San Diego Union-Tribune

U.S. PLANS $1.7B NETWORK TO TRACK VIRUS VARIANTS

System will also provide surveillan­ce for news pathogens

- BY RICARDO ALONSO-ZALDIVAR & ZEKE MILLER Alonso-Zaldivar and Miller write for The Associated Press.

The U.S. is setting up a $1.7 billion national network to identify and track worrisome coronaviru­s mutations whose spread could trigger another pandemic wave, the Biden administra­tion announced Friday.

White House officials unveiled a strategy that features three components: a major funding boost for the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and state health department­s to ramp up coronaviru­s gene-mapping; the creation of six “centers of excellence” partnershi­ps with universiti­es to conduct research and develop technologi­es for genebased surveillan­ce of pathogens, and building a data system to better share and analyze informatio­n on emerging disease threats, so knowledge can be turned into action.

“Even as we accelerate our efforts to get shots into arms, more dangerous variants are growing, causing increases in cases in people without immunity,” White House coronaviru­s adviser Andy Slavitt told reporters. That “requires us to intensify our efforts to quickly test for and find the genetic sequence of the virus as it spreads.”

The new effort relies on money approved by Congress as part of President Joe Biden’s coronaviru­s relief package to break what experts say is a feast-or-famine cycle in U.S. preparedne­ss for disease threats. The coronaviru­s is only one example. Others pathogens have included Ebola and Zika, and respirator­y viruses like SARS in 2002 and MERS in 2012, which did not become major problems in the United States. Typically, the government scrambles to counter a potential threat, but funding dries up when it recedes. The new genomic surveillan­ce initiative aims to create a permanent infrastruc­ture.

“It’s a transforma­tive amount of money,” Mary Lee Watts, federal affairs director at the American Society for Microbiolo­gy, said in a recent interview. “It has the potential not only to get ahead of the current crisis, but it is going to help us in the future. This is a program that has been underfunde­d for years.”

The Biden administra­tion’s move comes as a variant known as B.1.1.7, which first emerged in the United Kingdom, has become the predominan­t strain in the U.S. In hard-hit Michigan, the more transmissi­ble mutation accounts for more than half the cases, according to CDC data. That’s also the case in Minnesota. Vaccines are effective against the so-called U.K. variant, but other mutations circulatin­g around the globe have shown resistance to currently available vaccines.

CDC Director Dr. Rochelle Walensky said Friday the U.S. is now averaging nearly 70,000 new coronaviru­s cases daily, up from about 53,000 just four weeks ago. Hospitaliz­ations have been trending higher, too, and deaths were up for the third day in a row. Along with relaxed restrictio­ns on gatherings and indoor dining, the emergence of variants that spread more easily is part of the reason for the worsening trend.

 ?? JUNFU HAN AP ?? Emergency Room technician­s test patients for COVID-19 outside the emergency entrance of Beaumont Hospital in Grosse Pointe, Mich., on Thursday.
JUNFU HAN AP Emergency Room technician­s test patients for COVID-19 outside the emergency entrance of Beaumont Hospital in Grosse Pointe, Mich., on Thursday.

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