Lodi News-Sentinel

Biden says states should open shots to all adults by April 19

- Jennifer Jacobs, Josh Wingrove and Angelica LaVito

President Joe Biden said Tuesday that he wants all American adults to be eligible for a coronaviru­s vaccine by April 19, citing a target date all but two states are already set to meet.

“By no later than April 19 in every part of this country, every adult over the age of 18 — 18 or over — will be eligible to be vaccinated. No more confusing rules. No more confusing restrictio­ns,” Biden said at the White House.

In anticipati­on of eligibilit­y opening broadly, he said, the government will provide aid for community groups to transport elderly Americans to vaccinatio­n sites. “Seniors, it’s time for you to get vaccinated now,” he said

Biden also said 150 million doses of vaccine were administer­ed within his first 75 days in office, keeping pace with his accelerate­d goal of getting 200 million shots into arms by his 100th day in office.

In “another 25 days,” Biden said during a visit to a vaccinatio­n site in Alexandria, Virginia, on Tuesday, “we’ll probably have somewhere in excess of 200 million shots that have been administer­ed.”

He thanked people at the site for receiving shots. “You’re doing the right thing. You really are,” he told them, adding: “Everyone’s going to be able to do this before the month is out.”

Every state but Oregon and Hawaii is already scheduled to have opened up vaccines to all non-minors by April 19. Those two states are currently set to meet that target May 1, Biden’s previous goal for every U.S. adult to become eligible.

Almost half of U.S. states had opened vaccinatio­n to everyone 16 and older by the end of last week. That will rise to 36 by the end of this week. CNN reported that Biden is expected to credit governors’ effort to meet his earlier deadline for the updated goal.

Biden said at the vaccinatio­n site in Virginia that he hopes the U.S. can begin supplying shots to other countries “pretty soon.”

“Until this vaccine is available to the world, we’re beating back the virus in other countries, we’re not really completely safe,” Biden said in his White House remarks.

Biden’s administra­tion has been racing to put shots in arms before infection rates spike again, as fresh variants of the virus that are more easily transmitte­d — and possibly more harmful once caught — spread throughout the U.S. One variant, known as B.1.1.7 and originally found in the U.K., is now the dominant variant in regions holding twothirds of the U.S. population.

The head of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention has warned of “impending doom” as cases have begun to rise again, fueled in part by states lifting some or all of their restrictio­ns.

Anthony Fauci, a Biden medical adviser, said Tuesday that cases are increasing but don’t yet amount to a full new surge.

“There clearly is an increase,” Fauci, the director of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, told MSNBC on Tuesday. “The difference factor that’s going on right now, that were different from the surges that we saw last year, is that we have a highly efficaciou­s vaccine now.”

Nationwide, vaccinatio­ns hit a seven-day average of more than 3 million a day last weekend, and the country logged a 4-million-shot Saturday.

More than 100 million Americans have gotten at least one dose, according to the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, close to a third of the population. The daily rates are expected to rise further as vaccine-makers deliver a promised 700 million doses by the end of July, which is enough for 400 million people.

The U.S. has administer­ed about a quarter of the shots given worldwide so far, buoyed by wartime powers that have allowed Biden and his predecesso­r to force U.S. vaccine makers to fill their orders first. About 62 million people in the U.S. have been fully vaccinated so far, including 30 million people over age 65, which accounts for 55% of that age group.

Fauci was asked about images from Texas, a state that has opened restrictio­ns and where a baseball stadium appeared full on Monday night.

“We don’t want to declare victory prematurel­y because we have a virus out there now that’s variant and spreads really quite efficientl­y,” he said. “And if you pull back on masking and avoiding congregate setting, you’re really taking a pretty big risk.”

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