Welcome to Friday's Overnight Health Care, where we are marveling at the lede on this story about a climate scientist and a random encounter in a bar. Follow us on Twitter @PeterSullivan4 and @NateWeixel. The World Health Organization wants rich countries to donate more vaccine, the former CDC director has a theory on the origins of the coronavirus, and New York is setting up a vaccine passport. . We'll start, though, with more vaccine doses in the US: White House: 11M Johnson & Johnson doses coming next week The White House said Friday that Johnson & Johnson will deliver at least 11 million doses next week, a significant increase to hit the company's target of 20 million total doses delivered to the U.S. by the end of March. There had been some uncertainty over whether J&J would meet its goal: Johnson & Johnson experienced uneven manufacturing, fueling some doubts in the run-up to the end of the month. But White House coronavirus response coordinator Jeff Zients said Friday that the company is poised to meet the goal. "The company has said they'll deliver the 20 million by the end of March," Zients said during a press briefing. "And from our conversations with the company they appear on track to meet that goal with at least 11 million doses delivered next week." The White House has been working with the company to try to increase its manufacturing. There was a relatively small number of doses, 4 million, available when the vaccine was first authorized at the end of February. Read more here. This is where schools are back in session, and where kids are still learning virtually About a third of school districts across the nation have resumed in-person learning, while just 1 in 10 school districts continue teaching students entirely remotely, according to a new tracker launched to measure the way local schools adapt to the coronavirus pandemic. Some trends: The data shows that school districts across the South are the most likely to have sent children back to school already, while California has the highest concentration of districts that remain remote. But the lack of a clear national strategy for reopening schools, a yearlong problem that is only beginning to be addressed as the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention roll out new recommendations for distancing, air circulation and sanitation requirements, has kept most school districts in some type of hybrid learning environment. A majority: The data, maintained by Return to Learn, a joint project of the American Enterprise Institute and the College Crisis Initiative at Davidson College, shows 54 percent of school districts still operating school in some kind of hybrid model, in which kids attend class in person some days and virtually on others. Read more here. WHO to rich countries: How about donating some more vaccine doses? The World Health Organization (WHO) asked rich countries on Friday to donate 10 million coronavirus vaccine doses to poorer nations. "COVAX is ready to deliver, but we can't deliver vaccines we don't have. Bilateral deals, export bans and vaccine nationalism have caused distortions in the market with gross inequities in supply and demand," WHO Director-General Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus said at a press conference, Reuters reported. "Ten million doses is not much, and it's not nearly enough," Tedros added. US priorities: The U.S. has signaled it will not be sending vaccines to most other countries until every American is able to be vaccinated, though the Biden administration has announced a deal to share with its neighbors, Canada and Mexico. "The president has made clear that he is focused on ensuring that vaccines are accessible to every American. That is our focus," White House press secretary Jen Psaki said at a press briefing toward the beginning of March. "The next step is economic recovery, and ensuring that our neighbors, Mexico and Canada, have similarly managed the pandemic so that we can open our borders and build back better." Read more here. |
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