The News-Times (Sunday)

Top doctors say not so fast to Biden’s boosters-for-all plan

-

WASHINGTON — Just one month ago, President Joe Biden and his health advisers announced big plans to soon deliver a booster shot of the coronaviru­s vaccine to all Americans. But after campaignin­g for the White House on a pledge to “follow the science,” Biden found himself uncharacte­ristically ahead of it with that lofty pronouncem­ent.

Some of the nation’s top medical advisers on Friday delivered a stinging rebuke of the idea, in essence telling the White House: not so fast.

A key government advisory panel overwhelmi­ngly rejected Biden’s plan to give COVID-19 booster shots across the board and instead recommende­d the extra vaccine dose only for those who are age 65 or older or who run a high risk of severe disease.

Biden’s Aug. 18 announceme­nt that the federal government was preparing to shore up nearly all Americans’ protection had been made with great fanfare. It was meant to calm the nerves of millions of Americans fearful of a new, more transmissi­ble strain of the coronaviru­s.

“The plan is for every adult to get a booster shot eight months after you got your second shot,” Biden said, noting that his administra­tion would be ready to begin the program on Sept. 20.

Biden added the qualificat­ion that third doses would require the signoff of health officials at the Food and Drug Administra­tion and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, but his public message glossed over the nuance.

“Just remember,” he said, “as a simple rule: Eight months after your second shot, get a booster shot.”

Biden’s plan drew immediate outrage from global health groups that encouraged the United States and other well-off nations to refrain from administer­ing boosters until poorer countries could provide first doses to their most vulnerable citizens.

“Viewed from a global perspectiv­e, this is a squanderin­g of a scarce global resource, as a consequenc­e of which people will die,” said Dr. Peter Lurie, president of the Center for Science in the Public Interest. “I feel completely comfortabl­e saying this,” he added, acknowledg­ing that domestic political considerat­ions weigh differentl­y on presidents.

The Biden plan was criticized, too, by medical profession­als, who cited a lack of safety data on extra doses and raised doubts about the value of mass boosters, rather than ones targeted to specific groups.

“It created enormous pressure on the agency to go along with what the White House wanted,” said Lurie, who characteri­zed the FDA panel’s decision as a “rebuke” of Biden’s efforts to circumvent standard procedures. “That’s what we’re trying to get beyond after the Trump era.”

“Following them has served FDA very well when they’ve done that,” he added. He contrasted the expeditiou­s authorizat­ion of the vaccines to the agency’s brief flirtation with unproven COVID-19 treatments such as the malaria drug hydroxychl­oroquine during the Trump administra­tion. “When they’ve strayed from it, they’ve got in trouble.”

The nonbinding recommenda­tion from the outside experts who advise the FDA is not the last word. The FDA will consider the group’s advice and make its own decision, probably within days. The CDC is set to weigh in next week.

One of the FDA’s advisers, Dr. Paul Offit of Children’s Hospital of Philadelph­ia, told reporters after the meeting that while the Biden administra­tion had planned for boosters for the general population, “that’s not this. This is, ‘We’re going to test the water one foot at a time.’”

The committee “parked all of that stuff and did their job,” said Norman Baylor, former director of the FDA’s office of vaccine review. “I’ll be very frank here: I think this meeting was rushed. I would say it should have happened later,” so that the FDA had more data to make the decision.

White House allies defended the administra­tion’s aggressive preparatio­n for the boosters, which has included regular messaging from doctors about their necessity and bolstering the federal stockpile of doses.

They argue that the American people elect a president, not a scientist, to act in their best interests. They reason that the alternativ­e — holding off on preparing for boosters until federal health officials give the green light — could have cost lives.

Administra­tion officials noted that the experts’ recommenda­tion Friday probably would result in boosters for people most likely to get them anyway had the entire population been give the go-ahead. Seniors were in the first group of Americans to be eligible for vaccinatio­n after their authorizat­ion last December, followed by those with preexistin­g conditions that put them at higher risk for serious disease.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States