“So we need to prepare ourselves, to steel our spines. As frustrating as it is to hear, it’s going to take patience, persistence and determination to beat this virus. There will be no time to waste in taking the steps we need to turn this crisis around,” he said.
Fauci on Sunday again recommended that Trump, who has not yet received a vaccine, get vaccinated.
While the doctor, Biden and Vice President Mike Pence are among the notable government officials who have
publicly received the vaccine, the President, who previously contracted the virus, has said he will be inoculated “at the appropriate time.” A White House official previously told CNN that Trump will be vaccinated when it is recommended by the White House medical team.
“The decision of whether he gets vaccinated is up to him and to the White House physician who is a person I know is a very competent physician,” Fauci said. “My recommendation, and I’ve said this before, is that I would get him vaccinated. He is still the President of the United States. A critical person.”
In its
clinical guidance for the coronavirus vaccines authorized for emergency use in the United States, the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention said the vaccines should be offered to people previously infected with coronavirus, as Trump was in early October. It noted that vaccination could be delayed somewhat, since reinfection is uncommon in the 90 days after initial infection.
However, there’s no safety or efficacy data for the vaccines in people who were treated for Covid-19 with monoclonal antibodies or convalescent plasma; Trump’s treatment for Covid-19 included the monoclonal antibody cocktail made by Regeneron. The CDC’s guidance said “vaccination should be deferred for at least 90 days, as a precautionary measure until additional information becomes available, to avoid interference of the antibody treatment with vaccine-induced immune responses.”
Herd immunity estimates adjusted
Fauci, asked about a
New York Times report that he had been moving the goalposts on his estimate for what percentage of the population would need to be vaccinated against the virus in order to achieve herd immunity, told Bash that “the range is going to be somewhere between 70 and 85%.”
“We have to realize that we have to be humble and realize what we don’t know,” he said. “These are pure estimates and the calculations that I made, 70 to 75%, it’s a range. The range is going to be somewhere between 70 and 85%.”
The doctor added that the reason he first said 70 to 75% and then brought the figure up to 85% — an adjustment he deemed “not a big leap” — “was really based on calculations and pure extrapolations from measles.”
“So, I made a calculation that Covid-19, SARS-CoV-2, is not as nearly as transmissible as measles, measles is the most transmissible infection you can imagine,” he said. “So I would imagine that you would need something a little bit less than the 90%, that’s where I got to the 85.”
Everyone, Fauci said, has to be “honest and humble, nobody really knows for sure, but I think 70 to 85% for herd immunity for Covid-19 is a reasonable estimate, and in fact, most of my epidemiology colleagues agree with me.”