Tag: Dr. Fauci

  • Biden gives a message of hope on the first anniversary of COVID-19 Pandemic

    Biden gives a message of hope on the first anniversary of COVID-19 Pandemic

    “We are bound together by the hope, by the possibilities”

    I.S. Saluja

    WASHINGTON (TIP): President Joe Biden marked a year since the beginning of the coronavirus “shutdown” with a prime-time speech Thursday, March 11 night where he announced he would direct states to make all adult Americans eligible to get vaccinated by May 1. He also predicted a possible return to some semblance of normalcy by the Fourth of July and detailed several more measures aimed at speeding up vaccinations across the country.

    It was the first prime-time address of his presidency, delivered from the White House’s East Room. It came the same day he signed a $1.9 trillion COVID-19 relief package into law, a major legislative victory, and several days before he planned to hit the road to pitch the law to Americans. In his remarks, Biden said he was “announcing that I will direct all states, tribes and territories to make all adults, people 18 and over, eligible to be vaccinated no later than May 1.” But Biden warned that this would not mean all Americans would have their shot on that day. “It means you’ll be able to get in line beginning May 1,” he said. While the federal government procures and distributes vaccine doses, states and other non-federal jurisdictions control eligibility for that supply. While many have largely followed federal guidance for the order in which to vaccinate different groups, there is still a patchwork of different eligibility guidelines that restrict who can receive it. The president also set the Fourth of July as a new marker for the United States on the path to normalcy, saying that if people follow guidelines from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention — by wearing masks, socially distancing and getting vaccinated when possible. “By July the 4th, there’s a good chance you, your families and friends, will be able to get together in your backyard or in your neighborhood and have a cookout or a barbecue and celebrate Independence Day,” he said.

    But, he added, “large events with lots of people together” should still not take place. “After this long hard year, that will make this Independence Day something truly special where we not only mark our independence as a nation but begin to mark our independence from this virus,” Biden said. Earlier in the evening, the White House said the military will deploy 4,000 more active-duty service members “to support vaccination efforts,” with 6,000 total troops backing vaccination programs. It also said the number of community health centers and pharmacies administering COVID-19 vaccines would dramatically expand.

    On Friday, the White House said, the administration would allow many more professionals to give shots: dentists, paramedics, veterinarians and even medical and nursing students, among the additional groups.

    “We’re mobilizing thousands of vaccinators to put the vaccine in one’s arm,” Biden said in his remarks.

    The administration also plans to centralize information on a federally supported website to show vaccination locations — with a call center, too — as well as provide technological support to states that allow people to make vaccination appointments on their own sites, an official said.

    Biden’s remarks mixed compassion for the lives lost with hope about the path forward.

    “History, I believe, will record, we faced and overcame one of the toughest and darkest periods in this nation’s history,” he said. “The darkest we’ve ever known. I promise you, we’ll come out stronger with a renewed faith in ourselves, a renewed commitment to one another, to our communities and to our country.”

    Even so, he said the “truth” was that the country was not out of the pandemic yet — and that Americans must follow scientific guidance to emerge on its other side.

     

    “A lot can happen,” he said. “Conditions can change. The scientists have made clear that things may get worse again. As new variants of the virus spread, we’ve got work to do to ensure that everyone has confidence in the safety and effectiveness of all three vaccines.”

     

    Biden said it was up to Americans to ensure the country made it to the other side of the pandemic.

     

    “Listen to Dr. Fauci,” he said, referencing the government’s top infectious disease expert, Anthony Fauci.

     

    Biden directly condemned recent attacks on Asian Americans, describing them as “vicious hate crimes against Asian Americans who have been attacked, harassed, blamed and scapegoated.”

     

    “At this very moment, so many of them, our fellow Americans, they’re on the front lines of this pandemic trying to save lives, and still — still — they are forced to live in fear for their lives, just walking down streets in America,” he said. “It’s wrong, it’s un-American and it must stop.”

     

    Biden also implicitly criticized his predecessor, President Donald Trump, for intentionally downplaying the virus.

     

    “A year ago, we were hit with a virus that was met with silence and spread unchecked — denials for days, weeks, then months,” he said.

