woman shook her head defiantly between gasps, insisting that the vaccines were more harmful than the virus. The patient later died.

“It leaves me angry, frustrated and sad,” Dr. Chopra said. “These nonbelievers will never accept our viewpoint, and the result is that they are putting others at risk and overwhelming the health care system.”

The emotional fallout of the last 16 months takes many forms, including a spate of early retirements and suicides among health care providers. Dr. Mark Rosenberg, an emergency room doctor at St. Joseph’s University Medical Center in Paterson, N.J., a predominantly working class, immigrant community that was hit hard by the pandemic, sees the toll all around him.

He recently found himself comforting a fellow doctor who blamed himself for infecting his in-laws. They died four days apart. “He just can’t get past the guilt,” Dr. Rosenberg said.

At a graduation party for the hospital’s residents two weeks ago — the emergency department’s first social gathering in nearly two years — the DJ read the room and decided not to play any music, Dr. Rosenberg said. “People in my department usually love to dance but everyone just wanted to talk, catch up and get a hug.”

Dr. Rosenberg, who is also president of the American College of Emergency Physicians, is processing his own losses. They include his friend, Dr. Lorna Breen, who took her own life in the first months of the pandemic and whose death has inspired federal legislation that seeks to address suicide and burnout among health care professionals.

Most of the suffering goes unseen or unacknowledged. Dr. Rosenberg compared the hidden trauma to what his father, a World War II veteran, experienced after the hostilities ended.

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5 issues to know earlier than the inventory market opens Thursday, July 1

Here are the most important news, trends and analysis that investors need to start their trading day:

1. Stock futures steady after turning in a strong first half of 2021

The New York Stock Exchange welcomes executives and guests of Clear Secure, Inc. (NYSE: YOU), on June 30, 2021, in celebration of its Initial Public Offering.

NYSE

U.S. stock futures were steady Thursday on the first day of the third quarter on Wall Street. Investors hope the second half of 2021 remains as strong as the first half. The Dow Jones Industrial Average on Wednesday rose 210 points, moving within 0.8% of its latest record close in early May. Dow stock Walgreens Boots Alliance rose about 2% in the premarket after the drug store chain reported strong quarterly results and outlook. It also unveiled more details about its turnaround strategy. The S&P 500 on Wednesday ticked higher for its fifth-straight record close. The Nasdaq fell slightly from a record close in the prior session.

2. Wall Street’s June, second-quarter and year-to-date numbers

Wednesday was the last day of June, the second quarter, and the first half of the year.

  • Ahead of the new trading day, the S&P 500 was up 14.4% year to date. The Dow and Nasdaq were each up more than 12% so far in 2021. The S&P 500 and Nasdaq turned in gains for June. The Dow fell modestly. All three benchmarks were up solidly in the second quarter.
  • U.S. oil prices rose around 2.5% on Thursday to above $75 per barrel, the highest level since 2018. As of Wednesday’s settle, West Texas Intermediate crude was up strongly in June and in the second quarter. WTI has risen more than 51% for the year.
  • Bitcoin fell roughly 3% on Thursday but remained above $33,000. The world’s biggest cryptocurrency by market value, which saw an all-time high in April near $65,000 and recent lows below $29,000 last week, closed out the first half of the year down about 47% from its record.

3. Bond yields tick higher after new Covid-era low jobless claims

The 10-year Treasury yield, which began 2021 below 1% and spiked to 14-month highs above 1.77% in March, ticked higher Thursday to around 1.47%. Investors got another read on the U.S. labor market before the bell. After two straight weeks above 400,000, the government reported a lower-than-expected 364,000 new filings for unemployment benefits for last week, a new pandemic-era low. The government releases its June employment report Friday.

4. Krispy Kreme’s IPO prices below expected range, set to debut again

Krispy Kreme doughnuts go into production at the opening of the store at Harrods in London, Britain, October, 3, 2003.

David Bebber | Reuters

Krispy Kreme returns to the public markets Thursday, the morning after pricing 29.4 million initial public offering shares below the expected range at $17 per share. The IPO raised nearly $500 million, valuing the doughnut chain at $2.7 billion. Krispy Kreme, founded in 1937, was taken private by Keurig-owner JAB Holding in a $1.35 billion deal in 2016. It first went public in 2000. The company is set to begin trading Thursday on the Nasdaq under the ticker symbol “DNUT.”

