Latest Vaccine News

...Unfortunately Trump was demanding the vaccine be released before election day. He made statements demanding why the FDA was taking so long and that he would take steps to release the vaccine by executive order.

Of course, rushing a vaccine out before safety trials were completed in order to enhance Trump's election campaign would only serve to make the entire American population skeptical of the vaccine. In other words --- political-driven early release would be a disaster.

The mainstream medical community and rational people objected to a vaccine release being rushed for political purposes... they never objected to the accelerated schedule and steps outlined by the vaccine manufacturers.

Now the Trump administration is taking no responsibility for their disastrous vaccine distribution effort.

Bingo...

Also, I posted an earlier video of Trump making those demands and promises for political purposes.

I also remember that "executive order" (another political publicity stunt) in which he stated about the vaccination process with the vaccine companies...

America First.

Things didn't go his way soon afterwards, Europe (U.K.) began vaccinations first. :D

wrbtrader
 
Romney urges sweeping vaccine plan as U.S. surpasses 20 million COVID-19 cases
https://www.reuters.com/article/uk-health-coronavirus-usa-idUKKBN2962LD

U.S. Senator Mitt Romney on Friday urged the U.S. government to immediately enlist veterinarians, combat medics and others in an all-out national campaign to administer coronavirus vaccinations and slow a surging rise in COVID-19 hospitalizations and deaths.

The Utah Republican, who ran unsuccessfully for president as his party’s nominee in 2012, called for greater action as the Trump administration fell far short of its goal of vaccinating 20 million Americans with a first of two required doses by the end of 2020.

As of Friday, the first day of the new year, an estimated 2.8 million vaccine doses have actually been given, mostly to front-line healthcare workers as well as staff and residents of nursing facilities.

“That comprehensive vaccination plans have not been developed at the federal level and sent to the states as models is as incomprehensible as it is inexcusable,” Romney said in a statement.

The United States has lost more than 345,000 lives from COVID-19 to date, equal to one in every 950 Americans, and ranks 16th in national per capita coronavirus deaths in the world.

Meanwhile, the tally of known U.S. infections reached another sober milestone on Friday, surpassing 20 million confirmed cases since the start of the pandemic, and the number of hospitalized COVID-19 patients exceeded 125,000, setting a daily record once more.

California, the most populous state with 40 million residents, has become a leading U.S. flashpoint of the pandemic despite some of the nation’s toughest restrictions on social gatherings and business activities.

HIDDEN DISASTER IN CALIFORNIA
The soaring COVID-19 case load has pushed hospitals in and around Los Angeles in particular to their limits, filling emergency rooms, intensive care units, ambulance bays and morgues beyond capacity, and creating staff shortages.

Briefing reporters on Thursday, Cathy Chidester, director of the Los Angeles County Emergency Medical Services Agency, called the situation a “hidden disaster,” not plainly visible to the public.

Medical experts attribute the worsening pandemic in recent weeks to the arrival of colder weather and the failure of many Americans to abide by public health warnings and requirements to stay home and avoid unnecessary travel over the year-end holiday season.

The recent emergence of a more transmissible variant of the coronavirus in the United States could make a swift rollout of immunizations all the more critical.

Romney called for deploying veterinarians, emergency medical workers and medical students to help deliver vaccinations and set up inoculation clinics at sites such as school buildings that are largely empty because of the pandemic.

He also recommended establishing a clear order for Americans nationwide to receive their shots according to priority groups and birthdays, while welcoming other ideas from medical professionals. Prioritizing vaccine recipients is currently being handled state by state.

With the inauguration of Democratic President-elect Joe Biden set for Jan. 20, Romney has emerged as one of the few leading members of his party to openly criticize fellow Republican President Donald Trump.

Trump has repeatedly emphasized that he, not Biden, deserves credit for the speedy development of the vaccine, even as he has left immunization efforts largely to state and local officials to administer with the help of private pharmacies.

States and localities, already hammered by the months-long fight against the outbreak and its economic fallout, only recently received federal money for vaccinations under the latest relief passage signed into law on Sunday.

Trump has spent the weeks since his Nov. 3 re-election defeat rarely focused, at least in public, on the worsening pandemic. Instead, he has continued to make unsubstantiated claims of widespread voter fraud while falsely asserting he won the election.

OXYGEN SHORTAGES, LINES OF AMBULANCES
Romney said the country needs to acknowledge the current vaccination plan “isn’t working” and is “woefully behind,” and that leaders must find ways to quickly bolster capacity.

“It was unrealistic to assume that the healthcare workers already overburdened with COVID care could take on a massive vaccination program,” Romney said.

The crisis faced by healthcare systems has become especially acute in Los Angeles County where one patient is dying every 10 minutes from the respiratory virus, according to county health officials.

Heightened demands of caring for those struggling to breathe has also left many hospitals in the region short on oxygen, both in supplies and the ability of older facilities to maintain adequate pressure flow through ventilators, Chidester said.

She also described ambulances forced to wait several hours at a time to unload patients, causing delays throughout the county’s emergency response system.

