San Antonio Express-News

Pushing boosters, Biden urges ‘to be ready’

- By Zeke Miller and Alexandra Jaffe

BETHESDA — With rising numbers of COVID-19 cases predicted this winter, President Joe Biden on Thursday appealed for Americans to get their boosters and get behind his plan to tackle the new omicron variant through wider availabili­ty of vaccines and shots, but without new major restrictio­ns on daily life.

Biden wants to require private insurers to cover the cost of athome COVID-19 tests and he is tightening testing requiremen­ts for people entering the United States, regardless of their vaccinatio­n status. While some other countries are closing their borders or reinstitut­ing lockdowns, the president said he would not at this time impose additional

clampdowns beyond his recommenda­tion that Americans wear masks indoors in public settings.

“Experts say the COVID-19 cases will continue to rise in the weeks ahead this winter, so we need to be ready,” Biden said during a visit to the National Institutes of Health in suburban Maryland after a briefing with scientific advisers.

He said his new strategy “doesn’t include shutdowns and lockdowns,” and he hoped for bipartisan backing.

“My plan I’m announcing today pulls no punches in the fight against COVID-19, and it’s a plan that I think should unite us,” he Biden said.

Legal challenges have held up Biden’s vaccinatio­n-or-testing requiremen­t for workers at larger employers, and that’s led the president to urge businesses to impose their own mandates so companies can stay open without outbreaks.

His administra­tion has come to view widespread adoption of booster shots as its most effective tool for combating COVID-19 this winter. Medical experts say boosters provide enhanced and more enduring protection, including against new variants.

Much remains unknown about the omicron variant, such as whether it is more contagious, makes people more seriously ill and can thwart the vaccines. Officials said Thursday that a second case of the variant had been confirmed in the United States.

About 100 million Americans are eligible for boosters under current U.S. policy, with more becoming eligible every day. Officials believe that persuading the vaccinated to get another dose will be easier than vaccinatin­g the roughly 43 million adult Americans who haven’t gotten a shot.

“Go get your booster now,” Biden said.

Biden said the CDC is developing new guidance for schools in an effort to reduce or eliminate current quarantine requiremen­ts for those not fully vaccinated and exposed to the virus.

The rule that private insurers cover at-home testing is being drafted, and details remain to be worked out, officials said.

The administra­tion said it is making 50 million COVID-19 tests free for older people and other vulnerable groups for pickup at senior centers and community sites.

Beginning next week, Biden said, all travelers to the U.S., regardless of nationalit­y or vaccinatio­n status, will need to provide proof of a negative COVID-19 test within one day of boarding flights.

Biden is extending his directive requiring masks on airplanes and other public transit, which had been set to expire in January, through at least the middle of March, the White House said.

 ?? Evan Vucci / Associated Press ?? President Joe Biden speaks about the omicron variant Thursday, urging Americans to get a vaccine booster.
Evan Vucci / Associated Press President Joe Biden speaks about the omicron variant Thursday, urging Americans to get a vaccine booster.

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