In what was the biggest U.S. listing by a Chinese company since 2014, ride-hailing giant Didi started trading Wednesday morning and ended the day with a valuation of more than $68 billion. A slew of other firms, including Clear Secure and LegalZoom, popped in debuts Wednesday.

5. Trump Organization and its CFO indicted by Manhattan grand jury

Trump Organization chief financial officer Allen Weisselberg looks on as then-U.S. Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump speaks during a news conference at Trump Tower in Manhattan, New York, May 31, 2016.

Carlo Allegri | Reuters

The Trump Organization’s chief financial officer, Allen Weisselberg, surrendered to the Manhattan district attorney’s office on Thursday after a grand jury indicted him and former President Donald Trump’s company in a criminal case over its business dealings. The indictments against the firm and Weisselberg, handed up by a New York grand jury, are expected to be unsealed in court Thursday afternoon in Manhattan, a Trump representative told NBC News. NBC previously reported the charges center around allegations of Weisselberg and other Trump Organization executives receiving benefits without reporting them properly on their tax returns.

— NBC News and Reuters contributed to this report. Follow all the market action like a pro on CNBC Pro. Get the latest on the pandemic with CNBC’s coronavirus coverage.

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Are masks coming again? The Delta variant has some completely different officers rethinking precautions.

In May, federal health officials in the United States said that fully vaccinated individuals no longer need to be masked, even indoors. The council paved the way for a national reopening that continues to gain momentum.

But that was before the spread of the Delta variant, a highly infectious form of the virus that was first discovered in India and later identified in at least 85 countries. It now accounts for one in five infections in the United States.

Concerned about a global surge in cases, the World Health Organization last week reiterated its longstanding recommendation that everyone should wear masks.

Los Angeles County health officials followed on Monday, recommending that “everyone, regardless of vaccination status, should wear masks as a precaution in public places indoors.”

Barbara Ferrer, the county’s public health director, said the new recommendation was because of the increase in infections, an increase in cases due to the worrying Delta variant, and the continued high numbers of unvaccinated residents, especially children, black and Latin American residents, and important workers.

About half of Los Angeles County’s residents are fully vaccinated, and about 60 percent have received at least one dose. While the number of positive tests in the county is still below 1 percent, the rate has increased, added Dr. Ferrer added, and the number of reinfections in residents who were previously infected and not vaccinated has increased.

As far as Los Angeles County has managed to control the pandemic, it was due to a multi-faceted strategy that combined vaccinations with health restrictions to curb new infections, said Dr. Ferrer. Natural immunity among those already infected has also kept transmission low, she noted, but it is not clear how long the natural immunity will last.

“We don’t want to go back to lockdown or disruptive mandates here,” said Dr. Ferrer. “We want to stay on the path we are currently on, which keeps the transmission by the community very low.”

Health officials in Chicago and New York City said this week they had no plans to re-examine masking requirements. Officials from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention have declined to comment, but have also shown no intention of revising or re-examining the masking recommendations for fully vaccinated individuals.

But the Delta variant’s trajectory outside of the United States suggests that concerns are likely to increase.

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Who can journey to Phuket? Vaccinated vacationers who comply with guidelines

From July 1, tourists can visit Phuket without quarantine for the first time since March 2020.

In Thailand’s much-discussed “sandbox” pilot, the largest island has reopened to vaccinated travelers willing to stick to a laundry list of rules designed to safely resume tourism amid the pandemic.

The plan depends on a concerted vaccination campaign to vaccinate 70% of Phuket’s population, a goal local authorities achieved earlier this month as 74% of the population were vaccinated.

Local media has questioned this number, which is in stark contrast to Thailand’s nationwide immunization rate of around 4%. But confirmed Covid cases have dropped dramatically in Phuket. The island saw single-digit daily cases this week, while Thailand reported its third highest daily case count – 5,406 infections – overall on June 27.

The “sandbox” plan makes Phuket a testing ground for protocols which, if successful, are likely to roll out in other parts of Thailand – and possibly other destinations in Southeast Asia – later this year.

