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Tag: Anthony Fauci

  • Fauci Reveals How Trump Made Him Feel During White House Briefings

    Fauci Reveals How Trump Made Him Feel During White House Briefings

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    Dr. Anthony Fauci, outgoing head of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, is revealing more about how he navigated his “very uncomfortable” time in President Donald Trump’s administration. (Watch below.)

    Fauci told CNN’s Chris Wallace he felt “uncomfortable” publicly disagreeing with Trump during White House briefings.

    “And that’s how I evolved essentially in the, you know, public enemy number one of the far-right, which I did not desire to be put in that position,” Fauci said.

    Fauci added that he’s happy to cooperate with GOP-threatened House investigations into his pandemic recommendations, even if he becomes a “punching bag” for his critics.

    Fauci is set to retire this month following a 54-year career in government that includes 38 years as the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases director.

    Watch more of Fauci’s interview with Wallace below.

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  • McConaughey, Kunis among People mag’s ‘People of the Year’

    McConaughey, Kunis among People mag’s ‘People of the Year’

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    Matthew McConaughey, Mila Kunis, Jennifer Hudson and “Abbott Elementary” creator and star Quinta Brunson have been named People magazine’s 2022 “People of the Year.”

    LOS ANGELES — Matthew McConaughey, Mila Kunis, Jennifer Hudson and “Abbott Elementary” creator and star Quinta Brunson have been named People magazine’s 2022 “People of the Year.”

    The magazine unveiled its annual list Wednesday, with Editor in Chief Wendy Naugle explaining this year’s honorees were selected because of their efforts to help others.

    McConaughey was chosen for his advocacy efforts after the Uvalde school shooting rocked his hometown. Kunis was lauded for her fundraising — which People said has topped $37 million — for Ukraine, where she was born.

    Hudson and Brunson were honored for their onscreen work. Hudson, who launched a daytime talk show this year, was cited for her efforts to create an inclusive show where everyone felt welcome. Brunson’s “Abbott Elementary,” a critical hit that turned her into an Emmy winner, was praised as a show that brought many joy and showed that different generations can work well together.

    Each of the honorees are featured on a special cover that highlights their contributions. Kunis’ includes the quote, “I’m proud to be from Ukraine,” while Brunson includes her statement: “I’m a sign that times are changing.”

    McConaughey’s proclaims, “We have to do better for our kids,” while Hudson’s says, “I’m living my dream — and learning as I go.”

    Previous People honorees have included George Clooney, Regina King, Dr. Anthony Fauci, Sandra Oh, Selena Gomez and Simone Biles. This year’s special editions will be released Friday.

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  • Face The Nation: Johnson, Fauci, Polis

    Face The Nation: Johnson, Fauci, Polis

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    Face The Nation: Johnson, Fauci, Polis – CBS News


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    Missed the second half of the show? The latest on immigration and asylum cases, Anthony Fauci on Covid-19 and Colorado Gov. Jared Polis on red flag laws.

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  • 11/27: Face The Nation

    11/27: Face The Nation

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    11/27: Face The Nation – CBS News


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    This week on “Face the Nation with Margaret Brennan,” the U.S. faces some tough questions on public health — and public safety. Americans are gathering for the holidays, some for the first time in years, but health officials are warning a pandemic-weary populace of the dangers posed by a triple threat of respiratory viruses. We’ll talk to Dr. Anthony Fauci about the risk. Plus, Rep. James Clyburn and Colorado Gov. Jared Polis.

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  • Open: This is

    Open: This is

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    Open: This is “Face the Nation with Margaret Brennan,” Nov. 27 – CBS News


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    This week on “Face the Nation with Margaret Brennan,” the U.S. faces some tough questions on public health — and public safety. Americans are gathering for the holidays, some for the first time in years, but health officials are warning a pandemic-weary populace of the dangers posed by a triple threat of respiratory viruses. We’ll talk to Dr. Anthony Fauci about the risk. Plus, Rep. James Clyburn and Colorado Gov. Jared Polis.

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  • Full transcript: Dr. Anthony Fauci on

    Full transcript: Dr. Anthony Fauci on

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    The following is a full transcript of an interview with Dr. Anthony Fauci, chief medical adviser to President Biden, that aired on Sunday, Nov. 27, 2022, on “Face the Nation.”


    MARGARET BRENNAN: He has been the director of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases at the National Institutes of Health for almost 40 years and has served seven presidents. Dr. Anthony Fauci is planning to step aside from his day job by the end of the year. He joins us here today. Great to have you here in person again, Dr. Fauci.