     

    Biden added that “too often, we’ve turned against one another” — with the issue of mask-wearing dividing Americans and states pitted against one another.

     

    Biden briefly mentioned the American Rescue Plan which he signed earlier in the day. He said the plan was meant to provide immediate relief to American people. A family of four will have $5600 to take care of their needs.

    The plan, he said, provided forrestoration of health of small businesses which had suffered a lot during the pandemic.

    Funds have also been provided in the plan to accelerate vaccination and contain spread of the pandemic.

    “Our economy will be back on rails”, he said.

    Lauding Americans and America, Biden said, “This country can do anything, hard things, big things”. He hastened to add that anything could be achieved if all come together as “one people, one America”.

    “We will come out stronger, with renewed faith in ourselves and America”, he said.

    Concluding his address, he offered solace to families which lost their loved ones in the pandemic.

    (Agencies)

  • Biden orders US to rejoin WHO; UN chief welcomes re-engagement

    Biden orders US to rejoin WHO; UN chief welcomes re-engagement

    Trump had cut off US funding to the WHO, saying it was “virtually controlled by China.”

     WASHINGTON / UNITED NATIONS(TIP):  The US rejoined the World Health Organisation (WHO) in one of the first official orders of the Joe Biden presidency, reversing a key foreign policy decision his predecessor Donald Trump took last year after accusing the UN health agency of incompetence and bowing to Chinese pressure over the coronavirus pandemic. In April last year, as the coronavirus pandemic was spreading across the globe, Trump cut off US funding to the WHO, saying it was “virtually controlled by China.” He then went further, triggering the process to pull the US completely out of the organisation.The withdrawal was due to go into effect in July this year, but Biden’s order will cancel it. Biden in a letter to UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres on Wednesday, the first day of his presidency, said, “The United States intends to remain a member of the World Health Organisation.” “The WHO plays a crucial role in the world’s fight against the deadly COVID-19 pandemic as well as countless other threats to global health and health security. The United States will continue to be a full participant and a global leader in confronting such threats and advancing global health and health security,” Biden wrote.

    The UN Secretary-General welcomed the US’ re-engagement with the WHO, saying supporting the health agency is “absolutely critical” to combatting the COVID-19 pandemic. He said Washington joining the global vaccine initiative will boost efforts to ensure equitable access to vaccines for all countries.

    Guterres said now is the time for unity and for the international community to work together in solidarity to stop the virus and its shattering consequences.

    The US has been the largest funder to the WHO, contributing more than USD 450 million per annum. The US has been a party to the WHO Constitution since June 21, 1948.

    As the world reached a “heart-wrenching milestone” of two million COVID-19-related deaths less than a week ago, Guterres lamented that the deadly impact of the pandemic has worsened due to the absence of a global coordinated effort and said that “vocationalism” by governments is “self-defeating” that will delay a global recovery. Guterres has said the UN is supporting countries to mobilize the largest global immunization effort in history and the world organization is committed to making sure that vaccines are seen as global public goods – people’s vaccines.

    White House Press Secretary Jen Psaki said that Biden signed the executive order, reversing Trump’s decision to withdraw from the WHO. “This will strengthen our own efforts to get the pandemic under control by improving global health, and tomorrow we are not wasting any time,” she said.

    The WHO’s Executive Board has been meeting virtually this week, and the Biden administration announced that a US delegation, headed by Anthony Fauci, the government’s top infectious disease expert, will participate. Fauci will deliver a speech on January 21 to the WHO as head of a US delegation to lay out how the administration intends to work with the WHO on reforms, supporting the coronavirus response and promoting global health and health security

    “Once the United States resumes its engagement with the WHO, the Biden-Harris administration will work with the WHO and our partners to strengthen and reform the organisation, support the COVID-19 health and humanitarian response, and advance global health and health security,” the White House said in a fact sheet.

    Business Roundtable welcomed the decision of Biden to not to withdraw from the WHO. “We need international cooperation to get the COVID-19 pandemic under control here in America and around the world.

    Business Roundtable applauds President Biden’s decision to re-engage with the WHO to improve the international response to the pandemic and welcomes his commitment to WHO reform to prevent and better respond to future public health crises,” it said,

    (Source: PTI)