Los Angeles Times

Pandemic likened to a ‘plane in a nose dive’

Becerra and others on Biden’s new health team say meeting the vaccinatio­n goals will pose a challenge.

- BY LAURA KING

Becerra and others on new health team say meeting vaccinatio­n goals will be a challenge.

WASHINGTON — Xavier Becerra, President Biden’s nominee to be the nation’s top health official, on Sunday likened the U.S. spread of COVID-19 to a “plane in a nose dive” as the new administra­tion vowed to rapidly ramp up vaccinatio­ns against a virus that has killed more than 400,000 Americans, nearly onetenth of them in California.

Dr. Anthony Fauci, the president’s chief medical advisor, said the push to inoculate as many people as possible was a race against emerging new variants of the virus because existing vaccines may at some point lose some of their effectiven­ess against mutations.

“What we will do, and are doing already, is making preparatio­ns for the possibilit­y that down the pipe, down the line, we may need to modify and upgrade the vaccines,” Fauci said on CBS’ “Face the Nation.”

He said that although such modified vaccines weren’t necessary at this juncture, “the best way to prevent the further evolution of these mutants is to vaccinate as many people as possible.”

Biden’s chief of staff, Ron Klain, said a comprehens­ive vaccine distributi­on plan “did not really exist” when the new president’s team took over after his inaugurati­on Wednesday.

Interviewe­d on NBC’s “Meet the Press,” Klain said the “fundamenta­l difference” between the former and current administra­tions is that “we are going to take responsibi­lity at the federal government” level, because states and municipali­ties are struggling.

“The way in which people get vaccine is chaotic — it’s very limited,” said Klain. “The process of getting that vaccine into arms, that’s the hard process. That’s where we’re behind as a country.”

Becerra, California’s attorney general and Biden’s pick to be secretary of Health and Human Services, told CNN’s “State of the Union” that the spread of the virus is uncontroll­ed in the United States. The country has reported more than 25 million cases, about onequarter of the world’s total.

“The plane is in a nose dive, and we’ve got to pull it up,” Becerra said. “And you’re not going to do that overnight. But we’re going to pull it up — we have to pull it up.”

Administra­tion officials cautioned it will take time to reduce the virus’ spread because for now there simply isn’t enough vaccine to go around.

“I think that the supply is probably going to be the most limiting constraint early on, and we’re really hoping that after that first 100 days we will have much more production,” the director of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, Rochelle Walensky, said on “Fox News Sunday.”

Biden has said the administra­tion’s goal was to administer 100 million shots in its first 100 days. Though more than 1 million people have been inoculated on some days, Fauci said the administra­tion’s objective was ambitious, citing obstacles such as getting doses to remote rural areas and parts of the country with less medical infrastruc­ture.

Meeting the president’s goal “is going to be a challenge,” Fauci told CBS.

One prominent infectious-diseases specialist who will not be joining the Biden team is Deborah Birx, White House coronaviru­s task force coordinato­r under then-President Trump. During her tenure, she sometimes came under criticism for not pushing back publicly against some of Trump’s more fanciful claims.

In an interview on “Face the Nation,” Birx was asked directly whether there were “COVID deniers in the White House.” She replied that in the White House and around the country “there were people who definitely believed that this was a hoax.”

The scientist said she believes “a parallel set of data” from someone inside or outside the White House was shown to the president, suggesting that the misinforma­tion influenced Trump’s actions and public statements.

“I don’t know to this day who” provided it, Birx said.

 ?? Susan Walsh Associated Press ?? XAVIER BECERRA, President Biden’s nominee for Health secretary, and others in the administra­tion caution that it will take time to reduce the virus’ spread.
Susan Walsh Associated Press XAVIER BECERRA, President Biden’s nominee for Health secretary, and others in the administra­tion caution that it will take time to reduce the virus’ spread.

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