    DR. ANTHONY FAUCI: It’s great to be here in person with you, Margaret. Thank you.

    MARGARET BRENNAN: There is a lot circulating these days and I want to get your medical advice off the top. We have this trifecta of RSV, flu, and COVID. So what are the risks for people congregating this season?

    DR. FAUCI: Well, the risk depends on what your status of vaccination is. We have two of the three of the trifecta that you’re talking about, we have vaccinations for clearly COVID, particularly with the updated boosters that are now available. We have vaccinations for influenza, we’re already starting to see an early surge of both flu and RSV. We don’t have a vaccine for RSV, this, particularly problematic for children, five years of age and younger and for the elderly. But there are things you can do with RSV, is avoid congregate settings. And particularly if you have a cold or if you have sneezing and stay home, wear a mask, wash your hands. You know, we’ve kind of forgotten about the washing your hands and things like that, because unlike the other viruses, respiratory syncytial virus can actually remain on hands and on inanimate objects, and then it can be transmitted. So vaccinate for the things you can vaccinate for, and that’s flu and COVID. Good respiratory hygiene for RSV and common sense things like when you have congregate settings, and you’re in a situation not mandating masks that’s got a, you know, radioactive to it. Just use common sense that you might want to in a certain situation, particularly if you’re yourself vulnerable, by age or by medical condition, or you have someone in your family. So those are the things you want to do. The other thing that we- we don’t want to forget about is testing. And that has a lot to do mostly with- with COVID.

    MARGARET BRENNAN: You said last time test going in and test coming out.

    DR. FAUCI: Exactly and that’s the point. So when you’re- when you’re going to be congregate setting for family issues, like Thanksgiving, likes Christmas and the holidays, it just makes sense that if you’re going to have people coming in, since the tests are widely available, you can get the result in 10 to 15 minutes. Test yourself before you congregate with people, particularly when you’re having someone over the dinner, 5,10, 15, 20 people, it’s easy to do.

    MARGARET BRENNAN: I want to ask about RSV, though, specifically with little kids. These infections are overwhelming pediatric hospital wards around the country. The Children’s Hospital Association and the American Academy of Pediatrics say it’s a public health emergency. Is it an emergency?

    DR. FAUCI: Well, it is if in fact, which in some regions of the country, we’re seeing that the hospital system for pediatrics are at the point of almost being overwhelmed. When you have very little wiggle room of intensive care beds, when you have like almost all the intensive care beds that are occupied, it’s bad for the children who have RSV and need intensive care. But it also occupies all the beds and children who have a number of other diseases that require intensive care or ICU, they don’t have the bed for it. So if you get to that situation that’s approaching an emergency. So when the nurses and the pediatric associations are saying this is really critical, it is. Hopefully we’re going to see that peak come down because if you look at other countries that have had those kinds of peaks with flu and RSV, it’s peaked early, but come down. We’re hoping that what’s going to happen because both flu and RSV have- have-  have come to us earlier than it usually does. If you look at the flu curves, and you look at all the other years, it goes up like this way before it usually goes up over here. 

    MARGARET BRENNAN: So you think we’re in the worst of it?

    DR. FAUCI: I hope so. I hope so. I think so. But you know, you never want to be overconfident.

    MARGARET BRENNAN: More than 100,000 parents last month had to stay home from work to care for kids, according to the Bureau of Labor Statistics. And we’ve seen schools in Ohio, Kentucky, Tennessee, cancel classes because of these large numbers, so coming out of the holidays, should parents expect schools to shut down?

    DR. FAUCI: I don’t know. Margaret, I’m not sure. When- when you talk about shutting down schools, there’s always the–

    MARGARET BRENNAN: That’s also radioactive.

    DR. FAUCI: Exactly. There’s always the collateral issue. So you have to balance, and you do it in real time depending upon the viral load of disease in your region. Whether you know, the upper northeast may be quite different from the southwest, from the- from the- from the Pacific coast, from the upper Northwest. So you have to have the local authorities evaluate on a situation by situation basis, the potential collateral deleterious effects, with the effects of what might happen if you have so many kids getting infected–

    MARGARET BRENNAN: Some of these places just didn’t even have teachers–

    DR. FAUCI: Exactly. Well, that’s the local decision you’re gonna have to make. It’s a local issue. That’s the thing that gets lost in the discussion.

    MARGARET BRENNAN: So how do people, knowing everything you just laid out, how do they calculate their risk and protect themselves? I mean, for an older person, is it something they need to think twice about when it comes to sitting across from their grandchild at Thanksgiving or Christmas?

