Orlando Sentinel

Gov. DeSantis revealed Thursday the creation of mobile response units to deliver COVID-1 9 antibody treatment Regeneron.

Regeneron antibody cocktail, which has the same emergency FDA approval as vaccines, will be offered to high-risk residents

- By Steven Lemongello and Richard Tribou slemongell­o@orlandosen­tinel.com

Gov. Ron DeSantis revealed Thursday the creation of mobile rapid response units to deliver the COVID-19 antibody treatment Regeneron to Floridians at higher risk for the virus.

Regeneron, a monoclonal antibody cocktail, is an FDA-approved treatment for those who have already gotten sick. DeSantis said vaccinatio­n, while effective at preventing severe illness and death, hasn’t been as successful as hoped in preventing waves of infection.

“COVID’s not going to go away,” DeSantis said. “So the question is how are we going to approach it. You can approach it on the front end by protecting yourself, but of course, if you end up in a situation where you are infected and at high risk, getting in here early, this is the best shot we’ve got right now to keep people out of the hospital and keep them safe.”

The mobile units have already begun operating in northeast Florida, and DeSantis said they will be expanded throughout the state. A long-term location will be set up at a Jacksonvil­le library, the governor’s office added later, and strike teams will be sent to long-term care facilities.

“The Surgeon General is probably going to do a standing order which will make our sites available to people if they meet the certain criteria,” DeSantis said. “They won’t even necessaril­y need a prescripti­on from a doctor.”

Kami Kim, professor and director of the Division of Infectious Disease & Internatio­nal Medicine in the USF Health Morsani College of Medicine, said monoclonal antibody cocktails such as Regeneron have proven effective in preventing major symptoms.

Getting vaccinated is also important, Kim said. But maximum protection comes only after two shots and six weeks, “and we’re in the middle of a huge surge . ... So yes, the vaccine is really, really important. But if you’ve already come up with COVID, then [there’s] the monoclonal antibody.”

But, she stressed, “the number one strategy is probably going back to social distancing again and wearing masks. And obviously, Gov. DeSantis has his view on that, which most public health people would not entirely agree with.”

DeSantis has been increasing­ly under fire for his tempered response to the skyrocketi­ng COVID numbers in Florida. He spoke at an event in Jacksonvil­le, one of the areas where hospitals have been overwhelme­d.

The state had more than 15,000 people hospitaliz­ed with COVID-19 through Wednesday, with data reported from 230 of 261 hospitals reporting to the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services. Cases also continue to climb, with another 24,753 tallied on Wednesday, a record high. The state reported 39,695 Florida resident deaths from COVID-19 through its latest weekly report from this past Friday.

DeSantis had previously criticized officials who had warned about breakthrou­gh infections among the vaccinated, arguing it only deterred people from getting vaccines in the first place.

But on Thursday, he acknowledg­ed that while vaccines are successful in preventing severe illness and death, infections are happening among those who have gotten the shots.

“What you haven’t seen is widespread vaccinatio­n limiting waves,” DeSantis said. “It’s not just in Florida or the whole South, it’s all across the world . ... Vaccinatio­n is clearly helping reduce serious illness, it’s reducing your likelihood of being hospitaliz­ed. But you also have [vaccinated] people who are being hospitaliz­ed. So what tools do you have that make the most sense?”

The governor held multiple events at vaccinatio­n sites over the winter and early spring to promote getting shots, but he hasn’t held one since May.

Instead, DeSantis has focused on treatments such as Regeneron. He said clinical trials have shown early Regeneron treatment reduces the likelihood of hospitaliz­ation by 70%.

Unvaccinat­ed Floridians who begin the treatment, he cautioned, might have to wait to get inoculated for even longer following their illness because of antibodies in their system. The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention recommends waiting 90 days after finishing treatment.

While many vaccine skeptics claim to be concerned about the shots’ experiment­al approval by the FDA, the Regeneron antibody cocktail is in the exact same situation, having received emergency FDA approval late last year.

“The data are pretty clear that the vaccine prevents your chance of getting severe COVID,” Kim said. “Mild COVID that doesn’t land you in the hospital is still better than COVID that lands you on a ventilator and possibly dying.”

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