Porterville Recorder

Biden says to be concerned but not alarmed over surge

- By ZEKE MILLER

WASHINGTON — President Joe Biden urged concern but not alarm Tuesday as the U.S. set new records for daily reported COVID-19 cases and his administra­tion struggled to ease concerns about testing shortages, school closures and other disruption­s caused by the surging omicron variant.

Speaking ahead of a meeting with his COVID-19 response team at the White House, Biden looked both to convey his administra­tion’s urgency toward addressing the new variant and to convince wary Americans that the current surge bears little resemblanc­e to the onset of the pandemic or last year’s deadly winter. The president emphasized that vaccines, booster shots and therapeuti­c drugs have mitigated the danger for the overwhelmi­ng majority of Americans who are fully vaccinated.

“You can still get COVID, but it’s highly unlikely, very unlikely, that you’ll become seriously ill,” Biden said of vaccinated people.

“There’s no excuse, there’s no excuse for anyone being unvaccinat­ed,” he added. “This continues to be a pandemic of the unvaccinat­ed.”

Compared to last year, more Americans are employed, most kids are in classrooms, and instances of death and serious illness are down — precipitou­sly so among the vaccinated.

“We’re in a very different place than we were a year ago,” said White House press secretary Jen Psaki when asked if the country had lost control of the virus.

Still, over the past several weeks Americans have seen dire warnings about hospitals reaching capacity amid staffing shortages, thousands of holiday flight cancellati­ons in part because crews were ill or in quarantine, and intermitte­nt reports of school closures because of the more-transmissi­ble variant.

“I believe schools should remain open,” Biden said, adding that they have the funding needed for testing and other mitigation measures to stay open during the surge.

The president also announced that the U.S. is doubling its order for an anti-viral pill produced by Pfizer that was recently authorized by the FDA to prevent serious illness and death from COVID-19.

That means 20 million doses, with the first 10 million pills to be delivered by June.

A senior administra­tion official said that combined with other therapies, such as monoclonal antibodies and convalesce­nt plasma, 4 million treatments that are effective against the omicron variant would be available by the end of January.

“They’re a game changer and have the potential to dramatical­ly alter the impact of COVID-19, the impact it’s had on this country and our people,” Biden said of the pills.

Biden, though, is also facing new pressure to ease a nationwide testing shortage, as people seek to determine if they or their family members have been infected with the variant. Long lines and chaotic scenes over the holidays marred the administra­tion’s image as having the pandemic in hand.

“On testing, I know this remains frustratin­g. Believe me it’s frustratin­g to me, but we’re making improvemen­ts,” Biden said.

In a reversal, the White House announced last month that it would make 500 million rapid antigen tests available free to requesting Americans, but it will be weeks, if not months, before those tests are widely available. The administra­tion notes those tests are on top of existing supply of rapid tests and that even a small increase will help ease some of the shortages. Additional­ly, private insurers will be required to cover the cost of athome tests starting later this month.

Test manufactur­ers have until Tuesday night to respond to the government’s contract request, and the first awards are expected to be made this week, Psaki said. Meanwhile, the administra­tion is still developing a system for Americans to order the tests as well as a means to ship them to people’s homes.

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