    DR. FAUCI: Yeah, I mean, it is a judgment call. And one of the things you have to be careful of is that look around not only for your own protection, but for the protection of the people that you’re going to be in contact with, particularly, as you mentioned quite correctly, the elderly, those with underlying conditions, particularly those who are immunocompromised because there’s underlying conditions, like heart disease and lung disease, that if you do get infected, you have a greater chance of having a deleterious consequence. But there’s also something that is even more risky, people who are profoundly immune compromised, people that are on cancer, chemotherapy, people who have a variety of other diseases. So you gotta use common sense. I mean, the idea of coming into a crowded place and you’re going home to someone who’s immune compromised, it just makes sense to put a mask on. Nobody’s mandating anything but use common sense because you don’t want to infect yourself, because you’re not in a vacuum. You may give it to someone, particularly a loved one, or even somebody you don’t know, who has an immune-compromised condition.

    MARGARET BRENNAN: You recently had COVID.

    DR. FAUCI: I did.

    MARGARET BRENNAN: I wonder how that changes when you calculate your risk these days and and how long do you think immunity actually lasts?

    DR. FAUCI: Well, we know how much antibody immunity lasts because you can measure antibodies, they go up and they come down pretty quickly. This is very interesting with regard to coronavirus infection, or vaccination. Very different from something like measles, if you get infected with or vaccinated with measles. The degree of protection is measured in minimum in decades and optimally for a lifetime. We don’t see that with coronaviruses, at least when you’re dealing with getting infected. The big unknown which is mandated or controlled by a part of the immune system that’s not that easy to measure when you just draw blood, and that’s the cell mediated immunity that’s systemically in your lungs and in the other organ systems that have lymphoid tissue in it. So it is entirely likely that although you may get infected with mild symptoms, the degree of protection against severe disease may be much more prolonged than the very transient degree of protection against infection. Let me give you an example. You measured me, I’m an elderly person, so my immune system isn’t as robust as it was 30-40 years ago. I was vaccinated, doubly boosted, and I got infected. Now, the- the antibodies that were circulating in my body were not enough to protect me from getting infected. But it is very likely that the vaccination and double-boosting that I had protected me from getting a severe outcome that if I didn’t have that, I very well might have gotten very seriously ill, and I had a very mild infection. So I think what I’m- what I want people to understand is that although you may get infected with these new variants that are related to the Omicron, you may not be protected against infection. But if you look historically now at the other countries that have surges in these new variants, it’s interesting that the cases go up, but the hospitalizations don’t, which is a really good indication that although you’re not proof- profoundly protecting you against infection, you’re doing a pretty good job of protecting you against severe disease.

    MARGARET BRENNAN: You’re making a case for vaccination–

    DR. FAUCI: I’m totally making a case–  

    MARGARET BRENNAN: But- but people think, ‘Oh, I got a three month free pass. I just had COVID.” But they can still get new variants, they can still get sick in that window of time.

    DR. FAUCI: Exactly. Exactly. So you really want to keep up on your boosters. Because the- the protection clearly wanes, it wanes much more for- for infection than it does for severe disease, but it does wane.

    MARGARET BRENNAN: So what is the prevalent strain that you think we’re going to be facing this winter and does the recent booster shot, the bivalent, protect against it?

    DR. FAUCI: Okay, so we a few months ago had BA. 4, 5 totally dominant, ninety-some odd percent. Now, the BA- the BQ. 1 and the BQ. 1.1 is gradually coming up so that it occupies now about 50% of all the isolates. And then you have kind of an alphabet and number soup of the little ones that the B. 7, BA.4.6 and on and on and on. And even I can’t keep them together. But the ones that are on our minds right now that you do remember is the BQ. 1 and the BQ 1.1. Off in the distance is this XBB, which was very prevalent in Singapore. It came way up and then came way down. The reason you keep an eye on those is that they have what’s called a transmission advantage, in that they are evasive of the protection that you have. So if you look at the BQ. 1, and the BQ 1.1, which was just a couple of percentage a few weeks to a month ago, is now more than 50% total. Those viruses evade the protection of the monoclonal antibodies, Evusheld and some of the other monoclonal antibodies, that are used for treatment as well as prevention. Evusheld is used for prevention, others are used for treatment. It also diminishes the protection that is induced by vaccination and by prior infection. It doesn’t disappear, but it brings it down a few fold. So right now, in answer to your question, what am I concentrating on? I’m concentrating predominantly on the BQ. 1 and 1.1 that looks like by the time we get into December, it very likely will be overwhelmingly the dominant strain. What aside look at this XBB, which is not at all prevalent in the United States. In fact, it isn’t even measurable in a percent when you look at the chart, but what it’s doing in other countries is telling you that it clearly has a transmission advantage. So you have to keep your eye on all of these. Again, that’s the bad news or the sobering news. The somewhat encouraging news is that when you’re seeing these new variants, you also asked the question, what do they got to do with what we’ve been dealing with? If you look at the Omicron lineage, there’s a BA.2, which is one of the Omicron lineages, and all of the sublineage branches of what I’m talking about. The BA.4.6, the BF.7, the BQ 1.1. All–

    MARGARET BRENNAN: Right. People don’t know what they have.

