US surpasses 17 million official Covid-19 cases
The US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention would need to green-light the vaccine before shots can be administered — and a CDC advisory panel is expected to meet on the matter Saturday, raising the possibility that the Moderna vaccine could be used next week.
The recently authorized Pfizer vaccine, meanwhile, has been administered to hundreds of US health care workers this week, and drug store chains CVS and Walgreens are helping to get shots to long-term care residents and staff members.
• Average cases: The country’s average number of daily cases across a week was 215,729 on Wednesday — a record high, Johns Hopkins University data show. That’s more than three times what the daily case average was during a summer peak in July.
• Cases in one day: The US recorded 247,403 cases on Wednesday, a record for one day.
• Deaths: The nation averaged 2,569 deaths daily across the last week — the highest average yet. The total reported Wednesday — 3,656 — is a one-day high.
And it lamented that state and local governments are “not implementing the same mitigation policies that stemmed the tide of the summer surge,” citing indoor gatherings at home and calling for a “significant reduction in capacity or closure in public and private indoor spaces, including restaurants and bars.”
Dr. Carlos Del Rio, executive associate dean of Emory University’s school of medicine, said he agreed.
“We’re just simply saying, ‘Well, we’re getting vaccine.’ But the vaccine is coming way too late for thousands of people who will die before we get the vaccine” distributed widely,” Del Rio told CNN’s New Day” on Thursday.
“Transmissions (of the virus) are actively happening, and I think before the end of the year, we may be getting close to 4,000 deaths a day,” Del Rio said.
‘We are still in for a very rough few weeks at least’
In California, where Los Angeles County health officials are reporting exploding case numbers, health services director Dr. Christina Ghaly attributed the surge to residents gathering over the Thanksgiving holiday despite repeated pleas to stay home.
And the worst is yet to come, Ghaly added, saying “we are still in for a very rough few weeks at least, and potentially through January.”
Governors across the Northeast and Midwest issued a video message this week encouraging residents to “double down” on safety measures and reconsider their holiday plans.
“If you are planning to travel or gather with other households for the holidays — we urge you to reconsider,” the governors said. “Just one infection can cause an outbreak in your community, which could overwhelm our hospitals and put you and your loved ones at risk.”
In hopes of helping curb the spread around the holidays, El Paso County Judge Ricardo Samaniego announced curfews from 10 p.m. to 5 a.m. lasting from December 23 to December 26 and from December 30 to January 4.
“What people need to know is, we are still at a dangerous and critical part of this pandemic, and tens of thousands of American lives are at stake,” Adm. Dr. Brett Giroir, assistant secretary for health at the Department of Health and Human Services, said Wednesday.
“If you can avoid traveling, that’s a good measure,” he added.
It’s OK to squeeze extra dozes of Pfizer vaccine from the vials, FDA says
Politico was first to report that some pharmacists found they could get six — and possibly even seven — doses of vaccine out of vials, which are each designed to provide five doses. An FDA spokeswoman told CNN the agency was aware of the issue and “working with Pfizer to determine the best path forward.”
“At this time, given the public health emergency, FDA is advising that it is acceptable to use every full dose obtainable (the sixth, or possibly even a seventh) from each vial, pending resolution of the issue,” the spokeswoman said. “However, since the vials are preservative-free, it is critical to note that any further remaining product that does not constitute a full dose should not be pooled from multiple vials to create one.”
More than 2.9 million doses were allocated to states for the first Pfizer vaccine doses, according to a list published Wednesday by the CDC.
The Pfizer vaccine requires each patient to receive two doses about 21 days apart, and the Moderna vaccine also would require two doses. Assuming the Moderna vaccine is authorized, the two products could combine for an availability of 40 million doses, for 20 million people, by the end of December, Dr. Anthony Fauci, director of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, has said.
More Covid-19 at home tests authorized
The FDA issued an emergency use authorization Wednesday for another at-home Covid-19 test — this one for Abbott’s BinaxNOW COVID-19 Ag Card Home Test.
The test is authorized for “prescription use at home with self-collected nasal swab samples from individuals ages 15 years or older who are suspected of Covid-19 by their health care provider within the first seven days of symptom onset,” a statement from the agency reads. Adults can take samples for younger children.
Abbott has said the new test will cost $25.
On Wednesday, Giroir said there will likely be more good news from the FDA soon about “other home tests that are not exactly the over-the-counter type but are in the same ballpark.”
“You’ll see more and more tests get authorized, and then ramping up very soon in the early part of the year,” he added.
CNN’s Betsy Klein, Amanda Watts, Maggie Fox, Jacqueline Howard, Raja Razek and Andrea Diaz contributed to this report.
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