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Monday, March 3, 2025

Biden co-hosts 2nd global COVID summit as US nears 1M deaths

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1025 days ago
20220512
President Joe Biden speaks during a visit to O'Connor Farms, Wednesday, May 11, 2022, in Kankakee, Ill. Biden visited the farm to discuss food supply and prices as a result of Putin's invasion of Ukraine. (AP Photo/Andrew Harnik)

President Joe Biden speaks during a visit to O'Connor Farms, Wednesday, May 11, 2022, in Kankakee, Ill. Biden visited the farm to discuss food supply and prices as a result of Putin's invasion of Ukraine. (AP Photo/Andrew Harnik)

By ZEKE MILLER and MARIA CHENG

 

WASH­ING­TON (AP) — Pres­i­dent Joe Biden will ap­peal for a re­newed in­ter­na­tion­al com­mit­ment to at­tack­ing COVID-19 as he con­venes a sec­ond vir­tu­al sum­mit on the pan­dem­ic and marks “a trag­ic mile­stone” as the U.S. ap­proach­es 1 mil­lion deaths.

“As a na­tion, we must not grow numb to such sor­row,” Biden said in a state­ment Thurs­day. “To heal, we must re­mem­ber. We must re­main vig­i­lant against this pan­dem­ic and do every­thing we can to save as many lives as pos­si­ble.”

The virus has killed more than 995,000 peo­ple in the U.S. and at least 6.2 mil­lion peo­ple glob­al­ly, ac­cord­ing to fig­ures kept by the Cen­ters for Dis­ease Con­trol and Pre­ven­tion and the World Health Or­ga­ni­za­tion.

The pres­i­dent called on Con­gress to pro­vide more fund­ing for test­ing, vac­cines and treat­ments, some­thing law­mak­ers have been un­will­ing to de­liv­er so far.

The lack of fund­ing — Biden has re­quest­ed an­oth­er $22.5 bil­lion of what he calls crit­i­cal­ly need­ed mon­ey — is a re­flec­tion of fal­ter­ing re­solve at home that jeop­ar­dizes the glob­al re­sponse to the pan­dem­ic.

Eight months af­ter he used the first such sum­mit to an­nounce an am­bi­tious pledge to do­nate 1.2 bil­lion vac­cine dos­es to the world, the ur­gency of the U.S. and oth­er na­tions to re­spond has waned.

Mo­men­tum on vac­ci­na­tions and treat­ments has fad­ed even as more in­fec­tious vari­ants rise and bil­lions of peo­ple across the globe re­main un­pro­tect­ed.

The White House said Biden will ad­dress the open­ing of the vir­tu­al sum­mit Thurs­day morn­ing with pre-record­ed re­marks and will make the case that ad­dress­ing COVID-19 “must re­main an in­ter­na­tion­al pri­or­i­ty.” The U.S. is co-host­ing the sum­mit along with Ger­many, In­done­sia, Sene­gal and Be­lize.

The U.S. has shipped near­ly 540 mil­lion vac­cine dos­es to more than 110 coun­tries and ter­ri­to­ries, ac­cord­ing to the State De­part­ment — by far more than any oth­er donor na­tion.

Af­ter the de­liv­ery of more than 1 bil­lion vac­cines to the de­vel­op­ing world, the prob­lem is no longer that there aren’t enough shots but a lack of lo­gis­ti­cal sup­port to get dos­es in­to arms. Ac­cord­ing to gov­ern­ment da­ta, more than 680 mil­lion do­nat­ed vac­cine dos­es have been left un­used in de­vel­op­ing coun­tries be­cause they were set to ex­pire soon and couldn’t be ad­min­is­tered quick­ly enough. As of March, 32 poor­er coun­tries had used few­er than half of the COVID-19 vac­cines they were sent.

U.S. as­sis­tance to pro­mote and fa­cil­i­tate vac­ci­na­tions over­seas dried up ear­li­er this year, and Biden has re­quest­ed about $5 bil­lion for the ef­fort through the rest of the year.

“We have tens of mil­lions of un­claimed dos­es be­cause coun­tries lack the re­sources to build out their cold chains, which ba­si­cal­ly is the re­frig­er­a­tion sys­tems; to fight dis­in­for­ma­tion; and to hire vac­ci­na­tors,” White House press sec­re­tary Jen Psa­ki said this week. She added that the sum­mit is “go­ing to be an op­por­tu­ni­ty to el­e­vate the fact that we need ad­di­tion­al fund­ing to con­tin­ue to be a part of this ef­fort around the world.”

“We’re go­ing to con­tin­ue to fight for more fund­ing here,” Psa­ki said. “But we will con­tin­ue to press oth­er coun­tries to do more to help the world make progress as well.”