    DR. FAUCI:  They have no way- but they all branch off from that BA.2, which is part of the Omicron lineage.

    MARGARET BRENNAN: So are you envisioning that in the spring, we’re going to have to get a new sort of cocktail of booster shots to match this new threat?

    DR. FAUCI: You know, I don’t know. I have to be quite open and honest with you, as I always am, Margaret. I don’t know, because it really depends on what is going to happen in the spring. If we get, and this is what I’m hoping for. I’m a cautious optimist. By the time we get to the spring, the level of immunity that’s induced by infection, with or without vaccination, with or without boosters, among the entire population is such that the level of severe disease and infection is gonna go way, way down. And you won’t require having every four months or so giving somebody a boost. You heard us, we in the public health arena, talk about the likelihood of getting a cadence of maybe once a year, that you get it with the flu shot.  

    MARGARET BRENNAN: Like the flu shot.

    DR. FAUCI: Just like the flu shot, but it’s a little bit iffy about that. That’s good, because there’s a neatness to that, you know, once a year you get it in the fall. But that doesn’t take into account that you have to keep up the possibility that we will get a variant that’s very different than the variants we have right now that might require a springtime or some summertime boost. If it stays the way it is now, I hope it just gets down to that very low level.

    MARGARET BRENNAN: So the White House just asked Congress for another $10 billion in funding. 

    DR. FAUCI: Yes. 

    MARGARET BRENNAN: We’re technically still in the middle of a pandemic, even though the President said– 

    DR. FAUCI: Right.

    MARGARET BRENNAN: –pandemic’s over. Is that the worry? I mean, is that where that funding needs to go? Into the new cocktails?

    DR. FAUCI: Yeah, the funding- I mean, we really do need that money. I mean, it- First of all, the Congress has been very, very generous giving a lot of money for COVID. That is true, and we’re very grateful for that. But we do need more right now for any of a number of reasons. One of which is a practical thing of- of outreach and PSA campaigns to get people to be vaccinated. If you look at the number of people who are eligible for that updated booster, the BA.4,5 variant–

    MARGARET BRENNAN: It’s just 11% of the population. 

    DR. FAUCI: Yeah it’s 11% of the population which is really, really not optimal. You superimpose upon that, that only 68% of the population is vaccinated, and only a half of those have gotten their first boost to begin with, we have a long way to go to optimize our protection against COVID, which is really a shame, somewhat paradoxical, that a rich country with all the vaccines that we need, and we’re utilizing them at a much lower level than we should be.

    MARGARET BRENNAN: Why do you think that is? Is it- I mean the anti-vaccine movement had existed on the left for a long time, it’s now become prevalent among some conservatives in this country. What do you think is feeding that?

    DR. FAUCI: I think it’s a combination of an expansion and an amplification of the anti-science, anti-vax. There is something I’ve never seen in my 54 years in medicine at the NIH, is that the acceptance or not of a life-saving intervention is steered very heavily by your political ideology. I mean, why would you ever want to see that red states are undervaccinated and blue states are pretty well vaccinated and there are more deaths among red state Republicans than there are among blue states Democrat? Merely because of the fact that there is less vaccination. You don’t want anybody to get sick. I mean, divisions of political ideology are wonderful, because it makes for the diversity of thought in the country. But it shouldn’t be a reason why you get sick–

    MARGARET BRENNAN: Right.

    DR. FAUCI: –or you don’t get sick. That’s- As a public health official and as a physician, mostly, that’s what pains me, because you don’t want anybody to get sick, no matter what their ideology is, and yet, they’re depriving themselves of a life-saving intervention. That plus everybody’s got COVID fatigue, including you and I. We have COVID fatigue, and people just want it behind us. 

    MARGARET BRENNAN: Right.

    DR. FAUCI: We don’t- and people says, Oh, get another booster, an updated booster. There’s almost an intuitive feeling of goodness, I really want this over with. We have to fight that until we get it so low, that it’s appropriate to say, I don’t want to be bothered with it. But it’s not- we’re not there yet.

