President Joe Biden says that he is bringing forward his deadline for states to make all adults in the US eligible for coronavirus vaccines.
With states gradually expanding eligibility beyond such priority groups as older people and essential, frontline workers, the president will announce that every adult will be eligible by April 19 to sign up and get in a virtual line to be vaccinated, said White House press secretary Jen Psaki.
That is about two weeks earlier than Mr Biden’s previously announced May 1 deadline.
Mr Biden is to make the announcement at the White House after a visit to a Covid-19 vaccination site at Immanuel Chapel at Virginia Theological Seminary in Alexandria.
He thanked everyone for administering the shots and for showing up to receive them.
“That’s the way to beat this,” Mr Biden said. “Get the vaccination when you can.”
The president also said no-one should fear mutations of the coronavirus that are showing up in the US after being discovered in other countries.
Now is not the time to let up in our fight against COVID-19. We have to hold the line while everyone gets vaccinated. Keep wearing a mask, stay socially distanced, and wash your hands.
Let’s fight this to the end.— President Biden (@POTUS) April 6, 2021
He acknowledged that the new strains are more virulent and more dangerous, but said “the vaccines work on all of them”.
Ms Psaki said Mr Biden’s announcement will make things clearer for the public.
“It reduces confusion and it ensures that Americans who are not yet vaccinated, who are looking to get vaccinated, they know they are all eligible, all adults, I should say, on April 19,” she said.
Mr Biden is also expected to announce that 150 million doses of Covid-19 vaccine have been shot into arms since his inauguration on January 20.
That puts the president well on track to meet his new goal of 200 million shots administered by his 100th day in office on April 30.
Mr Biden’s original goal had been 100 million shots by the end of his first 100 days, but that number was reached in March.
The announcement about vaccine eligibility is somewhat symbolic and comes as states already had begun moving up their deadlines from the original May 1 goal.
It also comes as a flood of vaccine supply is being sent to states this week.
Jeff Zients, the White House coronavirus coordinator, told governors on Tuesday during a weekly conference call that more than 28 million doses of Covid-19 vaccines will be delivered to states this week, Ms Psaki announced at her daily briefing.
That allocation brings the total amount of vaccine distributed over the past three weeks to more than 90 million doses, Ms Psaki said.
At least a dozen states opened eligibility to anyone 16 and older on Monday alone, while New Jersey and Oregon announced this week that all residents 16 and older will become eligible on April 19.
The president had announced just last week that 90% of adults would be eligible for one of three approved Covid-19 vaccines by April 19, in addition to having a vaccination site within five miles of their home.
But eligibility is not the same as actually being vaccinated. Being eligible means people can sign up to reserve their place in a virtual line until they can schedule an appointment.