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I have copied your quote below, and am curious as to why we will be first, and is there a reason why it matters? I am confused.The US developed an overall plan from the beginning. The notification to states will start the fine detail process. Sure states will be required to collect, identify certain populations of people by city and location. Locals will need to secure medical personnel, buildings to be used, etc. At least one if not more of the vaccines must be kept at an extremely low temperature, requiring refrigeration or freezing for stability and effectiveness. Not sure this will initially be a vaccine we can get at a physician office or clinic.
The states have alot of work to prepare, cities, long term care facilities, as well. I'm sure we will face challenges, we will be the first free world nation to administer a vaccine. I read initial phase have 30-70 million doses.
Moo...
I'm sure we will face challenges, we will be the first free world nation to administer a vaccine.
Who should get the Covid-19 vaccine first? It's way trickier than you might think
I had read this article, above, a few weeks ago that discussed the extraordinary difficulties, for moral, financial, efficiency and efficacy reasons, as to who gets and how vaccines are distributed. I would think the "whole world" has to work together on this.... but what mind-boggling issues to address.
This quote from the attached CNBC article says it pretty clearly:
“We need to think through how to distribute vaccines to reduce harm internationally.
Doubts greet $1.2 billion bet by United States on a coronavirus vaccine by October