“I can tell you that things are going to get better as we get from February into March, into April because the number of vaccine doses that will be available will increase substantially,” Fauci said on NBC’s “Meet the Press.”
He said the country’s swelling stock will come from two sources: the already approved Pfizer and Moderna vaccines, which he said are “coming off the line as quickly as we can”; and a vaccine from Johnson & Johnson, which just submitted the single-shot drug to U.S. regulators on Thursday.
Fauci’s forecast comes as the United States vaccinates more people each day. On Saturday, states administered nearly 2 million doses, according to Washington Post data. That round of shots increased the country’s daily average to 1.4 million, just shy of the 1.5 million-per-day goal President Biden floated on the sixth day of his administration.
Biden surprised many, even his own aides, when he said: “I think, with the grace of God, and the goodwill of the neighbor, and the creek not rising, as the old saying goes, I think we may be able to get that to 1.5 million a day.”
But the country is still in a dark place. Even though the number of new infections has been steadily declining for nearly a month, the current average — more than 120,000 cases per day — far outpaces the surges seen in the spring and summer. And still, covid-19, the disease caused by the virus, is killing thousands of Americans each day.
The new virus variants have made matters more dire. Research made public Sunday found that the mutant strain first found in the United Kingdom is spreading rapidly across the United States, doubling in prevalence every 10 days — and even faster in Florida, the third most populous state.
The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention has estimated that the variant, known as B.1.1.7, will become dominant in the United States by late March.
The virus variant’s swift spread has intensified pressure on the effort to vaccinate as many people as possible, as fast as possible. One approach that experts in the United States and abroad have suggested is to use all available vaccine supply on first doses, giving a wider pool of people at least partial protection and delaying the second dose, which boosts the vaccines’ effectiveness.
Michael Osterholm, one of Biden’s coronavirus advisers, has said the strategy deserves further consideration. But on Sunday morning, Fauci said that there’s no time to study it and that the country is better off sticking to the two-dose rollout that was the subject of clinical trials.
“It’s a reasonable idea,” Fauci said. “I’m not putting the idea down. But it’s very impractical to do, it really is.”
On Twitter, Scott Gottlieb, a former commissioner of the Food and Drug Administration, echoed Fauci’s optimism about the country’s increasing supply of vaccines, but said leaders may then face another problem: more doses than people willing to receive them.
“I think it’s possible that by April, supply could outstrip demand,” Gottlieb said. “We should start to focus now on that challenge.”
Annie Gowen and Jacqueline Dupree contributed to this report.