Federal officials have been struggling to explain why, when they promised 20 million vaccines would have been given to people by the end of the year, only 5.3 million people have been vaccinated nearly a week into the New Year and fewer than 20 million vaccines have even been distributed.
"Clearly, no excuses. We should have gotten 20 distributed, and 20 into the arms of people -- by 20, I mean 20 million," Fauci, the longtime director of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, told the Economic Club of Washington.
"I think we have to wait for the first couple of weeks in January to make any determination as to what's gone wrong, if anything," Fauci said.
He said that some of the delays may be because the Covid-19 vaccination program is new and has never been tried before, and it was also difficult to start something in the middle of the holiday season.
"Again, no excuses, but you can explain why you may not have gotten to the level you want. Now, not to make excuses, we should have done better. So, let me make that clear," Fauci said. "We should have done better, but I think we should wait until we get into maybe the second, or the third week in January, to see if we can now catch up with the original pace that was set."
Health and Human Services Secretary Alex Azar blamed the holiday season for slowing the rollout of vaccines across the United States.
"Pfizer's vaccine was authorized and able to ship, I think it was December 14, and Moderna's was authorized and available to ship on December 21. Then you have of course Christmas and New Year's right there," Azar said in an Operation Warp Speed news briefing.
"So while we continue to ship, you do have just the natural human behavioral element of the holiday season there in terms of hospitals, pharmacies and other health care providers being able to line up individuals for vaccination," Azar said. "That's also a normal consequence."
Azar also blamed state leaders for strictly following guidelines from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, which recommended giving the first doses of vaccine to frontline health care workers and residents of long-term care facilities.
"I have encouraged our governors, and I will continue to do so, that if they are using all of the vaccine that is ordered -- that is allocated, ordered, distributed, shipped -- and they're getting it into health care providers' arms, every bit of it, that's great," Azar said.
"But if for some reason their distribution is struggling, and they're having vaccines sit in freezers, then by all means you ought to be opening up to people 70 and over, 65 and over, you ought to be making sure that the nursing home patients are getting vaccinated."
More than 50 cases of UK virus variant in 5 states
At least 52 cases of a coronavirus variant first discovered in the UK have been identified in the United States, according to data posted Wednesday by the CDC.
This includes at least 26 cases in California, 22 cases in Florida, two cases in Colorado, and one case each in Georgia and New York.
Health experts suspect there could be many more cases in the country. They have criticized the United States for not doing more genetic sequencing of virus samples to surveil for mutations.
Sunday, a CDC official told CNN the agency plans to more than double the number of samples it sequences over the following two weeks -- with a target of 6,500 per week.
US hits a Covid-19 daily death toll record
The United States reported its highest daily Covid-19 death count ever Tuesday -- a grim milestone that comes as state leaders work urgently to combat a slow pace of vaccinations.
More than 3,770 American deaths were reported in one day -- more than two dozen above the country's previous record, set less than a week ago. The country also topped 21 million infections Tuesday and set a hospitalization record, with 131,100 Covid-19 hospitalized patients nationwide, according to the Covid Tracking Project. That record lasted one day, Wednesday's total was 1,281 patients higher.
As numbers climb, governors are now taking new measures to get the distributed vaccines into arms faster, including mobilizing National Guard members and training more volunteers to administer vaccines.
The federal government's Operation Warp Speed said it distributed more than 3 million vaccines Tuesday -- bringing the US total of distributed vaccines to more than 19 million. Wednesday, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention data for first vaccine doses adminstered went up from the previous day by about 500,000 to 5.3 million.
Here's how states are boosting vaccination efforts
In California -- a state that's been ravaged by the virus -- just 27% of the vaccines distributed have made it into arms. The problem in some places: not enough people to give the vaccine.
"Everyone is scrambling to get as many vaccinators as possible while every staff member is needed to assist with the surge," Los Angeles County Public Health Director Barbara Ferrer said Tuesday.
California Gov. Gavin Newsom promised "aggressive action" to accelerate the process, including granting a waiver that will allow dentists to administer the vaccine after undergoing training.
In Maryland, Gov. Larry Hogan announced the Maryland National Guard will begin dispatching emergency vaccination support teams across the state to help local health departments in tasks including administering vaccines. North Carolina Gov. Roy Cooper also announced Tuesday he mobilized the state's National Guard to help speed the pace of vaccinations.
Arizona National Guard members, meanwhile, have been "conducting refresher training to the first wave of Arizona residents who have volunteers to support vaccination sites statewide."
In one county, more than 1,000 Covid-19 deaths in a week
But vaccination efforts are not all that local and state leaders are worried about. After a holiday season during which millions of Americans traveled -- despite experts' advice -- some officials now report alarming trends.
"We're at three times the hospitalizations we saw in November and almost seven times where we were in October," Dr. Bruce Vanderhoff, the chief medical officer for Ohio's health department, said Tuesday. "Our ICU beds are also very busy. In fact, our ICUs are caring for over 1,000 patients and more than a quarter of our ICU beds are filled with Covid care."
In California, Los Angeles County health officials said Tuesday there have been more than 1,000 new Covid-19 deaths in less than a week.
"While vaccines are a powerful tool, we do not need to wait for vaccines to stop new COVID-19 cases, hospitalizations and death. We can do that now," Ferrer, the county's health director, said in a statement. "It takes every business and every resident to purposefully follow public health directives and safety measures. Please stay home and leave only for essential work or essential services."
There are more than 8,000 people hospitalized with Covid-19 across the county, officials said -- and 20% of them are in intensive care.
In Georgia, about one in 15 residents has been infected with the virus, and more than one in 1,000 has died, according to Johns Hopkins University data.
About 91% of ICU beds across the state are occupied and 85% of all inpatient beds are occupied, according to estimates published by the Department of Health and Human Services.
Arizona health officials, meanwhile, reported just 8% of all ICU beds were available Monday. About 62% of people in the ICU are Covid-19 patients and 57% of the state's available ventilators are in use, according to the state's Covid-19 dashboard.
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