These are bad peoplehttps://t.co/8pjoHHQge1
— Chris Cillizza (@ChrisCillizza) February 1, 2021
How soon can we achieve immunity through vaccinations? This calculator can help answer the question. https://t.co/QsWHBLtpPN
— Eugene Scott (@Eugene_Scott) February 1, 2021
There’s some confusion about the meaning of the word “effective” in the vaccine trials. I tried to clear it up in today’s edition of The Morning.https://t.co/CMqh6qmXc4
— David Leonhardt (@DLeonhardt) February 1, 2021
(1/n)
SCOOP: The Biden admin and COVID-19 vaccine producers are discussing ways to ramp up manufacturing over the next several months, including partnering with additional pharmaceutical firms to help bottle the vaccine for distribution.https://t.co/g45Y2kaUkh
— Erin Banco (@ErinBanco) February 1, 2021
"I want the elderly to get it because I know they're in need of it," says a grocery worker who doesn't know when she will get her covid vaccine. "But we also need to get it, because we're out there serving them. @bylenasun @isaacstanbecker @akjohnson1922 https://t.co/EV48ISooC1
— Laurie McGinley (@lauriemcginley2) February 1, 2021
New: For the newly vaccinated, another round of difficult risk-benefit decisions on how to live their lives. @lauriemcginley2, @LennyMBernstein: https://t.co/k4HMIeZAZD
— Lenny Bernstein (@LennyMBernstein) February 1, 2021
I’m proud to announce another Blackstock-squared production.
— uché blackstock, md (@uche_blackstock) February 1, 2021
In today’s @washingtonpost, my twin sister Dr. @oni_blackstock and I outline the four things the Biden admin must do urgently to ensure Black Americans are not left out of the vaccine rollout.https://t.co/BuXXNlYsbu
The White House warns health providers that holding back Covid-19 vaccine doses for second shots that could be used for initial shots "should not happen"https://t.co/yGGVDgYwcC
— CNN Breaking News (@cnnbrk) February 1, 2021
Al Sharpton asks Mayor Bill de Blasio on MSNBC about racial disparities in New York City’s vaccine rollout.
— Emma G. Fitzsimmons (@emmagf) February 1, 2021
Here’s our story on how Black and Latino New Yorkers are getting left behind: https://t.co/d1mezt3tCR
William Haseltine, a former Harvard Medical School professor, says he doesn’t believe coronavirus vaccines will make the virus “go away, any more than the flu vaccines make flu go away.”
— CNN (@CNN) February 2, 2021
“We have got to prepare ourselves for a long battle.” https://t.co/cMoAW7x7TT pic.twitter.com/jCFvMsLmGt
New York officials have acknowledged there's a clear racial disparity among the people who have received vaccine doses to date and the city needs to redouble its efforts to address inequitable access https://t.co/BBXBug8qlp
— CNN (@CNN) February 2, 2021
New York has vaccinated more nonresidents than it has Black, Latino and Native American people who live in the five boroughs combined.
— Mara Gay (@MaraGay) February 2, 2021
New York needs to fix this. One solution: prioritize vaccinations by the hardest hit zip codes.
https://t.co/COoUppyUrI
A national demographic breakdown of administered COVID-19 vaccines is the first step towards making sure everyone is vaccinated, and that communities of color have equal access. https://t.co/WKtOtaPY4O
— Grace Meng (@Grace4NY) February 2, 2021
Undocumented immigrants should get coronavirus vaccines, the Biden administration said, adding that federal authorities won't conduct immigration enforcement operations at vaccine distribution sites or clinics https://t.co/oqKYJqbWU3
— CNN (@CNN) February 2, 2021
"Watching history repeat itself is just too hard. I can’t simply roll up my sleeve and show my vaccination card as some trophy afterward," @gregggonsalves writes: https://t.co/kuEfaiTgom
— The Atlantic (@TheAtlantic) February 2, 2021
@DrChrisMD on getting more Black and brown people vaccinated: “We have to go block by block…to ensure that vaccinations are delivered and that vaccines are explained and spoken about in plain, spoken terms.” pic.twitter.com/XaNE4fbXLn
— Zerlina on Peacock (@ZerlinaShow) February 1, 2021
The Howard County Health Department is set to receive 2,000 doses of the COVID-19 vaccine this week from the state, a 66% reduction from the previous week, according to Maura Rossman, Howard County’s health officer.https://t.co/ViurILAuHF
— The Baltimore Sun (@baltimoresun) February 2, 2021
🚨The U.S. hit a milestone tonight: More people have been vaccinated with at least one dose than have tested positive for Covid
— Drew Armstrong (@ArmstrongDrew) February 1, 2021
💉VACCINE DATA UPDATE (Feb 1)💉
🇺🇸32.8M doses admin
➕1M doses today; 7-day avg=1.34M/day
🏅6.08M completed vaccinationhttps://t.co/5Of3UY74wf pic.twitter.com/bKuKg3Tmlj
Here are the 5 trials for which we have phase 3 data to date. I took @ashishkjha columns and put them with columns reminding you how each work. Important- never forget your T cell response to vaccines (and natural infection) when starting too hard at antibody titers! pic.twitter.com/JlFq61o5IY
— Monica Gandhi MD, MPH (@MonicaGandhi9) February 2, 2021
This is unacceptable. We’ve known for months that COVID has disproportionately affected those who can least afford to fall ill. Ohio needs to ensure that access to vaccines is equitable and begin the work to end the disparities in our public health system.https://t.co/SLYODnZ1vf
— Nina Turner (@ninaturner) February 2, 2021
.@NBCNews | 'It's public service': U.S. nurses are coming out of retirement to administer vaccineshttps://t.co/ycAnNSKJqI
— Governor Larry Hogan (@GovLarryHogan) February 1, 2021
How quickly are people getting vaccinated for Covid-19?
— The Wall Street Journal (@WSJ) January 25, 2021
Track the progress of vaccine delivery and administration.