Manila Bulletin

US: Elderly, sick, essential workers will get virus vaccine first

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WASHINGTON, United States (AFP) — The United States plans to give priority to the elderly, those with pre-existing conditions and essential workers once there is a vaccine against COVID-19, a senior Trump administra­tion official said Tuesday.

Under Operation Warp Speed (OWS), the US government is aiming to deliver 300 million vaccine doses by January 2021, investing in manufactur­ing capacity to relieve pharmaceut­ical firms of the financial risk.

“Before any vaccines are approved or authorized, Operation Warp Speed will build the necessary plans and infrastruc­ture for distributi­ng them,” the official said.

Officials envision distributi­ng COVID-19 in tiers, employing a decade-old methodolog­y used for pandemic influenza.

‘’The elderly, those with pre-existing conditions and people performing essential services would be given higher tiers,’’ the senior official said.

“However, which population­s are able and should receive a vaccine that is developed will depend on the results of clinical trials,” the official added.

A second official stressed that the safety of vaccine candidates is not yet known, and it may turn out that they are not suitable for certain demographi­cs.

In addition, that official said, ‘’we fully expect there will be — name the number — 20, 30, 40 million Americans that probably have strong antibodies to coronaviru­s by the end of the year, so they would be a significan­tly lower priority.’’

While the developmen­t of a strong vaccine is not 100 percent guaranteed, the officials said the goal is to have enough vaccines by the height of next year’s flu season to vaccinated those who are vulnerable and desire a vaccine.

Insurance companies have said they intend to make the vaccines available to clients without an additional charge, the officials added.

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