The Middletown Press (Middletown, CT)

U.S. sees risk of COVID-19 supply rationing without more funds

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WASHINGTON — The White House is planning for “dire” contingenc­ies that could include rationing supplies of vaccines and treatments this fall if Congress doesn’t approve more money for fighting COVID-19.

In public comments and private meetings on Capitol Hill, Dr. Ashish Jha, the White House coronaviru­s coordinato­r, has painted a dark picture in which the U.S. could be forced to cede many of the advances made against the coronaviru­s over the last two years and even the most vulnerable could face supply shortages.

Biden administra­tion officials have been warning for weeks that the country has spent nearly all the money in the $1.9 trillion American Rescue Plan that was dedicated directly to COVID-19 response.

A small pool of money remains, and the administra­tion faces critical decisions about how to spend it. That means tough decisions, like weighing whether to use it to secure the next generation of vaccines to protect the highest risk population­s or giving priority to a supply of highly effective therapies that dramatical­ly reduce the risks of severe illness and death.

That decision may be made in the coming week, according to the administra­tion, as the White House faces imminent deadlines to begin placing orders for vaccines and treatments before other nations jump ahead of the U.S. in accessing supply.

Jha has warned that without more money, vaccines will be harder to come by, tests will once again be scarce, and the therapeuti­cs that are helping the country weather the current omicron-driven surge in cases without a commensura­te increase in deaths could be sold overseas before Americans can access them.

“I think we would see a lot of unnecessar­y loss of life if that were to happen,” Jha said last week. “But we’re looking at all the scenarios and planning for all of them.”

He said the administra­tion was “getting much more into the scenario-planning business to make sure that we know what may be ahead of us so we can plan for it and obviously also lay those out in front of Congress.“

Jha, who declined to put a specific projection on potential loss of life, has become the face of the Biden administra­tion’s efforts to persuade Congress to approve an additional $22.5 billion for COVID-19 response.

“The scenarios that we’re planning for are for things like what if Congress gives us no money and we don’t have adequate vaccines,” Jha told the AP in a May 12 interview. “We run out of therapies. We don’t have enough tests. What might things look like? Obviously, that’s a pretty dire situation.”

Already, the domestic production of at-home testing is slowing, with workers beginning to be laid off. In the coming weeks, Jha said, manufactur­ers will sell off equipment and “get out of this business,” leaving the U.S. once again dependent on overseas suppliers for rapid tests.

Drug manufactur­es and the Food and Drug Administra­tion, meanwhile, are working on evaluating the next generation of vaccines, potentiall­y including ones that are targeted at the dominant omicron strain. But getting them ready before the predicted case surge in the fall means placing orders now, since they take two to three months to produce.

Jha said that the U.S. has yet to start negotiatio­ns with drugmakers because of the lack of money.

“We’ve had some very preliminar­y conversati­ons with the manufactur­ers,” he said. “But the negotiatio­ns around it have not yet begun, partly because we’re waiting for resources.” He added: “The truth is that other countries are in conversati­ons with the manufactur­ers and starting to kind of advance their negotiatio­ns.”

The U.S., he said, doesn’t have enough money to purchase additional booster vaccines for anyone who wants one. Instead, the supplies of those vaccines may be

restricted to just the most vulnerable — not unlike the chaotic early days of the COVID-10 vaccine roll-out.

“Without additional funding from Congress, we will not be able to buy enough vaccines for every American who wants one once these new generation of vaccines come out in the fall and winter,” he said.

And while the U.S. has built up a stockpile of the antiviral pill Paxlovid, which has been widely effective at reducing severe disease and death, it’s running out of money to purchase new doses — or other, even more effective therapies that are in the final stages of developmen­t.

“If we don’t get more resources from Congress, what we will find in the fall and winter is we will find a period of time where Americans can look around and see their friends in other countries — in Europe and Canada — with access to these treatments that Americans will not have,” Jha said.

A congressio­nal deal for a slimmed-down COVID-19 response package of about $10 billion fell apart in March over the Biden administra­tion’s plans to lift virusrelat­ed restrictio­ns on migration at U.S. borders. But a federal judge on Friday put that on hold, just days before it was to take effect on Monday.

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