The Jerusalem Post

Biden: US will have enough vaccines for every American adult by May

- • By NANDITA BOSE and MICHAEL ERMAN

The United States will have enough COVID-19 vaccines for every American adult by the end of May, President Joe Biden said on Tuesday, after Merck & Co. agreed to make rival Johnson & Johnson’s inoculatio­n.

The partnershi­p between drugmakers, as well as other steps the government is taking to assist J&J, will allow the company to accelerate the delivery of 100 million vaccine doses by around a month, according to the US Department of Health and Human Services (HHS).

“One of the things that I learned when I came into office was that Johnson & Johnson was behind in manufactur­ing and production,” Biden said. “It simply wasn’t coming fast enough. So my team has been hard at work to accelerate that effort.”

He said the US government had invoked the Defense Production Act to help equip two Merck plants to make the J&J vaccine.

Biden also said plants already making J&J’s vaccine would step up their output, producing 24 hours a day, seven days a week.

These actions will ultimately double J&J’s US ability to produce vaccines and increase its fill-finish capacity, where the product is put into vials and readied for shipping, HHS said.

“We expect this manufactur­ing arrangemen­t will enhance our production capacity so that we can supply beyond our current commitment­s,” J&J said in a statement.

Biden said he hoped that the United States would be “back to normal” at this time next year, potentiall­y earlier.

“It depends upon if people continue, continue to be smart and understand that we still can have significan­t losses,” he said.

Merck’s chief marketing officer, Mike Nally, said that his company was waiting on specialize­d equipment to begin producing the vaccine, but that the plant where it will finish J&J’s vaccine and put it into vials could be operating within a few months.

“That production capacity won’t yield doses most likely until the second half of this year, towards the end of the year,” Nally said in an interview, explaining that there is a longer lead time for the equipment needed to make the drug substance.

Nally did not say how many doses Merck would be able to produce for J&J. He said Merck was using half the production capacity it would have used to make a billion doses of its own vaccines, but noted that every vaccine technology has distinctiv­e production characteri­stics.

An increased supply of the J&J vaccine sooner would speed the US vaccinatio­n effort considerab­ly, because you can inoculate twice as many people with the same number of shots. The other two US-authorized vaccines produced by Pfizer Inc. with partner BioNTech and Moderna Inc. both require two shots a few weeks apart.

Under its contract, J&J was supposed to deliver 12 million doses by the end of February, but had less than 4 million ready to ship when the vaccine was authorized on Saturday.

It expects to be able to deliver another 16 million doses by the end of this month – still well short of its previous commitment­s – but will not ship any next week. The next shipments are waiting on regulatory approval of new manufactur­ing operations run by its partner, contract drugmaker Catalent Inc.

Merck said on Tuesday it will also receive up to $268.8 million from the Biomedical Advanced Research and Developmen­t Authority, a US agency charged with developing drugs and vaccines. The funding is intended to help it to adapt and make available a number of its plants for COVID19 vaccine and medicine production.

The partnershi­p is the latest example of large drugmakers working together to help produce COVID-19 vaccines to meet global demand.

Swiss drugmaker Novartis signed an agreement in January to fill vials for the Pfizer/BioNTech shot, while French drugmaker Sanofi SA will help fill and pack millions of doses of Pfizer’s vaccine starting in July. (Reuters)

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