Dayton Daily News

At look at Biden’s coronaviru­s orders

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President Joe Biden on Thursday revealed a slate of new executive orders and presidenti­al directives intended to speed up production of COVID-19 supplies, increase testing capacity and require mask wearing during interstate travel — part of a sprawling 200-page national pandemic strategy he announced at a White House event. Taken together, the orders signal Biden’s earliest priorities in mounting a more centralize­d federal response to the spread of the coronaviru­s. Some of them mirror actions taken during the Trump administra­tion, while most look to alter course. Here’s what the orders aim to do.

Ramp up pace of manufactur­ing and testing

One order calls on agency leaders to check for shortages in areas like personal protective gear and vaccine supplies, and identify where the administra­tion could invoke the Defense Production Act to increase manufactur­ing. The White House has said it could use the Korean War-era law, which the Trump administra­tion made use of in its vaccine developmen­t program, to increase production of a type of syringe that allows pharmacist­s to extract an extra dose from vaccine vials.

The Biden team has said it identified 12 “immediate supply shortfalls” critical to the pandemic response, including N95 surgical masks and isolation gowns, as well as swabs, reagents and pipettes used in testing.

“On the asymptomat­ic screening side, we’re woefully undercapac­ity, so we need the money in order to really ramp up testing, which is so important to reopening schools and businesses,” said Jeffrey Zients, the new White House COVID-19 response coordinato­r.

Another order establishe­s a Pandemic Testing Board, an idea drawn from President Franklin D. Roosevelt’s War Production Board, to ramp up testing. The new administra­tion is promising to expand the nation’s supply of rapid tests, double test supplies and increase lab space for tests and surveillan­ce for coronaviru­s hot spots.

“This effort will ensure that we get testing to where it is needed and where it’s needed most, helping schools and businesses reopen safely and protecting the most vulnerable, like those who live in long-term care facilities,” Biden said in his Thursday remarks.

Require mask wearing during interstate travel

Biden has vowed to use his powers as president to influence mask wearing wherever he is legally allowed to, including on federal property and in travel that crosses state

lines. An order issued Thursday requires mask wearing in airports and on many airplanes, intercity buses and trains.

The same order also requires internatio­nal travelers to prove they have a recent negative COVID-19 test before heading to the United States and to comply with quarantini­ng guidelines issued by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention once they land.

Form better data collection systems

One order calls on the health and human services secretary and the White House’s COVID-19 response coordinato­r to re-evaluate the federal government’s COVID-19 data-gathering systems and issue a report on their findings. It also calls on the heads of “all executive department­s and agencies” to gather and share coronaviru­s-related data.

The Trump administra­tion struggled last year to settle on a centralize­d system, pitting competing programs at the Department of Health and Human Services and the CDC against each other. Alex Azar, the former health and human services secretary, ordered hospitals to send daily reports about virus cases to a private vendor that transmitte­d them to a central database in Washington, instead of the CDC, which had previously housed the data. The decision, which remains in effect, angered CDC scientists.

Establish health equity task force

Another order creates a COVID-19 “health equity task force,” which will recommend how to carve out more funding for parts of the population particular­ly hard hit by the virus, analyzing needs by race, ethnicity, geography and disability, among other

factors. Biden said Thursday that the task force would address hesitancy toward taking the vaccines.

The panel, housed at the Department of Health and Human Services, is part of a larger effort by the Biden administra­tion to draw more attention to persistent racial and ethnic disparitie­s in health care access, as minorities have been hospitaliz­ed and died from COVID-19 at substantia­lly higher rates. Biden appointed Dr. Marcella NunezSmith, an associate professor of internal medicine, public health and management at Yale, to lead the task force.

Publish guidance for schools and workers

Biden issued an order meant to protect the health of workers during the pandemic, telling the Occupation­al Safety and Health Administra­tion to release new guidance for employers. The order also asks the agency to step up enforcemen­t of existing rules to help stop the spread of COVID-19 in the workplace.

The president also directed the department­s of Education and Health and Human Services to issue new guidance on how to safely reopen schools — a major source of controvers­y over the summer when White House and health department officials pressured the CDC to play down the risk of sending students back.

Find more treatments for COVID-19 and future pandemics

The Biden administra­tion is calling on the health and human services secretary and the director of the National Institutes of Health to draft a plan to support the study of new drugs for COVID-19 and future public health crises through large, randomized trials. The treatments should be ones that “can be easily manufactur­ed, distribute­d and administer­ed, both domestical­ly and internatio­nally,” according to the executive order.

 ?? DOUG MILLS / THE NEW YORK TIMES ?? President Joe Biden signs executive orders Thursday that outline his administra­tion’s response to the COVID-19 pandemic.
DOUG MILLS / THE NEW YORK TIMES President Joe Biden signs executive orders Thursday that outline his administra­tion’s response to the COVID-19 pandemic.

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