Administration of Joseph R. Biden, Jr., 2021

[*The President's remarks were joined in progress.*]

The President. Well, we're in a position now where we're justâin talking with Jeffâwe've been pushing really, really hard with the manufacturing to significantly increase in the timeframe.

Jeff, when will it be by? By June, we'll haveâhow much will we have?

White House Coronavirus Response Coordinator Jeffrey D. Zients. We'll have 400 million does by June, which is enough to vaccinate 200 million Americans. And then, you ordered another 200 million dosesââ

The President. Yes.

Coordinator Zients. ââto be delivered this summer.

National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases Director Anthony S. Fauci. That's the best way to stop the mutations.

The President. No, I realize that. And one of the things thatâyou know, it's amazing how quickly things change in terms of people's perceptions, mine included. I know just a little tiny bit about this because I worked with that guy on cancer issues for a long, long whileâ[inaudible]â started with the Cancer Institute. Anyway.

But what I didn't realize was just how much of the vaccine we're going to have to actually get produced. And it's one thing to have the vaccine; it's another thing to have vaccinators to put it into people's arms. And it's really turned out to be a gigantic logistical issue for us.

And I can sayâI don't mean it as a criticism, just an observationâwhen weâwe've been in office now 3 yearsâno, 3 weeks. [*Laughter*]

National Institutes of Health Director Francis S. Collins. It just feels like 3 years. [Laughter]

The President. Just feels like 3 years. But what happened is that we were led toâif you ever hear anybody talking about transitions between Presidents, it's really important, because we didn't have any access to the transition. And you know, Doc; we talked about it. And so we thought, and we were led to believe, there was a lot more vaccine available than there was.

And when I said "in the first 100 days," I guaranteedâI promised that we would get 100 million shots in people's arms, everybody said, "No, that'sâyou can't do that." It's amazingânow I'm getting, "Why can't you get more?" Now we're getting a lot more, as we said, on average, but it could be significantly more.

But to get to the place whereâand these guys legitimately always ask meâis: "When will we have enough vaccine to have that 300-plus million people?" And even though we've increased by close to 600 millionâpromises of the vaccineâwe're going to be in a position where it's going to beâit is not going to be by the end of the summer. [*Laughter*] And so all the Americans who are looking for itâand that's why I keep listening to you talking about when we could theoretically reach enough of a saturation of access that we slow down the spread.

And soâbut this is theâit's an amazingâand by the way, every department is jumping in. The Defense Department over there, they jumped right in like they did with dealing with Ebola

before, in Africa. They're probably going to have, literally, over a hundred thousandâI mean, excuse me, 10,000 vaccinators. They're picking people up all over; people are coming out of retirement and stepping up.

Coronavirus Containment Efforts

Q. Mr. President, how worried are you about the variants? How worried are you about the variants?

The President. Well, we talked about the variants, and I'llârather than Joe Biden, the lawyer, explain the variantsâI think I understand itâbut I think it's important that, Doc, you talk about the variants and what we're anticipating and what we think the situation is going to be.

Director Fauci. The 117âthat's the U.K. variant that we feel the modelers are going to tell us is going to be dominant by the end of Marchâthe vaccines that we have now look pretty good against being able to prevent infection and certain disease.

The South African variant is a little bit more problematic. It diminishes the capability of the vaccines to induce the virus'sâthe antibodies that would suppress it. But it doesn't completely eliminate it, and we know that from studies with other vaccines in South Africa, where it went down to maybe 50 percent efficacy. But it was very good in preventing severe disease. In fact, there were no hospitalizations or deaths.

Bottom line is: We take it seriously. We're following it. And if necessary, we're able to make boosts that reflect the variants in question.

Presidential Transition/Coronavirus Vaccine Supply and Deployment

Q. Are you upset with the state of the rollout before you got here, Mr. President?

The President. No, I'm not. I thinkâlook, these folks have been absolutely amazing. What I was upset with is not having all the facts that were available to the last outfit, that we did not know.

So we were under the distinct impression there was significantly more vaccine available to begin to be distributed; that it was a distribution problemâwhich it is and was, but that wasn't the main problem; it was having enough. And then, gettingâyou know, there's a big differenceâthe logistical difference between having a vaccine sent to the States in bulk and refrigerated, and having vaccinators with the paraphernalia to put it into a vial and stick it in someone's armâis a very different and logistical problemâdifficult problem.

So there's the vaccine. There is the access to the vaccine, in terms of how you get it where it has to be. That is a giant logistical issue, and we're solving that now.

For example, we are, as ofâwas it today, Jeff? We're doingâwe're making sure that all these Federal systems, communityââ

Coordinator Zients. Community health centers.

The President. ââcommunity health centers that are federally runâwe are getting themâ what day are we gettingââ

Coordinator Zients. Starting next week.

The President. Starting next week, they'll getââ

Coordinator Zients. And pharmacies start today.

The President. And the pharmacies start today. We thought, by listeningâat least my team didâbetween the time we were elected and the time somebody recognized we were elected, that

we thought that it was well underway; that the drugstores were beginningâyou know, all the placesâthe Walmarts of the worldâwere ready. But it turned out they weren't. And so weâit's been a hell of a learning process. [*Laughter*]

But you have done an enormous, enormousâallâevery other scientist I've talked to across the board said the idea that it would end in less than a yearâyou'd come up with a vaccineââ

[*The press was escorted out, and the tour continued.*]

NOTE: The President spoke at 4:08 p.m. at the National Institutes of Health. Also participating in the tour were Barney Graham, Deputy Director, and Kizzmekia S. Corbett, Senior Research Fellow and Scientific Lead for Coronavirus Vaccines and Immunopathogenesis Team, NIH's Vaccine Research Center.

Categories: Addresses and Remarks :Vaccine Research Center at National Institutes of Health in Bethesda, MD; Interviews With the News Media : Exchanges with reporters :: Bethesda, MD.

Locations: Bethesda, MD.

Names: Collins, Francis S.; Fauci, Anthony S.; Zients, Jeffrey D.

Subjects: Diseases : Coronavirus, domestic prevention efforts; Health and Human Services, Department of : National Institutes of Health; Health and medical care : Research and development; Maryland : National Institutes of Health in Bethesda; Maryland : President's visits; White House Office : Assistants to the President :: Coronavirus Response Coordinator.

DCPD Number: DCPD202100133.