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Shots are slow to reach arms as Trump administration leaves final steps of mass vaccination to beleaguered states

Shots are slow to reach arms as Trump administration leaves final steps of mass vaccination to beleaguered states Isaac Stanley-Becker © Matt Slocum/AP Penny Cracas, with the Chester County Health Department, prepares a coronavirus vaccination Tuesday in West Chester, Pa. In suburban Milwaukee, clinicians recently discarded 500 doses of coronavirus vaccine after vials were “intentionally” left unrefrigerated. In southeastern Arizona, a rural clinic has enough shots but too few employees lining up to take them. And on the coast of Maine, physicians have been left in the dark about when they will get vaccinated. The largest immunization campaign in U.S. history is off to a slow start, dimming hopes, at the end of a dismal year, of an imminent return to normal.

Editorial Roundup: US | iNFOnews | Thompson-Okanagan s News Source

Excerpts from recent editorials in the United States and abroad: Dec. 29 The Post and Courier on the COVID-19 vaccine campaign and convincing the public to take the vaccine: The first shot of the second wave of COVID-19 vaccinations in South Carolina came Monday at a nursing home in Greenville. Now the question becomes: How do we get enough Americans to take the shots so the nation soon reaches “herd immunity”? There is no single answer. Recent polls on the willingness of people to be vaccinated point in different directions. The New York Times reports that repeated surveys by Gallup, the Kaiser Family Foundation and Pew have found a general increase in willingness to be vaccinated for the disease, from around 50% of Americans last summer to over 60% in December.

Editorial Roundup: US - 680 NEWS

Editorial Roundup: US Last Updated Dec 30, 2020 at 3:58 pm EDT Excerpts from recent editorials in the United States and abroad: Dec. 29 The Post and Courier on the COVID-19 vaccine campaign and convincing the public to take the vaccine: The first shot of the second wave of COVID-19 vaccinations in South Carolina came Monday at a nursing home in Greenville. Now the question becomes: How do we get enough Americans to take the shots so the nation soon reaches “herd immunity”? There is no single answer. Recent polls on the willingness of people to be vaccinated point in different directions. The New York Times reports that repeated surveys by Gallup, the Kaiser Family Foundation and Pew have found a general increase in willingness to be vaccinated for the disease, from around 50% of Americans last summer to over 60% in December.

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