    MARGARET BRENNAN: We’re not there yet? 

    DR. FAUCI: No.

    MARGARET BRENNAN: Because I asked you a while ago, you’re- I know you’re planning to retire. And I asked you when you would feel comfortable retiring. And you said not until COVID is in the rearview mirror, you said when COVID doesn’t dominate the mental framework of our society. What you’re saying is we’re choosing not to let it dominate our mental framework. 

    DR. FAUCI: Exactly. 

    MARGARET BRENNAN: But it is still very much a risk.

    DR. FAUCI: But it’s still there. I mean, there’s a difference. And that- And that’s an important point that I want to make. If you look at where we were a year ago at this time, when Omicron started to surge, we were having 800 to 900,000 infections and three to 4,000 deaths. Today, we had less than 300 deaths. Yesterday, we had 350 deaths, and we’re having about 45,000 or anywhere from 27 to 45,000 cases. That is much, much better than we were a year ago. But if you look at it in a vacuum, it’s still not a great place to be.

    MARGARET BRENNAN: No.

    DR. FAUCI: I don’t like reading in the newspapers or getting my report from the COVID team: today we lost 400 people, today we lost 350 people. So it’s much, much better than it was, but it is not at a level low enough where we should feel we’re done with it completely because we’re not.

    MARGARET BRENNAN: Since you’re retiring, do you think that will change what looked to be a really intense political firestorm aimed at you? There have been all these House Republican calls for investigations into the origins of COVID and saying they’re gonna bring you up to Capitol Hill. Do you think that wanes as you step down?

    DR. FAUCI: Well, I don’t think it’s gonna wane for me because they’re already saying, the Republicans, that had they won the Senate, they would be bringing me before the committee that Rand Paul would be- likely would be chairing. That’s not going to happen because the Senate is not in the Republican control. But the Republican House has said that they’re going to- and that’s fine with me.

    MARGARET BRENNAN: You’ll appear?

    DR. FAUCI: Oh, of course. I mean, I’m very much in favor of- of legitimate oversight. Absolutely. I mean, I’ve testified before Congress, given the 38 years that I’ve been director, literally hundreds of times, in many oversight hearings.

    MARGARET BRENNAN: It’s never been this personal for you, though. And I know when I talked to you a year ago, you were angry. You said I’m just going to do my job and I’m going to be saving lives and they’re going to be lying.

    DR. FAUCI: Well, you know, it is- it- they’ve clearly politicized it. You know they say that- I’m not political at all, period. I’ve never been and anybody who knows anything about me knows that that’s the case. But it is very clear when people are running their campaigns with an anti-Fauci element to it. I mean, that’s ridiculous. I mean, this is a public health issue. So yeah, it’s going to keep going likely much more geared towards me. I mean, it’s obviously a political issue. I’m not going to get involved. I didn’t get involved before in the politics. And I’m not going to get involved now in the politics, I’d be more than happy to explain publicly or otherwise, everything that we’ve done, and I could defend and explain everything that we’ve done from a public health standpoint.

    MARGARET BRENNAN: Because there is the political argument. And then there is the intelligence and scientific argument, demanding some more answers about COVID. 

    DR. FAUCI: Yeah. 

    MARGARET BRENNAN: And I think you’d agree that those are some legitimate questions there.

    DR. FAUCI: Oh, absolutely. Absolutely.

    MARGARET BRENNAN: And last year, President Biden said the United States is asking China for more data about the origins. 

    DR. FAUCI: Yeah.

    MARGARET BRENNAN: Have you seen anything that Beijing has produced?

    DR. FAUCI: No, you know, one of the- one of the problems is that- and this is historic. It goes way back to bird flu, the H5N1, the H7N9, the original SARS-CoV-1. That the Chinese, not necessarily the scientists that we know and we have dealt with and collaborated with productively for decades, but the whole establishment, a political and other establishment in China, even when there’s nothing at all to hide, they act secretive, which absolutely triggers an appropriate suspicion of like, “What the heck is going on over there?” When you had SARS-CoV-1, back in 2002, they were not transparent at all about what the heck was going on in China until–

    MARGARET BRENNAN: The Communist Party wasn’t?

