Just 3 weeks ago, we were told the new COVID vaccines were on their way. We’re still waiting.
By Terry H. Schwadron, DCReport Opinion
Editor
The last day of a very horrible 2020 perfectly encapsulates the year’s frustrations.
Donald
Trump tweeted early yesterday on the reality that his crowning achievement of
the year, getting vaccine research moving quickly, is bogged down hopelessly:
“The
Federal Government has distributed the vaccines to the states. Now it is up to
the states to administer. Get moving!”
And
there it is in 120 characters:
Love
me for what I’ve done and shut your mouth about any criticism. Look away from
325,000 American COVID-19 deaths, including Republican Luke Letlow, 41, a
Congressman-elect from Louisiana. Forget that many deaths could have been
avoided by with a strong position on normal public health measures. And if
anything is wrong here, it’s not my fault. I take no responsibility for the
results.
Pure
Trump. Pure 2020. Pure personal politics over all else. Pure BS.
Despite
repeated promises for rapid deployment with pressured emergency approvals from
the Federal Drug Administration, and with two vaccines being distributed with
at least two more in the pipeline, we find ourselves at the literal end of the
year with only 2 million inoculations rather than 20 million.
We
are ending 2020 as we have lived the last four years. Dear Leader is preening
himself, insisting Washington and the nation heed his every requirement for
adoration and re-election despite losing and spending his days golfing and
ignoring the realities the coronavirus is wreaking.
We
can agree that there is Zero Percent efficacy for vaccines that never make it
to the arms of Americans.
Logistical
Issues
States
are finding that getting the earliest vaccines into arms is proving to be the
predicted logistical challenge.
There
are delays due to some allergic reactions, complications from having omitted
pregnant patients from clinical trials and red tape as nursing homes only now
start the tedious job of collecting vaccine approval paperwork from family
members. There are issues about refrigeration, as expected, and there have been
various administrative screw-ups.
It’ll
get resolved in time, of course, just not immediately.
But
rather than own the issue on behalf of anxious Americans, Trump is disowning
any responsibility for getting the job done. We have Vice President Mike Pence,
head of the White House coronavirus task force, vacationing on the ski slopes
of Colorado. We have babble from the mouths of federal health agency heads.
We
have calls for immediate patience from governors trying simultaneously:
- to stop additional surges of coronavirus
- to watch the airports for flights from the UK and elsewhere where new strains are reported
- to find retirees and other volunteers to work at inoculation sites still located in the very hospitals that are overwhelmed with surges of new patients because too many Americans decided to party rather than isolate during holidays
And
we have righteous anger from President-elect Joe Biden over the slow start to
inoculations and the withholding of appropriate information about how it is all
supposed to be working.
What
we don’t have is enough of a jump on stopping this virus.
Everywhere
but Mar-a-Lago
The
nightly news country-wide reflects overfilled hospital wards. The number of
infected has reached nearly 20 million, with deaths accelerating. The
government’s great hope: Vaccines. Otherwise, there is talk of military
precision, but no plan.
Instead,
there is government dissension every time health official Dr. Anthony Fauci’s
estimates move a little more about how we finally get to needed levels of
immunity. There is Trump continuing to say schools, businesses and the economy
should be open fully and stoking political resistance to state orders for
quarantines, masks and social distancing.
Trump
talks bigger individual stimulus payments without getting Republican senators
to go along. There is no linkage of the payments in return for temporary
shutdowns of regions hard hit.
Indeed,
Trump and Republicans agree that a little money should go to states to pay for
the distribution of vaccines or for hardening schools and businesses from
contagion.
For
Trump, the credit should go to him, the work should go to the states.
Biden
is offering us grim assessments about more death and troubles before vaccines
can get to where they are needed. He says this is “the greatest operations challenge
we’ve ever faced as a nation.”
As
far as we can tell, by the end of this week, the government insists that about
14 million doses will have been distributed to states, although there’s been a
lot of apologizing about whether those totals match what was promised by end of
December. There is no real explanation of why that has resulted in 2 million
inoculations by 50 states or hundreds of distribution points.
Instead,
there’s a whole lot of scrambling under way to prove that we’ve equally focused
effort on manufacturing and drug store distribution partners, further vaccine
approvals and respect for local decision-making about who gets the available
vaccines.
There’s
not a lot of government talk about what hasn’t gotten done. In other words, it
feels as if it is a replay of start-stop coordination of testing and any of the
broader plans to stop the disease.
Is
it too much to ask for people – Trump included – to do their jobs completely?