China Daily Global Edition (USA)

Pharmacies to get vaccine shipments

White House announces plan to send million doses to drugstores starting Feb 11

- By MINLU ZHANG in New York minluzhang@chinadaily­usa.com

The Biden administra­tion announced Tuesday it will begin direct shipments of coronaviru­s vaccines to retail pharmacies across the country.

Starting on Feb 11, 1 million doses will be distribute­d to about 6,500 pharmacies, White House COVID-19 response coordinato­r Jeff Zients said in a briefing.

“Millions of Americans turn to their local pharmacies every day for their medicines, flu shots and much more. And pharmacies are readily accessible in most communitie­s, with most Americans living within 5 miles of a pharmacy,” he said. “This will provide more sites for people to get vaccinated in their communitie­s.”

The number of participat­ing pharmacies and allocation of vaccines is expected to accelerate as drugmakers increase production. The White House said the ultimate goal is to distribute the vaccines through more than 40,000 pharmacies nationwide.

The administra­tion also announced it is boosting the weekly allocation of vaccines going to states, territorie­s and Native American tribes to 10.5 million doses beginning this week, a 22 percent increase since Biden took office on Jan 20.

Meanwhile, Moderna, the maker of one of the two federally authorized COVID-19 vaccines, proposed to increase the number of doses in its vials. The company is looking to ease a logjam in manufactur­ing and to expand its distributi­on.

“The company is proposing filling vials with additional doses of vaccine, up to 15 doses versus the current 10 doses,” Moderna said in a statement Monday.

The current dose limit is slowing output of the vaccine, company spokesman Ray Jordan said, as the company approaches the manufactur­ing of almost a million doses a day.

Moderna’s president, Stephen Hoge, said that additional doses would help address capacity constraint­s, noting that “beyond the amount of drug product available, is how many vials you can fill in a given period of time”.

Moderna has discussed the possible change with the US Food and Drug Administra­tion (FDA) but has not yet submitted manufactur­ing data to support, according to The New York Times.

Chinese Americans were among the racial and ethnic groups hit hardest by the COVID-19 pandemic in New York City, according to recent research by NYC Health + Hospitals, the city’s public hospital system.

Although Chinese New Yorkers had lower test positivity and hospitaliz­ation rates, the disaggrega­ting data shows that they have had the highest COVID-19 death rates of all racial and ethnic groups.

They had a mortality rate of 37 percent, nearly 1.5 times more likely to die from COVID-19 than white patients, according to the report.

Millions of Americans turn to their local pharmacies every day for their medicines, flu shots and much more.” Jeff Zients, White House COVID-19 response coordinato­r

The research analyzed 85,328 patients tested for COVID-19 in New York City’s public hospital system — the largest public health care system in the United States.

“I think so much of this really speaks to the social factors — multiple generation­s living in crowded housing, not being able to work remotely. I think we’ve been missing that for so long,” Roopa Kalyanaram­an Marcello, study co-author and a senior director of research and evaluation for the city hospital system’s Office of Population Health, told NBC News.

Andrew Yang, the former Democratic presidenti­al candidate who is currently running for mayor of New York City, announced Tuesday that he has tested positive for the coronaviru­s.

“I am experienci­ng mild symptoms but am otherwise feeling well and in good spirits. I will quarantine in accordance with public health guidelines and follow the advice of my doctor,” Yang said in a statement.

Yang said he still plans to attend virtual events, adding that “when the time is right, I look forward to once again hitting the campaign trail and advancing a positive vision for our city’s future”.

Indoor dining will resume with limited capacity in New York City restaurant­s on Feb 14, Governor Andrew M. Cuomo said Friday, more than a month after the governor had banned it as virus cases climbed.

However, concerns have been raised about bringing staffers back to work indoors when restaurant workers still aren’t eligible for vaccinatio­ns. Average per-capita case counts in New York City were 64 percent higher than when Cuomo announced an indefinite ban on indoor dining in December, The New York Times reported on Tuesday.

Cuomo defended his decision, saying public safety must be balanced with economic concerns. “People need to work, they need income,” Cuomo said at Monday’s news conference. “The federal government is talking about sending a check, but it won’t be a substitute for sustained income.”

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States