To ease ER overcrowding, the county is denying ambulance transport to hospitals of emergency patients who are already under hospice care with do-not-resuscitate directives, according to Adam Blackstone, a spokesman for the Hospital Association of Southern California.

The leading U.S. infectious disease specialist, Dr. Anthony Fauci, said on Wednesday he was confident of overcoming early glitches in the vaccine campaign, saying America could still achieve enough collective immunity through vaccinations to regain “some semblance of normality” by autumn 2021.

Biden has vowed to use the Defense Production Act to boost the vaccination program and to send mobile vaccination units to help deliver shots in under-served areas.
 
You figured it out.

gwBe-lying... just makes shit up based what he thinks a headline means
and lies his ass off acting like he understands something.
When you call him out on his misrepresentation there is a 90 percent change he will continue to lie to support his original lies.

If you even spend 10 minutes going one step deeper on any subject related to Covid
you see he is a dangerous lying moron.


And do you think two shots was picked at random for those other vaccines? One can just read the article to understand what pfeizer said, instead of blanket statements like "pfeizer generated no data on the efficacy of a single dose" or fall for click bait headlines:

  • Pfizer confirmed in response that although some protection appears to begin as early as 12 days after the first dose, two doses of the vaccine — separated by three weeks — is the only regimen that proved to be 95% effective in Phase 3 trials.
 
Wasn't that long ago you lefties were saying a vaccine before the end of the year was impossible, now you're complaining, (why am I not surprised at a leftist complaining), that not enough vaccines are being administered. Actually this should be glass half full news for you Covid ghouls. Fewer vaccines means more graves to dance on, right? See, stay positive lefty, always a silver lining somewhere.

you a lefty now cap'n?

So here's something to think about. There has never been a vaccine for any coronavirus, not one, ever. Covid 19 comes along, supposedly more infectious, more deadly, more complicated, more of everything and a couple months in we already have very promising results working towards a vaccine. My bullshit meter is off the chart. Now either these people have never put much effort into previous vaccine research, or this one ain't all that complicated. Yeah they're working hard at it, all hands on deck, but com'on, never ever been able to concoct one and now we're on the cusp of one in a matter of weeks? There is another possibility, these phase one trials are easy peasy to get through and then failures result as they get further along. Just food for thought as I don't believe in all too convenient miracles.
Good points. Things just seem to be progressing a wee bit too fast for me not to raise an eyebrow. We all know this is complicated and it's an emergency situation. I'm afraid that desperation leads us to a, well boys it ain't perfect but it'll have to do vaccine. Not saying that's the worst thing, but I do believe come November/December some tough decisions are going to be right in out face. This bug isn't going away. Unless there is some miracle vaccine we decide, keep things open and watch several hundred thousand die, or we lock it up and destroy ourselves. Hell, might be both. And this assumes everyone is trying to work together without all the political gamesmanship. Throw that in the mix and things get worse. The future of life as we know it is pinned on this vaccine.
 
Let me play Captain Nostradamus for a moment. When, not if, but when the vaccine rollout isn't going as planned here is the 100 percent guaranteed response from the Biden administration and the media minions. Trump left us a mess, he screwed it up and now it's going to take some time to unscramble the Trump mess.
We can also expect this to be applied to everything else, economic recovery, foreign policy, mostly peaceful riots continuing, etc., etc. It's Trump's fault, the gift that will keep giving for all of 2021 and beyond.
 
you a lefty now cap'n?
But I am not the one complaining about the efficiency of the vaccine rollout, you are.
What I questioned in those posts, and still have concerns, is how in the hell did they come up with a vaccine so quickly? A vaccine for what we're told is the most complex and mysterious virus ever? Never has a vaccine come to market this fast. So yeah, I did and still do have questions about that. Time will tell just how effective it is and if there are any longer term side effects yet to be seen. Maybe they got lucky, maybe the process has been deliberately slow to justify the FDA and all of its many bureaucrats, or maybe they just cut a few corners. Let's hope it works.
 
Let me play Captain Nostradamus for a moment. When, not if, but when the vaccine rollout isn't going as planned here is the 100 percent guaranteed response from the Biden administration and the media minions. Trump left us a mess, he screwed it up and now it's going to take some time to unscramble the Trump mess.
We can also expect this to be applied to everything else, economic recovery, foreign policy, mostly peaceful riots continuing, etc., etc. It's Trump's fault, the gift that will keep giving for all of 2021 and beyond.
All administrations do this, it will never change. Trump was Obama didn't leave me enough of a stockpile of PPE 3 years in, etc etc. While there is some truth to all of it, would be nice to see politicians take some personal responsibility. It just happens to be more true that Obama inherited GWBs war and financial clusters, and Biden will have to follow a historically bad administration. Seems weird that one side, Clinton and Obama handed things off in pretty solid positions, while GWB and Trump handed things off in crisis. Hmmmm almost makes you think one side handles things better than the other.....
 
