The Denver Post

Biden vowed to follow science; sometimes he gets ahead of it

- By Michael D. Shear and Benjamin Mueller

As he announced Friday that booster shots would be available to some Americans, President Joe Biden made a prediction: His administra­tion was likely to soon provide third doses of the vaccine “across the board” to anyone who wanted one.

“In the near term, we’re probably going to open this

up,” he told reporters in remarks from the State Dining Room at the White House.

But that assessment — a politicall­y popular one in a country where most vaccinated people say they are eager for a booster — was the latest example of how Biden and some of his team have been ahead of the nation’s top public health scientists, who have emphatical­ly said in recent days that there is simply not enough evidence to suggest that boosters are necessary for the entire U.S. population.

In fact, two panels of scientists — one for the Food and Drug Administra­tion and the other for the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention — voted in recent days against recommendi­ng boosters for everyone after fierce public debates streamed online.

The president’s remarks Friday were the second time in two months that he had suggested boosters would be available to everyone. And they were issued on the same day that Dr. Rochelle Walensky, CDC director and one of the president’s political appointees, came under fire for allowing boosters for a broader group of people than her agency’s own immunizati­on panel recommende­d.

Taken together, the announceme­nts by Biden and Walensky did not sit well with all of the scientists who advise them, raising questions about the president’s pledge to always “follow the science” as he fought the pandemic. While some of them credited the CDC director for charting a course through uncertain waters, others warned that politics had intruded on scientific decisions — something that Biden had promised to avoid after the blatant pressures seen during the Trump administra­tion.

“Everybody uses this statement ‘follow the science’ very glibly, and I think that the science here did not warrant picking out a group of people and saying that you may be at more risk for acquiring an infection,” said Dr. Sarah S. Long, a member of the CDC’S advisory committee, referring to the groups of workers who were made eligible for booster shots.

For the president to be subject to that kind of criticism is exactly where he promised he would never be.

As a candidate, Biden repeatedly denounced President Donald Trump for pressuring scientists at the CDC and the FDA. In March, after becoming president, Biden repeated what officials have said is his North Star on the pandemic during a visit to the CDC’S headquarte­rs in Atlanta.

“There’s an entire generation coming up that is learning from what you’ve done,” he told employees there that day. “I don’t just mean learning about how to deal with a virus. Learning about it makes a difference to tell the truth, to follow the science, and just wherever it takes you, and just be honest about it.”

White House officials insist that the president is doing just that, and they dismiss criticism that his comments about the additional doses amount to undue pressure on the government’s public health experts. They say that the discussion about boosters was initiated by the government’s top doctors and that he made it clear from the beginning that any decision by the administra­tion would be subject to independen­t review and approval.

And Biden has deferred far more to the public health experts than did Trump, who publicly and privately pushed FDA and CDC officials to act more quickly to approve vaccines and actively promoted unproven treatments for the coronaviru­s like hydroxychl­oroquine. The former president also clashed repeatedly with scientists about wearing masks and decisions about when to reopen schools, churches and other activities.

But Biden’s public embrace of booster shots has rankled many in the public health sector, including those working inside the government, who say it could have the effect of putting undue pressure on scientists to make a recommenda­tion they do not believe is supported by the evidence.

Some public health officials and doctors say they fear that Biden — who has staked his presidency on successful­ly managing the pandemic — is pushing for boosters because they are politicall­y popular. A Reuters/ipsos national survey conducted Aug. 27-30 found that 76% of Americans who have received at least one shot of a vaccine want a booster. Only 6% do not, the poll found.

In mid-august, the president told the nation that his administra­tion planned to deliver booster shots to everyone starting the week of Sept. 20, pending decisions by the FDA and the CDC.

“Just remember as a simple rule, eight months after your second shot, get a booster shot,” he said during remarks at the White House.

That turned out to be premature. Only Pfizer, one vaccine maker, has won authorizat­ion to administer additional doses, and for just some of its recipients.

On Wednesday, the FDA authorized boosters, but only for older adults, people with underlying health conditions and some frontline workers who are frequently exposed to the virus.

The agency’s decision stood in direct contrast to Biden’s earlier comments.

Doctors were also split Friday over the decision by Walensky to overrule her own panel of immunizati­on experts.

On Thursday, the panel voted to recommend boosters for older adults and those with underlying health issues. But it advised against allowing front-line workers like teachers and nurses who have already been vaccinated to get a booster shot.

In a decision announced early Friday, Walensky rejected that last recommenda­tion and said that the CDC would allow the front-line workers to receive boosters. In a briefing for reporters later Friday, she defended the move, noting that the panel was sharply divided on the issue.

“Our teachers are facing uncertaint­y as they walk into the classroom, and I must do what I can to preserve the health across our nation,” Walensky said, calling it “a first step” and saying that “we will continue to review new data on effectiven­ess and experience with the third shot, as it becomes available.”

Dr. Steven Joffe, a professor of medical ethics and health policy at the University of Pennsylvan­ia, said that with such a close vote at the CDC’S meeting, it was reasonable for Walensky to rule a different way. But he suggested that she could have been influenced by the support she and the administra­tion had earlier shown for a broader distributi­on of the booster.

“To what extent did she feel like she was bound to follow that line of decision-making?” he said. “I can’t get inside her head and answer that question. The fact that the final decision-makers had already staked out their final positions had put the advisory committees in a very difficult position.”

 ?? Scott Olson, Getty Images ?? Lalain Reyeg administer­s a COVID-19 booster vaccine and an influenza vaccine to Army veteran William Craig at the Edward Hines Jr. VA Hospital on Friday in Hines, Ill.
Scott Olson, Getty Images Lalain Reyeg administer­s a COVID-19 booster vaccine and an influenza vaccine to Army veteran William Craig at the Edward Hines Jr. VA Hospital on Friday in Hines, Ill.

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