The Denver Post

Vaccinatio­ns to increase by spring?

- By Katie Thomas

Although more contagious variants are spreading in the United States, top health officials sounded notes of optimism Sunday that both the supply of vaccines and the rate of vaccinatio­n will steadily increase.

“The demand clearly outstrips supply right now,” Dr. Anthony Fauci, the nation’s top infectious disease doctor, said on the NBC program “Meet the Press.” “I can tell you that things are going to get better as we get from February into March, into April, because the number of vaccine doses that will be available will increase substantia­lly.”

The number of shots administer­ed daily in the United States has increased lately.

The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention reported that more than 2.2 million doses were given Saturday and 1.6 million

Friday. That brought the latest seven-day average to 1.4 million a day, which approaches President Joe Biden’s new goal of 1.5 million shots per day.

In addition, the supply of vaccines — though still well below demand — is growing.

Federal officials recently increased shipments to the states to 10.5 million doses a week as Moderna and Pfizer gradually increase production. The two companies have deals to supply the United States with a combined 400 million doses — enough to vaccinate 200 million people — by the summer.

Pfizer recently said that it will now deliver its doses two months ahead of schedule, by May, in part because it is now counting an additional dose in each vial it is manufactur­ing. Moderna is considerin­g a production change that would allow it to increase the number of doses in its vials to 15 from 10.

Officials are also counting on the Food and Drug Administra­tion authorizin­g a one-dose vaccine from Johnson & Johnson later this month. Although that company will initially provide the United States with only a few million doses, it is expected to step up output considerab­ly by April. Other vaccines from Novavax and AstraZenec­a could also be authorized for U.S. use in the spring, further increasing supply.

Officials are racing to vaccinate as many people as possible in order to outpace more contagious variants of the virus that were first identified in Britain and South Africa.

The variant from Britain, known as B117, is spreading rapidly in the United States, with its prevalence doubling roughly every 10 days, according to a new study. The CDC said it could become the dominant form of the virus in the United States by March.

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