From Yahoo/USA Today:
“Biden to offer millions of
at-home COVID-19 tests to Americans, says 'we're prepared' for omicron”
President Joe Biden on Tuesday
announced the purchase of a half-billion, at-home rapid COVID-19 tests and the
mobilization of 1,000 military medical personnel to overburdened hospitals, as
officials confront for a new surge in infections driven by the omicron variant.
The president unveiled the stepped-up measures in a speech from the White House
as the nation – already fatigued by a pandemic that's lasted nearly two years –
faces rising COVID-19 infections.
Biden said Americans will be able
to request the free-at-home COVID-19 tests be mailed to their homes by
accessing an online website. It comes as shortages have led to long lines and
overwhelmed hospitals in hot spots while Americans crisscross the country for
the holiday season. "I know you're tired. I know you're frustrated. We all
want this to be over," Biden said in his remarks from the White House
State Dining Room "But we're still in it. And this is a critical moment.
But we also have more tools than we've ever had before." Americans will
not be able to request the at-home tests online until January, meaning they
can't access the kits before millions are expected to travel for Christmas.
White House press secretary Jen Psaki said the administration is still working
through details of the program, including how many kits will be available for households
and whether some groups would be prioritized. The 500 million tests – among
eight versions approved by the Food and Drug Administration – are in addition
to 50 million tests the federal government began distributing this month to
community health centers. Biden said his administration has also worked to make
it easier to search online to find nearby COVID-19 tests.
'No this is not March 2020,'
Biden says The U.S. has lagged behind other nations in testing capacity.
Pressed by reporters about the shortages, Biden said, "I don't think
anybody anticipated that this was going to be as rapidly spreading as it
did." The moves come as the country faces a new challenge in the
fight against COVID-19: Federal health officials announced Monday the omicron
variant accounted for 73% of new cases last week, a nearly six-fold increase in
the new variant’s share of infections in only one week. Biden thanked
Americans for their "perseverance and courage" and returned to a
familiar message: urging Americans to get vaccinated and receive their third
booster shot. He stressed the unvaccinated face a greater likelihood of
hospitalization or death from COVID-19. "If you're not fully
vaccinated, you have good reason to be concerned," Biden said. He told
people who are vaccinated to "remain vigilant" and wear face masks
indoors in public settings but said they are protected from severe illness and
death. "If you got your booster shot, if you are vaccinated and
follow the precautions that we all know well, you should feel comfortable
celebrating Christmas and the holidays as you plan. You've done the right
thing."
Despite the urgency, Biden
rejected concerns that the U.S. could return to where it was in March 2020,
when the coronavirus pandemic started. "No, this is not March of 2020. Two
hundred million people are fully vaccinated. We're prepared. We know more. We
just have to stay focused." Biden pointed to stockpiled medical equipment
at hospitals as another difference. And because of greater overall knowledge
about the virus, Biden said schools don't need to shut down like last year. "We
should all be concerned about omicron but not panicked," Biden said.
The president also announced
plans to send six emergency response teams to Michigan, Indiana, Wisconsin,
Arizona, New Hampshire and Vermont and will stand up new federal testing sites
with the first location in New York City this week. "This free testing is
going to help reduce the waiting lines," Biden said. "Sometimes it's
hours. We're going to continue to add federal testing sites where needed, so if
you want an immediate test, there's a place where you can go get it."
HOLIDAYS IMPACTED?: What to
know about Omicron amid the holidays Some major U.S. cities announced new
restrictions on Monday to address a spike in COVID-19 cases. The District of
Columbia re-imposed its mask mandate and said city employees would be required
to get vaccinated, including receiving a booster shot, while Los Angeles
officials said its New Year’s Eve party planned for downtown will be streamed
with no in-person audience.
Why the US lags behind on
rapid testing The administration has taken some previous steps to expand
access to test kits, but experts have criticized the government for not doing
more – particularly for not making tests as cheap and easy to get as they are
in the United Kingdom and some other countries. White House press secretary Jen
Psaki on Dec. 6 dismissed the idea of sending free tests to all American
households, drawing criticism from many health experts. "Should we
just send one to every American?" Psaki said, raising issues such as the
cost of doing so. Part of the reason the U.S. hasn't been able to keep
up with the demand for testing stems from regulation of the industry, according
to Michael Mina, an epidemiologist and testing expert who serves as chief
science officer at biotech software company eMed. Mina said the U.S.
Food and Drug Administration has been regulating rapid COVID-19 tests as
medical devices instead of a public health tool, requiring companies to conduct
clinical trials that cost millions of dollars and last months. That slows the
process of getting tests in the hands of American consumers, he said, and only
a handful of COVID-19 rapid test manufacturers have kits available in the U.S.,
compared to the global market. "We're in a pandemic, a fast-moving
respiratory infectious disease, and speed of a result is much more important
for a public health test than sensitivity," Mina said. "This is about
(stopping) transmission. Nobody is talking about a new test for medical
purposes."
