Las Vegas Review-Journal (Sunday)

■ RJ Editorial: The FDA must give full approval to COVID-19 vaccines amid surge in cases.

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The Food and Drug Administra­tion has long had a reputation for being overly cautious when it comes to the approval of new medication­s and devices. Agency scientists take pride in their methodical and meticulous approach and its respect for patient safety. But while such prudence may serve the nation well during normal times, these are not normal times. FDA delays in granting full formal approval to the COVID vaccines already in use may be contributi­ng to a resurgence of the virus.

According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, average weekly virus cases have more than doubled nationwide in the past few weeks, and no state has been immune. For now, Nevada is one of the nation’s hot spots. Health profession­als report that the vast majority of people contractin­g the disease have not been vaccinated. While there have been anecdotal reports of an increase in breakthrou­gh cases — patients testing positive who have been inoculated — they remain rare and are far less likely to end in severe complicati­ons or death.

The bottom line: The vaccines work extremely well, and the fastest way to bring this pandemic to a close is to get reluctant adults to sit for the shots. “If you’re vaccinated, you’re not going to be hospitaliz­ed,” President Joe Biden said last week, “you’re not going to be in the IC unit, and you’re not going to die.”

CDC figures show that 69 percent of American adults have had at least one shot. But the number of vaccines being administer­ed has fallen precipitou­sly, from about 3 million doses a day in the spring to less than 275,000 a day in mid-July, The Wall Street Journal reports. Daily dose numbers have begun to tick upward in Nevada and other places as some of the unvaccinat­ed finally grasp that they aren’t out of the woods just yet. That’s good news.

But shot skeptics remain, and some of them cite the FDA’s lack of formal approval for the COVID serum — which is being distribute­d under an FDA emergency use order issued in December — as a cause of their hesitancy. That alone should be reason enough for the agency to recognize that foot-dragging is not an option.

Typically, the FDA’s standard review process takes about 10 months. An expedited review may be wrapped in six months. But the process doesn’t start until the companies — in this case Pfizer and Moderna — jump through various regulatory hurdles and submit the required paperwork. Pfizer was granted an expedited review in July, but Moderna is still working with the FDA on the necessary data.

“This seems like an exercise in the kind of extreme bureaucrat­ic formalism that morphs into regulatory irrational­ity,” University of Colorado law professor Paul Campos wrote last week. Given that the country is racing to get everybody over the age of 12 vaccinated, “failing to fully authorize the vaccines is nonsensica­l,” he added. “With two-thirds of the adult population already vaccinated, do public health bureaucrat­s think that, in the highly unlikely event that some sort of long-term problem with the vaccines emerges, pointing to their (emergency) status is going to somehow placate people who have seen these same authoritie­s — again, appropriat­ely — spend this entire year doing everything they can (short of fully authorizin­g the vaccines) to get as close to everyone as possible vaccinated?”

Not only would formal authorizat­ion potentiall­y remove a roadblock for some unvaccinat­ed adults, it would also put employers on a more firm legal footing when it comes to demanding that workers sit for the shots before they return to the job. Such a requiremen­t might also create a major incentive for overcoming vaccine hesitancy.

Mr. Biden told a CNN town hall audience last week that he hopes the FDA issues formal approval for the vaccines “maybe in the beginning of the school year, at the end of August, beginning September, October.” If current trends continue, however, October or later won’t be fast enough.

There comes a time when bureaucrat­ic protocol must give way to pragmatic urgency. The FDA has more data on the COVID vaccines — and more real-world experience — than it has had with virtually any other new medication. It’s past time to remove the “experiment­al” tag from COVID vaccines that have proven wonderfull­y effective and remain the key to getting us past this pandemic.

The views expressed above are those of the Las Vegas Review-Journal. All other opinions expressed on the Opinion and Commentary pages are those of the individual artist or author indicated.

 ?? The Associated Press ??
The Associated Press
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Mary Altaffer The Associated Press file

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