President-elect @JoeBiden is about to present his $1.9 trillion #COVID19 relief plan. Let’s look at some of the key points: (1/12)
cnn.com/2021/01/14/pol…
1. Mount a national vaccination program - we all know it’s not going as quickly as planned. He wants to invest $20 billion in a national program that would include community vaccination centers and mobile vaccination units. (2/12)
He strongly believes that 100 million doses can be administered in 100 days -- even without additional vaccines. (3/12)
2. Scale up testing - I’ve made it clear we aren’t doing enough testing. He wants to invest $50 billion to ramp up efforts including providing funds to purchase rapid tests for asymptomatic people (surveillance testing). (4/12)
hsph.harvard.edu/news/hsph-in-t…
This money would also go toward making sure schools could test regularly. (5/12)
3. Identify and address emerging variant strains - The US has not been doing enough sequencing to look for new mutations, so this proposal includes funding to dramatically increase: sequencing, surveillance and outbreak analytics (6/12)

cnn.com/2021/01/10/hea…
4. Provide additional support to vulnerable populations in congregate settings - they are proposing funding to “deploy strike teams to long-term care facilities experiencing Covid-19 outbreaks.” They also want to offer support to prisons. (7/12)
cnn.com/2021/01/11/us/…
6. Address supply shortages - $30 billion to the Disaster Relief Fund to help make sure there’s enough PPE - something we know that has continued to be in short supply. (8/12)
6. Invest in more treatments and make them more available - we have seen a number of effective treatments developed, but some have lacked accessibility or are not being used adequately. (9/12)
cnn.com/2020/12/16/hea…
7. Help schools open safely - I have spoken about how hard this decision has been for me as a parent. @JoeBiden 's plan wants to provide $130 billion to provide schools to help with things like reducing class size and improving ventilation. (10/12)
cnn.com/2020/08/12/hea…
8. Paid sick leave - the plan would support granting access to paid sick leave so people who are sick don’t feel the pressure to go to work due to financial constraints. (11/12)
cnn.com/2020/12/30/per…
So, why 1.9 trillion? Roughly 400 billion for combat Covid-19 (vaccines, testing), around $1 trillion for relief to families (including stimulus payments) and approx. $440 billion to help businesses (12/12)

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More from @drsanjaygupta

18 Dec 20
My worlds collided today. While most of you know me as a reporter for CNN, my 'day job' is still: neurosurgeon. (1/11)
As a healthcare worker, it was my turn to get vaccinated today. And, I didn’t hesitate. (2/11)
As a journalist, I have covered the #COVID19 story for the last year — watching the entire process of the vaccine development, the regulatory process and reviewed the data myself. (3/11)
cnn.com/2020/12/11/hea…
Read 11 tweets
17 Dec 20
Today the @FDA’s vaccine advisory committee is meeting again:this time to consider @moderna_tx’s #vaccine. By the end of the day, the US could be on their way to authorizing a 2nd vaccine. It can’t come soon enough. #Covid19 kills more than 2 ppl, on avg, in the US every minute.
@FDA’s Dr. Doran Fink says they are working with CDC and Alaskan authorities to investigate the cases of 2 adverse reactions to @pfizer's vaccine administered to health care workers.
cnn.com/2020/12/16/hea…
“We don't have enough information to make definitive recommendations one way or another...and will consider whether additional recommendations need to be made.” said @FDA’s Fink. Remember these + the 2 UK reactions are just 4 events out of 10s of thousands of vaccines given.
Read 7 tweets
6 Dec 20
While I have been tweeting a lot about the pandemic, vaccines and the virus, I am getting more and more (very funny!) comments about my hair. So, here is a decidedly unserious response. This is how I’m used to my hair looking. (1/12)
It wasn’t always this way. I’ve gone for a more clean cut look after med school. (2/12)
In the beginning of the pandemic, I even tried cutting it myself. (3/12)
Read 12 tweets
2 Dec 20
With Pfizer’s vaccine being granted authorization in the UK and the prospect of a Covid-19 vaccine EUA here in the US, I wanted to take a moment to answer some of the most common questions surrounding these vaccines. (1/16) Image
“Why is it so tricky to distribute these vaccines?” It’s in large part because the two vaccines currently under EUA review have to be stored at super cold temperatures. (2/16)
Pfizer's vaccine needs the coldest storage at -70C; -94F and that is unavailable in most places. Pfizer has even designed special “thermal shippers” to help transport its vaccine. (3/16) Image
Read 16 tweets
12 Nov 20
We’ve reached another sad milestone in this pandemic.
The US has surpassed a record of more than 60k Covid-19 hospitalizations for the 2nd consecutive day. (1/12)
But there is some glimmer of hope - a smaller percentage of people are dying now from Covid-19 than in the spring. (2/12)
cnn.com/videos/health/…
One study of the @nyulangone health system found that in the spring, 25.6% of hospitalized Covid-19 patients wound up dying. By the summer, that rate had dropped by more than 2/3rds to 7.6%. (3/12)
journalofhospitalmedicine.com/jhospmed/artic…
Read 12 tweets
9 Nov 20
I want to take a moment to explain the big vaccine news today. #Pfizer is reporting early data showing their vaccine is “more than 90%” effective in preventing COVID-19. I spoke with #Pfizer’s CEO @AlbertBourla today, as the news broke early this morning (1/10)
Remember – this is an early read from a group of independent experts, not #Pfizer itself. Who are these experts? They’re known as the data safety monitoring board. (2/10)
cnn.com/videos/health/…
What we know: out of nearly 44,000 trial participants, 94 were infected during the trial period. Here is the key finding: more than 90% of the infected cases occurred in the placebo group. Fewer than 10% of the infections occurred among those who had received the vaccine. (3/10)
Read 10 tweets

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