Looking abroad, the U.K. has been
able to stand up one of the most robust rapid test distribution programs in the
world, Mina said, because they recognized the need for a more efficient
regulatory framework to deal with the speed of this virus' transmission. "They
immediately saw the need to think about these tests differently," Mina
said of the U.K. "And in two years it's just unfathomable, in my view,
that we have not recognized that the way we're were evaluating rapid tests is
just antiquated." Biden has tried to make more tests available ahead of
the holiday season. Earlier this month, he unveiled his winter strategy amid
growing fears of the highly transmissible omicron variant, which included
requiring private health insurance companies to cover the total cost of at-home
COVID-19 tests next year and distributing free, at-home tests through health
centers and rural clinics. The White House also announced a $1 billion
investment to boost the supply of at-home rapid COVID-19 tests in October, with
the aim of making millions of rapid tests available to Americans as the holiday
season ramped up. But images of long lines at drive-through testing sites and
the words "sold out" next to images of at-home testing kits on
pharmacy websites raises questions about whether the White House is doing
enough to battle an expected explosive surge, particularly as Americans travel
for the holidays and the omicron variant begins to spread at a faster clip. "It’s
spotty. In some places you can easily get a test. But in other places, you
can’t," Dr. Anthony Fauci, Biden’s top coronavirus adviser said during
remarks at the National Press Club Monday. "I know that. I’ve tried
myself.”
'Viral blizzard' is coming Dr.
Scott Gottlieb, who led the Food and Drug Administration for the first two
years of the Trump administration, said the government is “probably not” doing
all it can to provide access to rapid antigen testing. During a meeting
with the USA TODAY Editorial Board earlier this month, Gottlieb said the
country has a “critical window” to make COVID-19 tests more ubiquitous as omicron
spreads more widely. People need to test themselves not just once before
attending a gathering or other higher-risk environment; they need to test the
day before, the day of and the day after, he said. “Flooding the market
with diagnostic home diagnostic tests for the next four months, to me, makes
eminent sense,” Gottlieb said, “and the best way to do that is to directly
subsidize it.” Michael Osterholm, who advised Biden on COVID-19 during
the presidential transition, warned last week that a “viral blizzard” is
coming. Osterholm said on CNN that millions of Americans are likely to be
infected by omicron over the next three-to-eight weeks. “That will be
overlaid on top of delta,” he said, “and we’re not yet sure exactly how that’s
going to work out.” Delta is another highly contagious variant of the
coronavirus. Dr. Celine Gounder, an epidemiologist who advised Biden's
transition team on COVID-19, said the president needs to refocus the
conversation around hospitalizations and deaths, rather than infections and
cases.
In places like New York City,
where the population is highly vaccinated, cases are on the rise but
hospitalizations are not. But in places with low vaccination rates, a surge in
cases could lead to a surge in hospitalizations and deaths and overwhelm the
health care systems. “It's tragic because we have those tools to move beyond
this, but we're just not using them,” Gounder said. “I think people need to
understand vaccines work best at a population level, they're not on/off
switches at the individual level.” Just over 60% of the population is fully
vaccinated, according to the CDC. As he urged the unvaccinated to get their
shots, Biden noted that former President Donald Trump, who has many followers
hesitant of getting the COVID-19 vaccine, said over the weekend that he
received his booster shot. "Maybe one of the few things he and I agree
on," Biden said. Republicans make up an increasingly disproportionate
share of those who remain unvaccinated, according to the Kaiser Family
Foundation, a nonpartisan health research organization that has been tracking
vaccinations. Political partisanship trumps age, race, education level or
insurance status as a predictor of whether someone is vaccinated.
Biden’s efforts to impose vaccine
requirements on many workers have been impeded by the courts. While a
federal appeals court on Friday reinstated a federal rule that workers at
larger businesses get vaccinated or be regularly tested, the Labor Department
announcedit would give businesses more time to comply because of the
uncertainty created by legal challenges. Workers who are not fully
vaccinated won’t have to be regularly tested for the coronavirus until Feb. 9,
more than a month after the original deadline of Jan. 4. The
administration is also fighting challenges to requirements that health care
workers and federal contractors be vaccinated. "These rules are
going to keep workers safe, and keeping workers safe will help keep businesses
open," Biden said. Acknowledging the requirements might not be popular, he
said it is meant "not to control your life but to save your life."
Biden released his winter strategy on Dec. 2, a day after the first
confirmed case of the omicron variant in the USA was announced. Now, the
variant has been found in at least 39 states. It’s expected to become the
dominant strain in the coming weeks.
The plan included: Requiring travelers entering the country by air to test negative for the coronavirus within a day of departure, regardless of vaccination status or nationality, instead of within three days. Extending through March 18 the requirement that masks be worn on airplanes, trains and public transportation. Requiring private health insurance companies to cover 100% of the cost of at-home tests for the coronavirus, beginning in mid-January. Launching a public education campaign to encourage 100 million adults to get boosters, with a special focus on seniors. Deploying emergency response teams to support strained hospital system, help with the administration of lifesaving monoclonal antibody treatments and conduct outbreak investigations.
^ Biden continues to fail in his handling of everything from Covid to Shortages to the Military. We are nearly 2 years into this Pandemic and nearly a year with Biden as President and yet he still seems so confused by everything.
What good are at-home tests in
January when people need them now or even months ago? He said this all
"sprang-up just a month ago" yet it started back in March 2020 and he
started dealing with it in January 2021 - more than a month ago.
He continues to be as confused by
Covid as he is by Afghanistan (there are still American Citizens, American
Green Card Holders and Afghans who worked for the US abandoned to the Taliban
120 days and counting.) He is
always a day late and a Dollar short. ^
https://news.yahoo.com/biden-outline-covid-steps-along-090026335.html?fr=sycsrp_catchall
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