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  • 2022-05-16 (xsd:date)
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  • White House errs on vaccine availability, then corrects it (en)
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  • The White House recently tweeted that when President Joe Biden took office, there was no vaccine available. After widespread pushback on social media, it retracted the claim. On May 12, the White House’s official Twitter account sent a tweet that said in part that when President Biden took office ... there was no vaccine available for COVID-19. When President Biden took office, millions were unemployed and there was no vaccine available. In the last 15 months, the economy has created 8.3M jobs and the unemployment rate stands at 3.6% — the fastest decline in unemployment to start a President's term ever recorded. — The White House (@WhiteHouse) May 12, 2022 The tweet attracted wide notice, with critics noting, among other things, that Biden himself had received his first vaccination on Dec. 21, 2020, which was about a month before he was sworn in. Today, I received the COVID-19 vaccine. To the scientists and researchers who worked tirelessly to make this possible — thank you. We owe you an awful lot. And to the American people — know there is nothing to worry about. When the vaccine is available, I urge you to take it. pic.twitter.com/QBtB620i2V — Joe Biden (@JoeBiden) December 22, 2020 On May 13, the White House walked back its original statement, tweeting , We previously misstated that vaccines were unavailable in January 2021. We should have said that they were not widely available. Vaccines became available shortly before the president came into office. Since then, he’s responsible for fully vaccinating over 200 million people. We previously misstated that vaccines were unavailable in January 2021. We should have said that they were not widely available. Vaccines became available shortly before the President came into office. Since then, he’s responsible for fully vaccinating over 200 million people. https://t.co/rHJ0GZ63Dy — The White House (@WhiteHouse) May 13, 2022 The White House erred in its first attempt at framing its record on vaccines. While coronavirus vaccines were often hard for ordinary Americans to get, they did exist and were being administered. The first vaccination was administered to an employee at Long Island Jewish Medical Center on Dec. 14, 2020, or six days before Biden received his first shot. Initially, health care workers were among the few categories of Americans who were allowed to receive a vaccination. On Dec. 22, 2020, the Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices at the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention made its recommendations for allocating COVID-19 vaccines at a time when production was first ramping up. The idea was to target the available vaccines to those who were most at risk. Phase 1a was reserved for health care personnel and residents of long-term care facilities, or about 24 million people . In phase 1b, vaccines would be reserved for people 75 years and older and frontline essential workers outside of the health care context, a number estimated to total 49 million. In phase 1c, the vaccine would be given to people between 65 and 74 years, or younger people with certain high-risk medical conditions, totaling about 129 million people. The actual prioritization decisions were made individually by states , and many states experienced challenges in distributing and allocating the vaccines they had received, both before Biden took office and after. On Jan. 8, or 12 days before Biden took office, the Associated Press reported that of 21.4 million doses distributed, only about 5.9 million had been administered. By that point, the vast majority of doses would have been administered to health care workers, residents of long-term facilities, or other very old Americans. The data shows that vaccinations accelerated during the first few months of Biden’s presidency. All told, in the 37 days before Biden took office, 21.3 million doses were administered. In Biden’s first 37 days in office, 60.5 million doses were administered, or almost triple the number in the equivalent period before he was sworn in. Our ruling The White House said, When President Biden took office ... there was no vaccine available. A vaccine did exist before Biden took office. In fact, Biden himself received his first shot about a month before he took office. In all, more than 20 million shots were administered while Trump was president. That said, the notion that the vaccine was not widely available, as the White House’s corrected tweet put it, has better support. Initially, only health-care and other frontline workers, along with the most elderly Americans, were eligible. It took until several months into Biden’s presidency before non-elderly, non-immunocompromised Americans were able to get shots. We rate the statement False. (en)
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