A test of the tourists’ appetite for rules

But Phuket, like most of Southeast Asia, doesn’t make it easy for tourists to enter.

According to the Thai Tourism Authority (TAT), to avoid quarantine in Phuket, visitors must provide:

  • A vaccination card with a vaccine approved by the World Health Organization or Thai Health Authorities issued at least 14 days prior to arrival; Children traveling with you are allowed
  • A negative RT-PCR test (performed within 72 hours of departure)
  • A minimum of $ 100,000 in health insurance to cover the stay
  • An admission known as a certificate of entry to enter
  • Proof of payment for a 14-day stay and necessary Covid tests or for a stay of less than two weeks, travelers must also present confirmed departures from Thailand
  • Evidence that travelers have spent the past 21 days in a low or medium risk country on a list on the Thai Department of Disease Control website that is mainly in Thai

A selection of countries and territories on Thailand’s list

Australia, Cambodia, Canada, Chile, China, Denmark, Finland, France, Germany, Greece, Israel, Italy, Myanmar, New Zealand, Norway, Russia, Singapore, South Korea, Spain, Sweden, Taiwan, United Arab Emirates, United Kingdom, United States

Source: TAT; updated June 29; List not exhaustive

Upon arrival, travelers must undergo a health screening and download a monitoring application called ThailandPlus. They also have to do and pay for a Covid-19 test and wait for the results at their hotel. Additional tests are required on travel day 6 or 7, for longer stays again on day 12 or 13.

Those who tested negative can travel freely around Phuket and other parts of Thailand after 14 days, as long as they practice social distancing, undergo temperature checks and wear masks, according to the tourism authority’s website.

Masks are required in public areas such as the beach and in cars.

Authorities recommend tourists to use SHA + restaurants and taxis in Phuket, but do not have to.

Pakin Songmor | Moment | Getty Images

Tourists are required to pay in advance and stay in hotels or host families that are “SHA +” certified, which means they have met safety and health agency measures and vaccinated more than 70% of the staff.

Anyone who tests positive “will be referred to specific health facilities at their own expense for medical treatment,” according to the TAT website.

More visitors than Rome in happier times

With almost 11 million arrivals, Phuket was the 15th most visited city in the world in 2019, according to a report by consultancy Euromonitor International entitled “Top 100 City Destinations”.

Wedged between Mumbai (No. 14) and Rome (No. 16), the island, with its estimated 420,000 inhabitants, towered above the list of international travelers but no domestic visitors, day-trippers and cruise passengers.

The entire travel industry awaits the reopening of Phuket.

Jade Chandhakant

Regional Director of Trip.com

Despite the island’s popularity, Phuket reopening is expected to be subdued. Spring Covid outbreaks in Thailand, combined with meandering schedules, rule changes, and late government approval for the “sandbox” program last week, may have put off summer tourists who have likely made other plans by now.

There is a preference for domestic travel and a persistent aversion to flying among countries returning summer, especially the types of long-haul flights required to reach Thailand from the United States or Europe.

Thailand’s neighbors are unlikely to pack their bags either. Tourism has not started in earnest again anywhere in Southeast Asia, where strict quarantines and sluggish vaccination campaigns have nearly ended the summer tourist prospects.

Unvaccinated tourists can visit Phuket but must be quarantined for 14 nights in designated hotels.

Pone-Pluck | Moment | Getty Images

That’s not good news for Thailand, as almost 72% of its overnight guests were from Asia in 2019, according to the United Nations World Tourism Organization. Almost a quarter of all tourists to Thailand come from China, which does not yet allow residents to travel freely for leisure tourism.

According to the Bangkok Post, 1,500 people are expected to arrive in Phuket, which would be a long way from the daily average of 25,000 tourists it received before the pandemic.

But it’s a start, and Thai officials hope to replicate it elsewhere soon.

What’s next?

With its sugar-sweet beaches and lively nightlife, Phuket isn’t the only “sandpit” Thailand has in the making.

The islands of Koh Samui, Koh Pha Ngan and Koh Tao were reopened to vaccinated travelers on July 15 following a similar scheme. The cultural enclave of Chiang Mai, a city in the north of the country, could soon follow suit.