    DR. FAUCI: Right. Until it got into Hong Kong, and then spread to the rest of the world. It has been proven without a doubt that SARS-CoV-1 went from a bat to an intermediate animal host to a human. Didn’t come out of any lab, nothing. It was a natural occurrence, yet they were so secretive about it, that you might want to suspect about what they’re hiding. So right now, what we would really like to know is all of the details of what went on with the original people who were infected. We keep a completely open mind as to what the origin is. Having said that, if you look at the examination by highly qualified international scientists with no political agendas, they’ve published in peer reviewed journals, the best of the peer reviewed journals, that all the accumulated evidence, particularly related to the Chinese bringing into the Wuhan market animals from the wild that should not have been there that clearly could have brought in from a bat to them to a human, that the evidence is quite strong that this is a natural occurrence. Does that mean we’ve ruled out that there was something funny going on at leak? Absolutely. And I, and all of my colleagues, keep an absolutely open mind, we’ve got to investigate every possibility because this is too important not to do that. That’s not incompatible with saying the scientific evidence still weighs much more strongly that this is a natural occurrence. You must keep your mind open that it’s something other than that.

    MARGARET BRENNAN: Right. Or that it was both at- Right.

    DR. FAUCI: Exactly. 

    MARGARET BRENNAN: But, have you seen anything that Beijing has produced at all in terms of explanation or data?

    DR. FAUCI: Well, their explanation is an explanation that they will not allow us to look at the primary information.

    MARGARET BRENNAN: Still- yeah. Totally still won’t allow you to–

    DR. FAUCI:  They can say, oh, you know, it’s in frozen food, or it’s in this or it’s in that. But there’s no primary data. The W.H.O. went in and saw some of the data, which some of which was actually quite helpful. But we- you know what we need, Margaret, we need a transparency and a collaboration to open things up so that we can discuss it in a non-accusatory way. 

     MARGARET BRENNAN: Exactly. 

    DR. FAUCI: What happens is that if you look at the anti-China approach, that clearly the Trump administration had right from the very beginning, and the accusatory nature, the Chinese are going to flinch back and say, Oh, I’m sorry, we’re not going to talk to you about it, which is not correct. They should be.

    MARGARET BRENNAN: But they’re not talking to the Biden administration about it either is what you’re saying. 

    DR. FAUCI: Exactly. I think that horse is out of the barn, and they’re very suspicious of anybody trying to accuse them. We need to have an open dialogue with their scientists and our scientists, keep the politics out of it. And let the scientists- because these are scientists that we’ve known for decades, and we’ve collaborated with them.

    MARGARET BRENNAN: The Washington Post editorial board had an interesting piece on this recently. I don’t know if you read it–

    DR. FAUCI: Yeah. Yeah.

    MARGARET BRENNAN: –but about the secrecy regarding the origins. And it says the world owes those who died, 6 million people, but probably twice that or more to be better prepared in the future. The cover-up is immense and still in place. China should now agree to a full and thorough scientific investigation that returns to Wuhan. Do you agree with that word cover-up? And intentional distortion?

    DR. FAUCI: I don’t know what that means. No, I- I- it isn’t that I agree or disagree. I’m not sure what they’re talking about. I mean, if cover-up is not allowing people to come in and look at all the data, that’s not a cover, that’s not being transparent. To me a cover-up is–

    (CROSSTALK)

    MARGARET BRENNAN: Well, but like the animals being killed before anyone can go into the market to investigate that. 

    DR. FAUCI: No, no, no. Well- again I don’t want to- it’s going to be taken out of context by others, for sure, but that’s my life. Welcome to it. Cover up means you know something, and you’re hiding it, not being transparent and allowing things to open is a little bit of a different. The thing that I- that I’m very concerned about, is that the Chinese knew from the original SARS-CoV-1, that you don’t want to bring these exotic animals into a market placed in contact with people. So they supposedly outlawed it, then you get a very competent, high integrity investigator from Australia, goes to China and gets photographs of these animals in the Wuhan market who should not have been there. So that to me is like an example, if you want to call that a cover up, or you want to call that lack of transparency, I don’t know what it is. But when you say you’re not going to bring animals into a market, and you do, that’s bad.

    MARGARET BRENNAN: Yeah, and some have argued, it’s just that the way the bureaucracy of the communist state works, that it didn’t want to allow for embarrassment.

    DR. FAUCI: Exactly. It- it- I think you just maybe in two sentences explained a lot that people are spending a half an hour talking about. 

    MARGARET BRENNAN: Well it’s absolutely fascinating be fascinating, frankly, I find it all fascinating.

    DR. FAUCI: No, no it’s fascinating that, you know, it’s the idea of they don’t want to be embarrassed. And by not wanting to be embarrassed, it’s like shooting yourself in the foot of nobody believing anything you say.

