The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Carter, other ex- presidents urge vaccine use

His wife was staunch advocate for vaccines as Georgia’s first lady.

- By Ernie Suggs ernie. suggs@ ajc. com

A day after America witn e s s e d i t s wo r s t d a y i n coronaviru­s- related deaths, Jimmy Carter joined three other l iving former presidents Thursday in encouragin­g Americans t o get a COVID- 19 vaccinatio­n shot as soon as it becomes available.

In a statement, Carter said that he and his wife, Rosalynn, “are in full support of COVID- 19 vaccine efforts and encourage everyone who is eligible to get immunized as soon as it becomes available in their communitie­s.”

Carter’s office didn’t confirm whether he planned to get the vaccine. Carter is 96 years old.

Ro s a l y n n C a r t e r, who is 93, was a staunch advocate for vaccines as Georgia’s first l ady and subsequent­ly co- founded Vaccinate Your Family in 1991 to ensure equitable access to immunizati­ons.

E a r l i e r T hu r s d ay, f o r - mer Presidents Bill Clinton, George W. Bush and Barack Obama all agreed to get vaccinated — in front of television cameras if they had to — to instill confidence in Americans who have watched more than 270,000 people in the country die from the coronaviru­s.

O n We d n e s d a y, mo r e than 2,770 Americans died of COVID- 19, a grim record. But in a November Gallup poll, 42% of Americans said they didn’t plan to receive a coronaviru­s vaccine.

Dr. Anthony Fauci, t he director of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases and the nation’s top infectious disease expert, also said that he would be willing to be vaccinated on camera.

Earlier t hi s week, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention vaccine advisers voted 13- 1 to recommend that health care workers and residents of long- term care facilities be first in line for any coronaviru­s vaccines that get emergency authorizat­ion from the U. S. Food and Drug Administra­tion.

 ?? CURTIS COMPTON/ AJC 2019 ?? President Jimmy Carter, seen in 2019 at Maranatha Baptist Church in Plains with wife Rosalynn ( left), says they “are in full support of COVID- 19 vaccine efforts and encourage everyone who is eligible to get immunized as soon as it becomes available.”
CURTIS COMPTON/ AJC 2019 President Jimmy Carter, seen in 2019 at Maranatha Baptist Church in Plains with wife Rosalynn ( left), says they “are in full support of COVID- 19 vaccine efforts and encourage everyone who is eligible to get immunized as soon as it becomes available.”

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