If Thailand’s sandbox program proves successful, other countries could take similar action, said Jade Chandhakant, Trip.com’s regional director for Thailand and Vietnam.

According to the Thai Tourism Authority, direct flights to Phuket are operated by British Airways, Cathay Pacific, Emirates, Etihad Airways, Qatar Airways, Singapore Airlines and Thai Airways.

Pakin Songmor | Moment | Getty Images

“The entire travel industry is expecting Phuket to reopen,” he said. “We hope that the reopening of Phuket will mark the beginning of more ‘sandboxes’ and that this is a surefire way to resume recreational tourism in Southeast Asia.”

As for Thailand, whatever the outcome, the country may push for a reopening. Prime Minister Prayuth Chan-ocha indicated in a speech on June 16 that his goal was to open all of Thailand by mid-October.

He said Thailand “cannot wait for a time when everyone is fully vaccinated with two vaccinations to open the country or when the world is free of the virus”.

“I know there is some risk involved in making this decision because if we open up the country there will be an increase in infections no matter how good our precautions are,” he said. “Now is the time to take this calculated risk.”

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As Covid Rages, Putin Pushes Russians to Get a (Russian) Vaccine

MOSCOW — President Vladimir V. Putin urged Russians to get vaccinated against the coronavirus on Wednesday — his most extensive comments on the matter yet — as his country scrambles to contain a vicious new wave of the illness.

Speaking at his annual televised call-in show, Mr. Putin spent the opening half-hour trying to convince Russians to get one of the country’s four domestically produced shots. It was the latest instance of a marked change in tone about the pandemic from Russian officials, who for months did little to push a vaccine-wary public to get immunized but are now starting to make vaccination mandatory for some groups.

“It’s dangerous, dangerous to your life,” Mr. Putin said of Covid-19. “The vaccine is not dangerous.”

Only 23 million Russians, or about 15 percent of the population, have received at least one vaccine dose, Mr. Putin said. Polls this year by the independent Levada Center showed that some 60 percent of Russians did not want to be vaccinated. Analysts attribute Russians’ hesitancy to a widespread distrust of the authorities combined with a drumbeat of state television reports that described the coronavirus as either mostly defeated or not very dangerous to begin with.

Mr. Putin revealed that he himself had received the Sputnik V vaccine this year — the Kremlin had previously refused to specify which shot he had been given — and that he had experienced a brief fever after the second dose. But his message remained muddled, as he questioned the safety of Covid-19 vaccines in general.

“Thank God we haven’t had tragic situations after vaccinations like after the use of AstraZeneca or Pfizer,” Mr. Putin said.

Mr. Putin spoke just as his handling of the pandemic — long touted by the Kremlin as superior to the approach taken in the West — threatened to turn into a major debacle. While Russia’s Sputnik V vaccine is widely seen as safe and effective, most Russians have been avoiding it and other available, domestically produced shots. As a result, the country is suffering through a harrowing new wave of the pandemic, with the delta variant of the coronavirus spreading fast.

Russia’s biggest cities, Moscow and St. Petersburg, have been reporting more than 100 deaths per day recently, setting records; nationwide, the number of reported new cases per day has doubled to more than 20,000 in recent weeks, with 669 deaths reported on Wednesday. The official toll is likely to be a significant undercount.

Regional officials in Moscow and elsewhere have resisted lockdowns. But, almost certainly with Mr. Putin’s blessing, they have made vaccination mandatory for large groups of people in their regions, such as service workers. That has prompted an outcry from many Kremlin critics and supporters alike.

“I don’t support mandatory vaccination, and continue to have this point of view,” Mr. Putin said, putting the responsibility for such orders on regional officials.

Updated 

June 30, 2021, 9:29 p.m. ET

The renewed surge of the coronavirus could derail the Kremlin’s message of competence in comparison to Western dysfunction just as parliamentary elections approach in September. Mr. Putin’s most vocal opponents have already been jailed, exiled or barred from running, but obvious election fraud or a poor showing by his governing United Russia party could still weaken the president’s domestic authority.