    MARGARET BRENNAN: One of the other things that’s interesting to us when we watch how the world deals with COVID is the “Zero COVID” policy in China, where they shut down almost fully cities and things, and that impacts the global economy. It’s why we’re still dealing with this in many ways. Why hasn’t Beijing been able to get a really effective vaccine? Why do they still struggle with this like that?

    DR. FAUCI: Well, it’s the combination of not having an effective vaccine that they themselves made, it just is not nearly at the level of many of the other vaccines, it’s just not, and that’s unfortunate. And not wanting to bring in vaccines from the very beginning that were highly effective 94-95% effective–

    MARGARET BRENNAN: Moderna, Pfizer.

    DR. FAUCI: The Moderna, the Pfizer, the- you know, the- the ad vector ones that we’ve had from J&J and others, as well as locking down almost without a purpose. Whenever you lock down, if you look at the times we had to shut down, because the hospitals were being overwhelmed, and you had to stop the flow, at least temporarily, and then open up, get people vaccinated. So when you put restrictions, you do it, to give you time, to be able to do something productive so you can, you know, unloosen, or loosen up the restrictions. They to at least from what we were seeing, were just rigidly closing things down, which, unless you have a really, really good purpose of preparing yourself for opening, it doesn’t seem to make a lot of sense.

    MARGARET BRENNAN: And it impacts the global economy and us here in the US. What do you plan to do after you leave NIH in December? What’s next for you?

    DR. FAUCI: You know, I don’t know, Margaret. And and- the reason I don’t know is that I want to strictly stick to the- to the ethical guidelines of not negotiating what my next position, wherever that may be in a university or in a foundation or whatever, until I actually step down. Otherwise, there could be considerations of conflict of interest and things like that. I want to stay completely away from that. So I’ve done none of that. When I step down at the end of the year, then I’ll start entertaining venues in which I’m going to operate. I know what I want to do, but the venue and what I want to do it, I don’t know what that is. I want to continue to write and to lecture and utilize what I will have outside of a government position. What do I have? I have 54 years of experience as a scientist at the NIH. I have 38 years of experience leading the largest and most important infectious disease research institution in the world, and I’ve had the privilege of advising seven presidents, I could use that experience, that know how, that judgment, to help others to write about it to, to lecture about it and perhaps, to encourage at a time of anti-science, the best and the brightest among the young to at least consider a career in science and public health and importantly, in public service. If I can do that, after I step down, I think that’ll be, you know, something that I would be pleased with.

    MARGARET BRENNAN: We’ll be watching–

    DR FAUCI: Thank you.

    MARGARET BRENNAN: Dr. Fauci, thank you for your time today, and we’ll be right back.

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  • This week on

    This week on

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    “Face the Nation” Guest Lineup:

    • Dr. Anthony Fauci — President Biden’s chief medical adviser and director of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases

    • Rep. Jim Clyburn — (D) South Carolina, majority whip

    • Gov. Jared Polis — (D) Colorado

    • Jeh Johnson — Former Department of Homeland Security secretary under former President Barack Obama

    • Michael Chertoff — Former Department of Homeland Security secretary under former President George W. Bush

    How to watch “Face the Nation”

    • Date: Sunday, November 27, 2022

    • TV: “Face the Nation” airs Sunday mornings on CBS. Click here for your local listings

    • Radio: Subscribe to “Face the Nation” from CBS Radio News to listen on-the-go

    • Free online stream: Watch the show on CBS’ streaming network at 10:30 a.m., 1 p.m. and 4 p.m. ET.

    With the latest news and analysis from Washington, don’t miss Margaret Brennan (@margbrennan) this Sunday on “Face the Nation” (@FaceTheNation). 

    And for the latest from America’s premier public affairs program, follow us on Facebook, Twitter, and Instagram.

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  • Omicron BQ Covid variants, which threaten people with compromised immune systems, are now dominant in U.S.

    Omicron BQ Covid variants, which threaten people with compromised immune systems, are now dominant in U.S.

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    A person receives a coronavirus disease (COVID-19) test as the Omicron coronavirus variant continues to spread in Manhattan, New York City, U.S., December 22, 2021.

    Andrew Kelly | Reuters

    The omicron BQ coronavirus subvariants have risen to dominance in the U.S. as people gather and travel for the Thanksgiving holiday, putting people with compromised immune systems at increased risk.

    BQ.1 and BQ.1.1 are causing 57% of new infections in the U.S., according to data published by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention on Friday. The omicron BA.5 subvariant, once dominant, now makes up only a fifth of new Covid cases.