But I am not the one complaining about the efficiency of the vaccine rollout, you are.
What I questioned in those posts, and still have concerns, is how in the hell did they come up with a vaccine so quickly? A vaccine for what we're told is the most complex and mysterious virus ever? Never has a vaccine come to market this fast. So yeah, I did and still do have questions about that. Time will tell just how effective it is and if there are any longer term side effects yet to be seen. Maybe they got lucky, maybe the process has been deliberately slow to justify the FDA and all of its many bureaucrats, or maybe they just cut a few corners. Let's hope it works.

except you were complaining about something different altogether:

Wasn't that long ago you lefties were saying a vaccine before the end of the year was impossible, now you're complaining, (why am I not surprised at a leftist complaining), that not enough vaccines are being administered. Actually this should be glass half full news for you Covid ghouls. Fewer vaccines means more graves to dance on, right? See, stay positive lefty, always a silver lining somewhere.

Meanwhile, I was calling out Fauci on changing timelines, and posting about 100% effectiveness on vaccine trials when you were bitching about "vaccine being out too quick". No surprise, you righties always accuse others of what you do yourselves. AKA, blatant hypocrites w/amnesia:

Looks like Fauci is on a backtracking rampage. Precondition to be let out in public?

https://www.forbes.com/sites/alexan...-might-have-a-vaccine-by-the-end-of-the-year/
Fauci: ‘We Might Have A Vaccine By The End Of The Year’

TOPLINE
Dr. Anthony Fauci, director of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, said in a Wednesday interview that a vaccine for Covid-19 could be ready as early as November, an aggressive timeline that would beat many earlier predictions for when a vaccine might be ready

“We have a good chance—if all the things fall in the right place—that we might have a vaccine that would be deployable by the end of the year, by November-December,” Dr. Fauci said on CNN Wednesday morning.

Fauci explained that the vaccine trials with Niaid are proceeding “at risk,” meaning researchers are taking “the next steps before the results of the previous step,” which can shorten the development process by months.

He also did not rule out the possibility that there may be a second wave of coronavirus: “It could happen, but it is not inevitable.”

Many pharmaceutical companies are racing to produce a vaccine as quickly as possible; Pfizer chief Albert Bourla has challenged his team to a “moon-shot-like goal” of having millions of doses of a vaccine distributed to the public by the end of the year.

The FDA has fast-tracked vaccine trials and the Department of Health and Human Services has already signed contracts ordering $100 million worth of needles and syringes for a “Covid-19 mass vaccination campaign.”

Vaccines usually take much longer than a year to go from development to mass market: the fastest entirely new vaccine developed in the United States took four years—it took 20 months for researchers just to bring a vaccine to clinical trial for the 2002-03 SARS outbreak.

CHIEF CRITICS
Former FDA chief Scott Gottlieb also said Wednesday that a widely available vaccine is “probably a 2021 event,” saying on CNBC that “we’ll have to have one more cycle of this virus in the fall, heading into the winter, before we get to a vaccine.”

Similarly, Merck MRK CEO Ken Frazier called vaccine timelines within 12 to 18 months “very aggressive,” saying to the Financial Times that he would not hold his own company, which has two Covid-19 vaccine candidates, to this timeline.

KEY BACKGROUND
There has been much uncertainty, speculation and disagreement among the scientific community as to when a vaccine will be ready for Covid-19. Last week, a scientific report from Stat News flagged issues around lack of data and methodology to back much of the optimism held for Moderna’s vaccine, purported as the U.S. FDA’s vaccine front-runner. The scientific community has also raised skepticism around the University of Oxford’s vaccine due to their use of press release rather than traditional methods of scientific announcement (via studies and journal articles) to communicate developments around their vaccine.

There are 10 Covid-19 vaccines currently undergoing human trials, according to the World Health Organization, with 114 others in preclinical trials.
 
But I am not the one complaining about the efficiency of the vaccine rollout, you are.
What I questioned in those posts, and still have concerns, is how in the hell did they come up with a vaccine so quickly? A vaccine for what we're told is the most complex and mysterious virus ever? Never has a vaccine come to market this fast. So yeah, I did and still do have questions about that. Time will tell just how effective it is and if there are any longer term side effects yet to be seen. Maybe they got lucky, maybe the process has been deliberately slow to justify the FDA and all of its many bureaucrats, or maybe they just cut a few corners. Let's hope it works.

Have faith in the Pfizer vaccine. Don’t forget they make Viagra.

If they can raise the dead... they can save the living.
 
All administrations do this, it will never change. Trump was Obama didn't leave me enough of a stockpile of PPE 3 years in, etc etc. While there is some truth to all of it, would be nice to see politicians take some personal responsibility. It just happens to be more true that Obama inherited GWBs war and financial clusters, and Biden will have to follow a historically bad administration. Seems weird that one side, Clinton and Obama handed things off in pretty solid positions, while GWB and Trump handed things off in crisis. Hmmmm almost makes you think one side handles things better than the other.....

So true.Looking at the state of the country at end of Bushes and Trumps terms and compering it to the state Clinton and Obama left the country in its unfucking believable nearly half this country still vote for republican presidents.
 
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