Mr. Putin’s annual call-in show, first broadcast in 2001, has turned into a bedrock of how he has communicated with Russians during two decades of rule. More than a million questions were submitted ahead of time by phone, text message and smartphone app, state news media reported. They covered things like the cost of airline tickets, problems with building regulations, illegal logging and high food prices.

The lengthy session affords the president a chance to show that he is in charge, in command of the details of a plethora of issues and concerned about the welfare of regular Russians. It also allows him to blame problems on lower-level officials, while casting himself as the savior of the common citizen.

But it has also underlined the weakness of the top-down system of governance over which Mr. Putin presides. To solve even the most minor issues, it seems, Mr. Putin himself sometimes needs to get involved.

For instance, after a sheep breeder in the Caucasus republic of Ingushetia told Mr. Putin that he had been having trouble finding a plot of land to rent, the president pledged to speak to the region’s governor.

“Sheep breeding is very important,” Mr. Putin said. “People who do this deserve support.”

Mr. Putin spent much of the show focused on domestic issues. He shot down online rumors of new fees for farmers, pledging that “no one is planning a tax on livestock.” A woman’s smartphone video from a grocery store showed the high cost of carrots and other staples. Mr. Putin pledged to address the matter, noting that it was a global problem and that “the vegetable harvest is soon, and I hope this will have an impact on prices.”

But Mr. Putin was at his most animated when he was asked about geopolitics. Responding to a question about Ukraine, he repeated his oft-stated contention that Russians and Ukrainians were “one people” and that the country had turned into a puppet of the United States. He rejected another viewer’s idea that last week’s incident surrounding a British warship approaching Crimea could have touched off World War III.

But he warned that any attempt by the West to build up a military presence in Ukraine, Russia’s biggest western neighbor, would pose an existential threat.

“This creates significant problems for us in the security sphere,” Mr. Putin said. “This touches the existential interests of the Russian Federation and the Russian people.”

Some of the questions during the nearly four-hour show came as live phone or video calls, while others were prerecorded videos. Mr. Putin at times appeared confused as to whether or not a question was being asked in real time, talking back at some of the recorded videos. After some technical difficulties about two hours in, the hosts said that the show was coming under a denial-of-service cyberattack.

“Everyone talks about Russian hackers,” one of the hosts quipped.

Oleg Matsnev contributed reporting.

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Johnson & Johnson Covid vaccine might shield individuals in opposition to the delta variant

U.S. Surgeon General Dr. Vivek Murthy told CNBC on Wednesday there is reason to be hopeful that people who received the single-shot Johnson & Johnson Covid-19 vaccine may be protected against the virus’ delta variant.

Murthy pointed to data that showed the Oxford-AstraZeneca shot is highly effective against hospitalization from the more contagious variant. He also said people should think of the AstraZeneca vaccine “as a cousin” to J&J’s shot since it was “built on a similar platform.”

“While we are still awaiting direct studies of Johnson & Johnson and the delta variant, we have reasons to be hopeful, because the J&J vaccine has proven to be quite effective against preventing hospitalizations and deaths, with all the variants that we’ve seen to date,” Murthy told “The News with Shepard Smith.”

World Health Organization officials urged fully vaccinated people to continue to wear masks, social distance and practice other pandemic-related safety measures as the delta variant spreads across the globe.

The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, however, affirmed Wednesday that it’s leaving it up to states and local health officials to set guidelines around mask-wearing.

Murthy said the CDC guidance was based on giving people flexibility.

“The CDC, in its guidance, essentially, was giving people flexibility and choice but wanted people to know that, if you are fully vaccinated, your risk of getting this virus or passing it on is low, which is why it said masks are not required indoors or outdoors, if you are fully vaccinated,” Murthy said. 

Authorized vaccines from Moderna, Pfizer-BioNTech and Johnson & Johnson have demonstrated to be highly effective in preventing Covid, especially against severe disease and death.

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Behind Biden’s Pledge to Share 80 Million Vaccine Doses

WASHINGTON – When an airliner carrying 2.5 million doses of the coronavirus vaccine took off from Moderna from Dallas to Islamabad, Pakistan on Wednesday, federal officials had just gone through a dizzying bureaucratic back and forth getting them there.

