Enterprise-Record (Chico)

Biden calls for action as he introduces health team

- By Jonathan Lemire and Ricardo AlonsoZald­ivar

WILMINGTON, DEL. » President- elect Joe Biden on Tuesday called for urgent action on the coronaviru­s pandemic as he introduced a health care team that will be tested at every turn while striving to restore the nation to normalcy.

Biden laid out three COVID-19 priorities for his first 100 days in office: a call for all Americans to voluntaril­y mask up during those 100 days, a commitment to administer 100 million vaccines and a pledge to try to reopen a majority of the nation’s schools.

“I know that out of our collective pain, we will find our collective purpose: to control the pandemic, to save lives, and to heal as a nation,” Biden said.

Topping the roster of picks was health secretary nominee Xavier Becerra, a Latino politician who rose from humble beginnings to serve in Congress and as California’s attorney general. Others include a businessma­n renowned for his crisis management skills and a quartet of medical doctors, among them An

thony Fauci, the government’s top infectious- disease specialist.

The usual feel- good affirmatio­ns that accompany such unveilings were overshadow­ed by urgency, with new cases of COVID-19 averaging more than 200,000 a day and deaths averaging above 2,200 daily as the nation struggles with uncontroll­ed spread.

Vaccines are expected soon. Scientific advisers to the government meet Thursday to make a recommenda­tion on the first one, a Pfizer shot already being

administer­ed in the United Kingdom. Indeed, President Donald Trump held his own event Tuesday, to take credit for his administra­tion’s work to speed vaccine developmen­t.

But having an approved vaccine is one thing, and getting it into the arms of 330 million Americans something else altogether. Biden will be judged on how well his administra­tion carries out the gargantuan task.

On Tuesday, the president- elect warned that his team’s preliminar­y review of Trump administra­tion plans for vaccinatio­ns has found shortcomin­gs. And he called on Congress to pass legislatio­n to finance administra­tion of vaccines as they become more widely available next year. That would effectivel­y close the loop, from lab to patient.

The rest of Biden’s extensive health care agenda, from expanding insurance coverage to negotiatin­g prices for prescripti­on drugs, will likely hinge on how his administra­tion performs in this first test of competence and credibilit­y.

Becerra, Biden’s pick to head the Department of Health and Human Services, will be backed in the White House by businessma­n Jeff Zients, who will assume the role of coronaviru­s response coordinato­r. Running complex, high-risk operations is his specialty.

Alongside Fauci, the other medical doctors selected include infectious­disease specialist Rochelle Walensky to run the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, Vivek Murthy as surgeon general and Yale epidemiolo­gist Marcella Nunez- Smith to head a working group to ensure fair and equitable distributi­on of vaccines and treatments.

 ?? SUSAN WALSH — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? President-elect Joe Biden, right, and Vice-President-elect Kamala Harris, left, listen as a video of California Attorney General Xavier Becerra, who has been nominated by Biden to serve as secretary of Health and Human Services, is displayed at The Queen theater in Wilmington, Del., Tuesday.
SUSAN WALSH — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS President-elect Joe Biden, right, and Vice-President-elect Kamala Harris, left, listen as a video of California Attorney General Xavier Becerra, who has been nominated by Biden to serve as secretary of Health and Human Services, is displayed at The Queen theater in Wilmington, Del., Tuesday.

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