Imperial Valley Press

Key dates as US regulators weigh emergency use of vaccines

- By The Associated Press

The next few weeks will likely see a lot of action as U.S. regulators assess COVID-19 vaccines and state officials get ready to start giving the shots to people. Shots for at most 20 million people are expected by year’s end.

A timeline of what to expect in the coming days:

— Dec. 1: Centers for Disease Control and Prevention advisory committee votes on who should be first in line to receive vaccinatio­ns.

— Dec. 4: Deadline for states to submit requests for doses of the Pfizer/BioNTech vaccine and where they should be shipped.

— Dec. 10: Food and Drug Administra­tion advisers meet to debate if there’s enough evidence for emergency use of the Pfizer vaccine. Sometime after the meeting, the FDA will weigh those recommenda­tions in deciding whether to authorize emergency use.

— Dec. 11: Deadline for states to submit requests for doses of the Moderna vaccine and where they should be shipped.

— Dec. 17: FDA advisers meet to debate evidence behind the Moderna vaccine. The FDA will weigh those recommenda­tions in deciding whether to authorize emergency use sometime after the meeting.

Once the FDA authorizes emergency use of either vaccine:

— Within 24 hours: “Phase 1a” of rollout begins. Private shippers would send shots to each state’s predetermi­ned locations, such as hospitals. Health workers would give first shots to people per states’ plans, with people working in health care likely at the front of the line.

— Second doses: For Pfizer’s vaccine, the second dose is given three weeks after the first. For Moderna’s, the second shot comes four weeks after the first.

 ?? AP PHOTO/ASHLEY LANDIS ?? A COVID-19 test is handed through the vehicle window at a mobile testing site on Tuesday in Long Beach, Calif.
AP PHOTO/ASHLEY LANDIS A COVID-19 test is handed through the vehicle window at a mobile testing site on Tuesday in Long Beach, Calif.

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