Con­gress has balked at the price tag for COVID-19 re­lief and has thus far re­fused to take up the pack­age be­cause of po­lit­i­cal op­po­si­tion to the im­pend­ing end of pan­dem­ic-era mi­gra­tion re­stric­tions at the U.S.-Mex­i­co bor­der. Even af­ter a con­sen­sus for virus fund­ing briefly emerged in March, law­mak­ers de­cid­ed to strip out the glob­al aid fund­ing and sole­ly fo­cus the as­sis­tance on shoring up U.S. sup­plies of vac­cine boost­er shots and ther­a­peu­tics.

Biden has warned that with­out Con­gress act­ing, the U.S. could lose out on ac­cess to the next gen­er­a­tion of vac­cines and treat­ments, and that the na­tion won’t have enough sup­ply of boost­er dos­es or the an­tivi­ral drug Paxlovid for lat­er this year. He’s al­so sound­ing the alarm that more vari­ants will spring up if the U.S. and the world don’t do more to con­tain the virus glob­al­ly.

“To beat the pan­dem­ic here, we need to beat it every­where,” Biden said last Sep­tem­ber dur­ing the first glob­al sum­mit.

De­mand for COVID-19 vac­cines has dropped in some coun­tries as in­fec­tions and deaths have de­clined glob­al­ly in re­cent months, par­tic­u­lar­ly as the omi­cron vari­ant has proved to be less se­vere than ear­li­er ver­sions of the dis­ease. For the first time since it was cre­at­ed, the U.N.-backed CO­V­AX ef­fort has “enough sup­ply to en­able coun­tries to meet their na­tion­al vac­ci­na­tion tar­gets,” ac­cord­ing to vac­cines al­liance Gavi CEO Dr. Seth Berkley, which fronts CO­V­AX.

Still, de­spite more than 65% of the world’s pop­u­la­tion re­ceiv­ing at least one COVID-19 vac­cine dose, few­er than 16% of peo­ple in poor coun­tries have been im­mu­nized. It is high­ly un­like­ly coun­tries will hit the World Health Or­ga­ni­za­tion tar­get of vac­ci­nat­ing 70% of all peo­ple by June.

In coun­tries in­clud­ing Cameroon, Ugan­da and the Ivory Coast, of­fi­cials have strug­gled to get enough re­frig­er­a­tors to trans­port vac­cines, send enough sy­ringes for mass cam­paigns and get enough health work­ers to in­ject the shots. Ex­perts al­so point out that more than half of the health work­ers need­ed to ad­min­is­ter the vac­cines in poor­er coun­tries are ei­ther un­der­paid or not paid at all.

Do­nat­ing more vac­cines, crit­ics say, would miss the point en­tire­ly.

“It’s like do­nat­ing a bunch of fire trucks to coun­tries that are on fire, but they have no wa­ter,” said Ritu Shar­ma, a vice pres­i­dent at the char­i­ty CARE, which has helped im­mu­nize peo­ple in more than 30 coun­tries, in­clud­ing In­dia, South Su­dan and Bangladesh.

“We can’t be giv­ing coun­tries all these vac­cines but no way to use them,” she said, adding that the same in­fra­struc­ture that got the shots ad­min­is­tered in the U.S. is now need­ed else­where. “We had to tack­le this prob­lem in the U.S., so why are we not now us­ing that knowl­edge to get vac­cines in­to the peo­ple who need them most?”

Shar­ma said greater in­vest­ment was need­ed to counter vac­cine hes­i­tan­cy in de­vel­op­ing coun­tries where there are en­trenched be­liefs about the po­ten­tial dan­gers of West­ern-made med­i­cines.

“Lead­ers must agree to pur­sue a co­her­ent strat­e­gy to end the pan­dem­ic in­stead of a frag­ment­ed ap­proach that will ex­tend the lifes­pan of this cri­sis,” said Gayle Smith, CEO of The ONE Cam­paign.

GAVI’s Berkley al­so said that coun­tries are in­creas­ing­ly ask­ing for the prici­er mes­sen­ger RNA vac­cines made by Pfiz­er and Mod­er­na, which are not as eas­i­ly avail­able as the As­traZeneca vac­cine, which made up the bulk of CO­V­AX’s sup­ply last year.

The emer­gence of vari­ants like delta and omi­cron have led many coun­tries to switch to mR­NA vac­cines, which seem to pro­vide more pro­tec­tion and are in greater de­mand glob­al­ly than tra­di­tion­al­ly made vac­cines like As­traZeneca, No­vavax or those made by Chi­na and Rus­sia.

___

Maria Cheng re­port­ed from Lon­don.

COVID-19COVID-19 deathsHealthUnited StatesUnited States of America


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