COVID-19 vaccine will be free for Americans: officials

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WASHINGTON, Aug 14, 2020 (BSS/AFP) – If a COVID-19 vaccine is proven
effective, the US will ensure it’s distributed for free to all Americans,
officials said Thursday, underscoring there will be no shortcuts on safety.

“We are not at all reducing the regulatory rigor with which we will
evaluate and hopefully approve vaccines,” Paul Mango, a senior health
department official, told reporters.

Washington has invested more than $10 billion in six vaccine projects and
signed contracts guaranteeing the delivery of hundreds of millions of doses
should they be approved following clinical trials.

The vaccine doses themselves will be paid for by the government.

Doctors or clinics that administer them will have to be paid but these
costs should mostly be covered by private and public insurers.

“Most” commercial insurers have agreed to waive any out-of-pocket costs to
their customers, said Mango.

“We are on track to deliver hundreds of millions of doses by January 2021,”
he added.

Francis Collins, director of the National Institutes of Health (NIH), said
he was “cautiously optimistic” that at least one of the six vaccines the US
had invested in would come through by the end of the year.

Critics of President Donald Trump have expressed worries that the
administration may bypass safety precautions to announce a vaccine is
available before the election on November 3 — a charge Mango denied.

“We are not at all reducing the regulatory rigor with which we will
evaluate and hopefully approve vaccines,” he said.

Russia this week approved a vaccine even before the start of the last phase
of clinical trials, in which the drug is injected into tens of thousands of
volunteers to verify its effectiveness and safety.

“I hope that the Russians have actually definitively proven that the
vaccine is safe and effective, but I seriously doubt that they’ve done that,”
Anthony Fauci, the United States’ top infectious disease official said at a
virtual panel hosted by National Geographic.

Collins compared Russia’s vaccine, which they have dubbed “Sputnik V” after
the Soviet Union’s pioneering satellites, to a game of “Russian roulette.”