Morning Briefing
Summaries of health policy coverage from major news organizations
Pentagon To Offer Vaccine To Prisoners At Guantanamo Bay
The Defense Department will offer the coronavirus vaccine to detainees at the Guantanamo Bay facility, a prosecutor involved in the government鈥檚 case against five of the prisoners said in a letter to defense lawyers. 鈥淸A]n official in the Pentagon has just signed a memo approving the delivery of the Covid-19 vaccine to the detainee population in Guant谩namo,鈥 prosecutor Clayton G. Trivett Jr. wrote Thursday, according to The New York Times. (Budryk, 1/28)
Mexico鈥檚 confirmed coronavirus death toll surpassed India鈥檚 on Thursday to become the world鈥檚 third-highest, after months in which President Andr茅s Manuel L贸pez Obrador had downplayed the coronavirus as his government scrambled to control it. As of Friday morning, Mexico had recorded 155,145 coronavirus deaths during the pandemic, 1,135 more than India, according to a New York Times database. It recorded 1,506 deaths on Thursday alone, about 300 short of a daily record from earlier this month. (Ives, Abi-Habiv and Lopez, 1/29)
Germany鈥檚 health minister says he expects the European Union's drug regulator to authorize a further coronavirus vaccine made by AstraZeneca on Friday, but that currently available data may mean it is not recommended for older adults. Jens Spahn said authorities are waiting to see what advice the European Medicines Agency issues with regard to vaccinations for people over 65, and Germany would then adjust its own guidance for doctors in the country. 鈥淲e don't expect an unrestricted approval,鈥 Spahn told reporters in Berlin. (Jordans and Cheng, 1/29)
AstraZeneca PLC Chief Executive Pascal Soriot promised to churn out more Covid-19 vaccines, at a lower price, than any of his big pharma competitors. Now, a production problem at a single factory in Belgium has delayed tens of millions of doses destined for Europe, endangering the continent鈥檚 already-slow inoculation drive and representing the greatest threat so far to Dr. Soriot鈥檚 extraordinary pledge last year to vaccinate the world鈥攁nd do so for no profit. After disclosing the European problem, the drugmaker now says it has been troubleshooting similar production issues in recent weeks as far away as the U.S. and Australia. (Strasburg and Norman, 1/28)
When members of the European Parliament sat down this month to read the first publicly available contract for purchasing coronavirus vaccines, they noticed something missing. Actually, a lot missing. The price per dose? Redacted. The rollout schedule? Redacted. The amount of money being paid up front? Redacted. (Apuzzo and Gebrekidan, 1/28)
In news about China 鈥
As the first American evacuees from Wuhan, China, touched down at a California military base a year ago, fleeing the epicenter of the coronavirus outbreak, they were met by U.S. health officials with no virus prevention plan or infection-control training 鈥 and who had not even been told to wear masks, according to a federal investigation. Later, those officials were told to remove protective gear when meeting with the evacuees to avoid 鈥渂ad optics,鈥 and days after those initial encounters, departed California aboard commercial airline flights to other destinations. (Diamond, 1/28)
A World Health Organization team on Friday visited a hospital where China says the first COVID-19 patients were treated more than a year ago as part of the experts鈥 long-awaited fact-finding mission on the origins of the coronavirus. The WHO team members and Chinese officials earlier had their first in-person meetings at a hotel, which WHO has said were to be followed by field visits in the central city of Wuhan. (Fujiyama, 1/29)
When evidence began mounting of a deadly new coronavirus in China a year ago, authorities could have reacted with swift warnings about public safety. They didn鈥檛. Instead, they banned social-media posts about the virus, stopped symptomatic people from entering hospitals, punished doctors who spoke of the risks and unleashed a stream of state-TV propaganda downplaying its severity. That鈥檚 the narrative constructed by 鈥淚n The Same Breath,鈥 a scathing new documentary by the Oscar-shortlisted filmmaker Nanfu Wang. (Zeitchik, 1/28)