The United States had a donation agreement with Moderna and Covax, the longstanding vaccine exchange initiative. Covax had previously entered into indemnity agreements with Moderna that protect the company from liability for possible damage caused by the vaccine. Officials at the American embassy in Islamabad had worked with regulators there to assess the Food and Drug Administration’s review of the vaccine; Pakistani regulators had to sift through tons of materials on the vaccine batches and the factory that made them before approving their use there.

Once signed, the result was what is known as a tripartite agreement: a type of agreement that increasingly engages the Biden government’s pandemic response efforts and underscores how the demand for vaccines in the United States is lagging as many countries seek help ask of those who have a surplus.

Amid criticism from some public health experts that President Biden’s vaccine diplomacy has been slow and inadequate, the White House plans to announce Thursday that it has fulfilled the president’s pledge to distribute 80 million doses by June 30 around 50 countries, the African Union and the Caribbean consortium of 20 nations have been officially offered, with around half already delivered and the rest planned in the coming weeks, said Natalie Quillian, the Biden government’s deputy Covid-19 response coordinator .

The dose-sharing effort has become an ongoing activity across the federal government, with alternate-level meetings several times a week and daily operational reviews. The White House can hold up to 15 country-specific calls a day, starting at 7 a.m., often to the National Security Council, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, the Department of State and Defense, and other agencies.

Approximately 75 percent of the doses are routed through Covax, which has delivered more than 91 million doses to both affluent and low-income countries. The rest is distributed through bilateral agreements that allow countries to retrieve and distribute cans more directly.

Researchers have estimated that 11 billion doses of vaccines are needed worldwide to potentially eradicate the coronavirus pandemic. In the past few months, tens of millions of doses of the three federally approved vaccines in the United States have gone unused, and more have come off the supply lines. White House officials said they wanted to ensure adequate supplies to Americans this spring before completing the overseas shipping overseas work.

To date, more than three billion vaccine doses have been administered worldwide, which is 40 doses per 100 people. Some countries have not yet reported a single dose, although the highly contagious Delta variant is spreading around the world, exposing other inequalities.

“If this is the pace at which it is continuing, then unfortunately it is much slower than necessary,” said Dr. Saad B. Omer, the director of the Yale Institute for Global Health, on the US effort.

Ms. Quillian said more doses would be shipped over the summer, in addition to the 500 million doses of the Pfizer BioNTech vaccine the Biden government promised this month to distribute to about 100 countries next year. She described this phase of vaccination diplomacy as procedurally more complex than the domestic vaccination program. Challenges with bilateral agreements, such as the three million doses of the Johnson & Johnson vaccine sent to Brazil last week, include: the recipient country is negotiating compensation agreements with the manufacturers.

When the cans destined for Pakistan were declared for shipping last week, attention shifted to packaging and transportation to the Dallas airport. The health authorities in Pakistan and an organization behind Covax – UNICEF, the United Nations Children’s Fund – will deliver it, an effort the Biden government wants to oversee. Less than two percent of the Pakistani population are fully vaccinated.

Dr. Hilary D. Marston, a member of the government’s Covid-19 Response Team and a former National Security Council and National Institutes of Health official who helped coordinate supplies, said the State Department and Centers for Control of Disease and Prevention had also worked with Pakistani officials to find out how many doses the country could store.

Pakistan is an obvious candidate for a vaccine donation, Ms. Quillian said. As a neighbor of India, which faced a devastating spike in virus cases this spring, Pakistan has likely been affected by the spread of the Delta variant, which was first identified in India. But the wider list of countries the United States has sent vaccines to required more consideration.

Updated

June 30, 2021, 6:05 p.m. ET

Jake Sullivan, the White House national security adviser, said at a news conference earlier this month that the government was initially prioritizing neighbors of the United States and Asian countries with spikes in virus cases.

The sharing of cans can sometimes appear to be an international matchmaking scheme. Some countries have requested the vaccine from Johnson & Johnson due to simpler storage requirements and its attractiveness as a one shot shot. Others have already approved one or more of the vaccines used in the US, which speeds up the process.

“Any country we offered a vaccine to,” said Ms. Quillian, “if they asked for a specific type, we were able to accommodate that request.”

