Andy Slavitt 🇺🇦 Profile picture
Nov 26, 2021 22 tweets 3 min read Read on X
COVID Update: A new variant in southern Africa has emerged & is grabbing global concern.

What do we know about it? Should we be worried? 1/
In situations like this, it is useful to separate into what is known with good certainty, what is unknown, and what is being speculated.

Then I will address the “what if…” question. 2/
Known—

B.1.1.529 (it will be given a Greek alphabet name today) originated in South Africa and Botswana and cases have been recorded among travelers in Belgium, Hong Kong, and Israel. 3/
What we know so far doesn’t paint a full picture.

The variant has a lot of mutations— over 50. The ACE2 receptor, which allows the virus to bind to our cells, has over 10 mutations according to scientists in S Africa. 4/
There is a lot more that we don’t know. While there are still a limited number of cases that mutation profile has scientists concerned that possibly neither prior immunity nor a vaccine will be effective— or as effective— at preventing spread & infection. 5/
Some of the characteristics of the variant are reminiscent of Beta and Lambda, two variants that became concerning, but ultimately haven’t been able to compete with Delta. 6/
It will take 2 weeks or so to test in a lab whether the mRNA vaccines are effective and if so, how effective they are. In the meantime, there will be speculation from limited reporting. 7/
It is reported that many of the cases were among younger people in South Africa, who are largely unvaccinated. Does that mean something? Maybe. 8/
South Africa has one of the most sophisticated detection systems & many scientists have pointed to lower vaccination levels@in Africa & an abundance of immunocompromised people as a breeding ground for new variants. 9/
This leads to speculation that there is more spread than discovered. Currency, stock, bond & oil traders began the day in near panic— airline stocks are down, Netflix is up.

People who get paid to speculate will speculate. For the rest of us, there’s no sport in it. 10/
The unanswered questions are important ones. Even if a variant creates more difficulty for the immune system, it’s rate of spread is important. If it doesn’t outcompete Delta, it will likely be more limited in its reach as long as Delta continues to spread. 11/
We’ve all gotten nervous enough that it’s worth answering the question, “but what if it does evade prior immunity and outcompetes Delta?” 12/
It’s foolhardy to predict the future but smart to prepare. And we have been preparing.

The mRNA vaccines are built on a platform which allow for very rapid development of new vaccines to tackle emerging variants should they be of major concern. 13/
Both Pfizer & Moderna estimate 100 days to develop a vaccine for a new variant.

Manufacturing, approvals & distribution take time but we are getting more efficient at all. If we start in early December, new vaccines could be available by summer in much of the world. 14/
This explains Europe, already dealing with waves & worries over variants, decided to shut down travel from S Africa until more is learned.

Holding the variant at bay while keeping hospitals open is now a learned impulse. But is it a good one? 15/
Banning travel hasn’t seemed to be anything close to a panacea. And it punishes countries and their economies who make and report discoveries.

There’s an ugly irony as well. 16/
We (the G20) couldn’t vaccinate Africa fast enough despite abundant vaccines & so now we will increase the costs to them of our failure. 17/
The WHO today, in concert with scientists in the region, will determine whether this is officially a variant of concern. 18/
Part of all of us go into hyperdrive when we see certain words— new variant, evade immunity, travel ban. These are learned responses.

But there have also been many false alarms, assumptions made, panic, and over-reactions. 19/
So much less is known than will be speculated. What seems clear is that vaccinating the globe & pockets of the US that are still unvaccinated remain the priority.

And masks, portable air filters, staying outdoors, and other tools remain our friends should cases rise. 20/
We have the tools to minimize the effects of even a new problematic variant.

