World

US officials reject Trump claims on Covid-19 death toll

But they rallied behind vaccination campaign

Updated 5 years ago · Published on 04 Jan 2021 4:00PM

US officials reject Trump claims on Covid-19 death toll
United States President Donald Trump has blamed authorities for delays in administering Covid-19 vaccinations, claiming that the number of cases and deaths caused by the virus has been exaggerated. – AFP pic, January 4, 2021

WASHINGTON – United States officials yesterday rejected Donald Trump’s claim that the national Covid-19 death toll of more than 350,000 has been exaggerated, but defended the stumbling campaign to vaccinate millions of Americans.

Some 4.2 million people in the US have received initial doses of the two-dose vaccines from Pfizer-BioNTech or Moderna – far below official predictions of 20 million by the new year.

The president blamed local authorities for the delays, tweeting that “the vaccines are being delivered to the states by the federal government far faster than they can be administered!”

He also claimed that the number of cases and deaths was “far exaggerated” because of a “ridiculous method of determination”, accusing the Centres for Disease Control (CDC) of a policy of “when in doubt, call it Covid-19”.

In response, top US scientist Anthony Fauci said “those are real numbers, real people and real deaths”.

Surgeon General Jerome Adams, who was nominated by Trump, said he saw no reason to question the numbers from the CDC.

More than 13 million vaccine doses have been distributed nationwide, but efforts to vaccinate health workers and vulnerable people have been hampered by logistical problems and overstretched hospitals and clinics.

“There have been a couple of glitches, that’s understandable,” Fauci said, adding that it was a challenge “trying to get a massive vaccine programme started and getting off on the right foot”.

Part of the problem, Adams said, was that “a lot of the local capacity to be able to vaccinate was being used for testing and responding to surges”.

Fauci said he saw “some little glimmer of hope” in the fact that 500,000 people are now being inoculated a day, a far better number than when the programme started last month, and “I think we can get there if we really accelerate, get some momentum going”.

Adams said he, too, expects vaccinations to “rapidly ramp up in the new year”.

Troubling reports have emerged of vaccines going bad due to poor organisation, lack of healthcare professionals to administer them or, in one isolated case, sabotage.

Some people have also waited in line for hours only to be turned away.

In Tennessee, elder citizens, some with walkers, were reported standing along a busy highway while waiting for their vaccinations.

Moncef Slaoui, the chief adviser to Operation Warp Speed, the military-led US vaccine effort, said there was an “assumption” that states had plans in place to administer the vaccine.

“We need to improve,” he said.

“We will do the best we can, as we have done over the last eight months, to make (certain) these vaccines indeed make it into the arms of people.”

The hardest-hit country in the world by the pandemic, the US has recorded 20.6 million cases overall and 351,452 deaths yesterday.

Numbers of cases and deaths are expected to soar further after the holidays. – AFP, January 4, 2021

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