“For businesses and universities that have been thinking about putting vaccine requirements in place in order to create safer spaces for people to work and learn, I think that this move from the FDA … will actually help them to move forward with those kinds of plans,” US Surgeon General Dr. Vivek Murthy told CNN on Sunday.
“This FDA approval cannot come a moment too soon,” said emergency physician Dr. Megan Ranney, associate dean at the School of Public Health at Brown University.
“With this full approval in hand, we’re going to have a chance to message again about the safety and effectiveness of this vaccine. We can help to fill the airwaves and the newspapers and social media with messages about what a difference this vaccine makes in terms of preventing hospitalization and death, even in the face of the Delta variant,” Ranney said.
New vaccinations increase, but with a caveat
“So we’re still looking a tough couple of months ahead,” Ranney said.
Many Americans still need to get vaccinated to minimize the spread of the Delta variant and help keep children in classrooms, former CDC Director Dr. Tom Frieden said.
“We’re encouraged by the increase in uptick of vaccines. But remember, you’ve got something like 90 million (eligible) people not vaccinated,” Frieden said Saturday.
“So a million (vaccine doses) a day leaves you months and months of lots of people susceptible to severe illness or death.”
‘Seriously, y’all. Stop it,’ FDA warns of horse drug
The FDA tweeted a blunt warning for anyone trying to use ivermectin against Covid-19: “You are not a horse. You are not a cow. Seriously, y’all. Stop it.”
“Such high doses can be highly toxic in humans,” the FDA said.
Still, the Mississippi Poison Control Center has received an increasing number of calls from people who took ivermectin. At least 70% of such calls related to “ingestion of livestock or animal formulations of ivermectin purchased at livestock supply centers,” the Mississippi State Department of Health said Friday.
“Some of the symptoms associated with ivermectin toxicity include rash, nausea, vomiting, abdominal pain, neurologic disorders, and potentially severe hepatitis requiring hospitalization,” the health department said.
The US surgeon general said tech companies need to do more to stop the spread of misinformation.
“It’s happening … aided and abetted by social media platforms,” Murthy said.
“These are things that companies can and must change. And I think they have a moral responsibility to do so, quickly and transparently.”
He said the myth about ivermectin as a treatment for Covid-19 highlights “the profound cost of health misinformation.”
“It is not a recommended drug to prevent Covid-19,” the surgeon general said. “The best protection we have against Covid-19 is the vaccine.”
Covid-19 hospitalizations reduce resources for others
More than 23,000 of them were in ICU beds, reducing resources for others who need hospital care.
In Mississippi, the number of Covid-19 patients requiring hospitalization or intensive care reached record highs last week, Gov. Tate Reeves said.
The major problem with resources is “not a lack of beds,” Reeves said Thursday. “It is a lack of staff.”
He encouraged Mississippians to get vaccinated.
In Florida, Orlando’s mayor has asked residents to conserve water as liquid oxygen — typically used to treat the local water supply — was being diverted to hospitals locally and statewide to treat critically ill Covid-19 patients.
“And it’s another result of what happens when residents do not get the vaccine and become critically ill, needing medical support and treatment.”
CDC: Those at high risk should avoid cruises for now
Unvaccinated people are strongly urged to avoid cruise travel, the CDC said.
“If you are at increased risk for severe illness and considering cruise travel during the Covid-19 pandemic, discuss this type of travel with your healthcare professional,” the CDC said.
“Older adults and people of any age with certain underlying medical conditions are more likely to get severely ill if they get Covid-19. People with weakened immune systems, including people who take medicines that suppress their immune systems, may not be protected even if fully vaccinated.”
Anyone who has Covid-19 symptoms, was exposed within 14 days to someone with Covid-19, or is awaiting results of a Covid-19 viral test should not board cruise ships, the CDC said.
CNN’s Nadia Kounang, Jen Christensen, Chris Boyette, Maggie Fox, Jamie Gumbrecht and Rebekah Riess contributed to this report.