They, as with the rest of the pandemic, rely on some amount of collective action. Probably why the markets are down. /end
Post-script: The WHO met today and labeled the new variant, now called #Omicron, a variant of concern

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More from @ASlavitt

Feb 8, 2023
On the latest @inthebubblepod, I talk with @SykesCharlie, founder and editor of @BulwarkOnline, about the emergence of Ron DeSantis as the presumptive leader of the far right wing of the Republican Party. Here are my takeaways in a 🧵
Listen here: link.chtbl.com/InTheBubble?si… 1/
“Ron DeSantis ​​is taking the politics of being a bully to a different level,” Sykes tells me. “He’s decided he's going to move as hard and demagogically to the right as he can. He’s learned something from Donald Trump: you don’t need to be a nice guy.” 2/
Sykes says DeSantis is exploiting the culture wars in order to tap into Republicans’ grievances, and that the GOP sees the Florida governor as a “younger, smarter” but equally combative replacement for Trump. But DeSantis stands out from other conservatives for a reason. 3/
Read 7 tweets
Nov 25, 2022
Some thoughts on using Twitter:
With Musk inviting back people who use the platform to threaten rape, to lie at scale & become whatever else his whims decide, here are some actions worth considering …
-Mute all advertisers in your feed. I’m not going to be a revenue source & don’t want those who advertise here to be encouraged.
-If you have a lot of followers or post a lot, consider moving the bulk of your content elsewhere. Post looks promising. (I’m @ASlavitt there.)
-I’m also on Mastadon to check it out & until Post is done with its waitlist & will eventually pick one.
-I continue to occasionally check the news feed here & promote things on Twitter minimally & will cross-post for a short time as people decide what they want to do.
Read 4 tweets
Oct 13, 2022
COVID Update: It’s time for one as we look ahead to the winter.

The real question is whether we will have another 2021 with a lot of disruption— on a more modest wave— or nothing at all.

There is early data to help answer this question. 1/
Currently there are lots of Omicron sub-variants co-circulating around the globe.

Household names like:
BA.4.6
BQ1.1
XBB

While it’s all a little hard to follow, there’s something interesting about the nature of these variants. 2/
Variants:
1- These are all variants of Omicron. This is good. Better than dealing with a Delta variant emerging. Makes progression more closely resemble the flu.
2- Each are growing in different parts of the world without 1 being dominant. We could have a mix this winter.3/
Read 14 tweets
Sep 6, 2022
NEW: COVID vaccines will now be recommended annually, with the flu shot.

I spoke to the White House yesterday about the plan. 1/
Rather than an ad hoc schedule which confuses many as to when to get vaccinated, the thinking is that an annual shot will result in many more people getting vaccinated.

They point to 2/3 of adults who take the flu vaccine vs 1/3 of adults over 50 who have been taking COVID. 2/
We have infrastructure, outreach, and habits that can be capitalized to get people their flu and COVID vaccines together.

This is the prime benefit.

But of course it comes with some questions they are preparing to address. 3/
Read 8 tweets
Aug 19, 2022
COVID Update: When will we have new boosters and when should we take them.

I’ve asked 5 of our top scientists & policy leaders and here are answers and other COVID news (good and bad). (1)
The new boosters are bivalent vaccines. Ancestral strain plus Omicron. The idea is broad protection from a virus that is strayed quite a lot. (2)
Pfizer’s vaccine will be ready first— the first week to 10 days of September is the best estimate.

Moderna will follow the first week in October. (3)
Read 14 tweets
Aug 15, 2022
Over time, the climate legislation which Congress passed has the potential to become one of the most popular pieces of legislation ever passed.

Rivaling Social Security and Medicare.

The reasons include __things, many of which don’t meet the eye. 1/
1- The first reason is simple. As younger generations grow older, they will mark the shift in the slowing of carbon emissions to this bill.

Floods, fires, heat waves, and rising sea levels won’t abate. We are not cooling. 2/
2- The changes to people’s lives to improve the climate will not require the sacrifice the GOP has long stated.

Heat pumps at home, a renewable grid & electric cars require no sacrifice to people’s lives.

Yes people can still eat hamburgers. 3/
Read 12 tweets

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