Officials can still face significant hurdles. Since the donated cans were manufactured and sold according to American legal and official procedures, they must be approved separately by the recipient countries. The process often involves working out kinks with overseas regulators.

The use of Covax doses can sometimes stall, as in South Sudan and Congo, both of which put some of the initiative back due to logistical problems and vaccine reluctance. There have been clearer successes in bilateral agreements that the US has already negotiated. South Korea, which received a million doses of the Johnson & Johnson vaccine from the United States, reported that it used up 99.8 percent of the doses in just a few weeks, White House officials said.

Dr. Omer said that because of the time it takes vaccines to elicit an immune response, targeting donations to countries with outbreaks is insufficient.

“It has been six months, even since the vaccination program started, that we had some substantial movement on this issue,” he said of the dose-sharing campaign.

Ms. Quillian defended the government’s timing. “It’s hard to remember three months, or even February or January. We didn’t have enough vaccine for this country, ”she said. “The president wanted to make sure that we can take care of ourselves first and show that it can work here, and then we always wanted to share when we have surpluses.”

The government of Biden, said Dr. Omer said he needed to rely more on the CDC’s expertise in global vaccination campaigns, including its success in organizing the distribution of polio vaccines.

Dr. Michael H. Merson, professor of global health at Duke University and former director of the World Health Organization’s global program on AIDS, said a useful model for distributing vaccines overseas was the President’s Emergency Plan for AIDS Aid, or Pepfar. who worked with The Global Fund to provide, administer, and monitor the safety of antiretroviral drugs.

The CDC’s disease outbreak prediction operations recently received a financial boost from Mr Biden’s American rescue plan, which would enhance the White House’s efforts to identify potential virus hotspots overseas, White House officials said. A more organized program to do this work is underway, they said.

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Health

CDC leaving it as much as states to set tips for masks, director says

Rochelle Walensky, director of the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), takes off a protective mask during a Senate Appropriations Subcommittee hearing in Washington, D.C., U.S., on Wednesday, May 19, 2021.

Greg Nash | Bloomberg | Getty Images

CDC Director Dr. Rochelle Walensky said Wednesday the U.S. agency is leaving it up to states and local health officials to set guidelines around mask-wearing even after the World Health Organization urged fully vaccinated people to continue the practice.

The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention has “always said that local policymakers need to make policies for their local environment,” Walensky said during an interview on the NBC program “TODAY.” She added that the agency’s guidelines broadly recommend that vaccinated people don’t need to wear masks.

“There are areas of this country where about a third of people are vaccinated, they have low vaccination rates,” Walensky said. “There are areas where they have more disease in the context of people not being vaccinated. So, in those areas, we’ve always said please look, make suggestions.”

She added, “If you are vaccinated, you are safe from the variants that are circulating here in the United States.”

The CDC director’s comments come days after WHO officials urged fully vaccinated people to continue to wear masks, social distance and practice other pandemic safety measures as the highly contagious delta variant spreads rapidly across the globe.

Delta, now in at least 92 countries, including the United States, is expected to become the dominant variant of the disease worldwide, according to the WHO. In the U.S., the prevalence of the strain is doubling about every two weeks.

WHO officials said Friday they are asking fully vaccinated people to continue to “play it safe” because a large portion of the world remains unvaccinated and highly contagious variants, like delta, are spreading in many countries and spurring outbreaks.

“People cannot feel safe just because they had the two doses. They still need to protect themselves,” Dr. Mariangela Simao, WHO assistant director-general for access to medicines and health products, said during a news briefing.

The WHO’s comments were a departure from the CDC, which has said fully vaccinated Americans can go maskless in most settings, and sparked widespread confusion.

Walensky said Wednesday that the WHO makes recommendations for a global population, adding many regions of the world remain unvaccinated.

“When the WHO makes those recommendations, they do so in that context,” she said.

Still, while many states have lifted most of their mask restrictions, places like Mississippi are recommending that residents continue to wear masks indoors even if they are fully vaccinated.

Delta is the dominant variant in Mississippi right now and only 31% of the state’s eligible population is vaccinated, state health officials said on a call late Tuesday. About 96% of new Covid cases are unvaccinated people, they added.

– CNBC’s Rich Mendez contributed to this report.