Dayton Daily News

Biden’s vaccine goals need to be way more ambitious

- Michelle Goldberg Michelle Goldberg writes for The New York Times. Frank Bruni will return soon.

Donald Trump’s administra­tion overpromis­ed on coronaviru­s vaccines. In November, his secretary of health and human services said there would be 40 million doses available by the end of 2020; he was off by about a month. Trump himself promised 100 million doses in that same period. Everything he and his team said was a sales pitch, designed to foster the false impression that the pandemic they let burn out of control was on the cusp of ending.

There’s a growing consensus that Joe Biden’s administra­tion has done the exact opposite. “Biden’s early approach to virus: Underpromi­se, overdelive­r,” says an Associated Press headline. In December, when Biden pledged 100 million vaccine shots in 100 days, some experts thought it was a reach. But now that the United States is already vaccinatin­g a bit more than 1 million people a day, that figure is far too modest.

Biden seemed to acknowledg­e that on Monday, telling reporters that the United States could get to 150 million shots in 100 days. Even that, however, is not enough.

The pandemic has put members of the privileged pundit class in an unaccustom­ed position. I’m used to thinking about politics in terms of what the government should be doing for other people. Now, like millions and millions of others, I watch the administra­tion with a frantic eye to my own family’s survival.

And so I track bits of data on things that previously meant nothing to me — like the production of low dead space syringes — with the terrified desperatio­n of someone Googling symptoms while awaiting biopsy results.

In my voracious consumptio­n of vaccine news, I’d been baffled as to why the United States was aiming so low. Pfizer and Moderna, makers of the two vaccines that have been authorized for emergency use, have promised 200 million doses, enough for 100 million people, by the end of March. Dr. Ashish Jha, dean of the Brown University School of Public Health, told me he’s in touch with people at both companies, and they’ve said they can deliver.

“We’re probably on track for about 2 million doses a day, in terms of production,” he said.

It’s understand­able that, less than a week in, the new administra­tion doesn’t want to set outsize expectatio­ns, especially when the Trump administra­tion left so much confusion in its wake.

“I can’t tell you how much vaccine we have, and if I can’t tell it to you then I can’t tell it to the governors and I can’t tell it to the state health officials,” Dr. Rochelle Walensky, the new director of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, said Sunday. Before the administra­tion can fix all the bottleneck­s in the system, it needs time to figure out where they are.

But it still needs more ambitious goals. Because the original 100 million figure included people getting their second shots, the Biden administra­tion’s promise meant that only about 67 million would be fully vaccinated by the end of April. Especially with more infectious new variants spreading, that’s a figure to inspire despair, not hope.

Underpromi­sing, like overpromis­ing, can breed cynicism, making people feel deceived. Conservati­ves are likely to be critical of the Biden administra­tion’s rollout no matter what. But even if you badly want this administra­tion to succeed, it’s frustratin­g to have to read between the lines of public statements to get some idea of when American life might once again become minimally tolerable.

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