    The BQ subvariants are more immune evasive and likely resistant to key antibody medications, such as Evusheld and bebtelovimab, used by people with compromised immune systems, according to the National Institutes of Health. This includes organ transplant and cancer chemotherapy patients.

    There are currently no replacements for these drugs. President Joe Biden, in an October speech, told people with compromised immune systems that they should consult with their physicians and take extra precautions this winter.

    New variants may make some existing protections ineffective for the immunocompromised. Sadly, this means you may be at a special risk this winter,” Biden said.

    The XBB subvariant is also circulating at a low level right now, causing about 3% of new infections. Chief White House medical advisor Dr. Anthony Fauci, in a briefing Tuesday, said XBB is even more immune evasive than the BQ subvariants.

    Fauci, director of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, said the new boosters, which were designed against omicron BA.5, probably aren’t as effective against infection and mild illness from XBB. But the shots should protect against severe disease, he said. Singapore saw a spike in cases from XBB, but there wasn’t a major surge in hospitalizations, he added.

    Moderna and Pfizer said last week that their boosters induce an immune response against BQ.1.1, which is a descendent of the BA.5 subvariant.

    Fauci, in the press briefing, said public health officials believe there is enough immunity from vaccination, boosting and infection to prevent a repeat of the unprecedented Covid surge that occurred last winter when omicron first arrived.

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  • Fauci gives final briefing after 50 years in government

    Fauci gives final briefing after 50 years in government

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    Fauci gives final briefing after 50 years in government – CBS News


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    Dr. Anthony Fauci, the nation’s top infectious disease expert, held his final news briefing Tuesday before he steps down from his government position next month.

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  • Dr. Anthony Fauci talks family, career and what’s next

    Dr. Anthony Fauci talks family, career and what’s next

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    Dr. Anthony Fauci may be stepping down from his role as chief medical advisor to the president in December, but the immunologist says he’s “not even close” to completely retiring.

    “I don’t know precisely what I’m going to do because I really can’t negotiate a post-government job while I’m in government,” he said. “My broad general theme, even though I don’t know the venue in which it’s going to happen, would be to continue to stay in the arena of science, medicine and public health.”

    Fauci has served under seven different presidents, covering health crises from Ebola to the AIDS epidemic. Over the course of his five-decade career, the physician has faced both criticism and accolades from officials and the public. 

    He said that he “never ever wanted to hurt anybody, including President Trump,” who made several comments about Fauci during the height of the COVID pandemic. Fauci’s response to the virus, he said, led him to become “the boogeyman of the far right.”

    “We are living now in an era, I believe, where there is so much distortion of reality, conspiracy theory and untruths,” he said.

    The physician has even received death threats for his work, but says he doesn’t focus on them. 

    “The hate and the people who want to kill me is not real,” he said. “It’s unrealistic.”

    Despite the backlash, he says he stayed in the position for all this time because “it was clear that if we walked away from telling the truth in an environment of untruths, then there would be nobody there telling the truth.”

    “When you’re dealing with an outbreak involving the country and the world, you generally think of the country as your patient,” he said. “And when things get tough, you don’t walk away from it.”

    He reflected on the work of his career, and what the nation has learned over the years, noting that the response to AIDS informed the country on the COVID-19 vaccine development. 

    “We made major investments in science for decades prior to COVID, and within 11 months [to] have a vaccine that went through massive clinical trials, that is beyond unprecedented,” he said. “We will never be able to prevent the emergency of a new infection. What you can do is prevent that emergence from becoming a pandemic.”

    He’s lead the National Institutes of Health for about as long as he’s been married to world renown bioethicist and nurse Dr. Christine Grady. He got emotional talking about his wife and said he couldn’t have done his job without her. 

    “She’s just solid,” he said. “She was working 18 hours a day by working, raising three children, getting a PhD and doing a job that’s an important job.”

    Last weekend, Fauci was honored with the lifetime achievement award at the ninth annual Muhammad Ali Humanitarian Awards. 

    “I gave it everything I had,” he said when reflecting on his life and career. “I didn’t leave anything on the field.”

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  • Dr. Anthony Fauci on what’s next for his career

    Dr. Anthony Fauci on what’s next for his career

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    Dr. Anthony Fauci on what’s next for his career – CBS News


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    Chief medical adviser to the president Dr. Anthony Fauci, who’s served under seven administrations, said he’s stepping down from his position in December. But the immunologist won’t be retiring completely. He discusses what’s next for his career with “CBS Saturday Morning” co-host Michelle Miller.

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  • Guest lineups for the Sunday news shows

    Guest lineups for the Sunday news shows

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    WASHINGTON — ABC’s “This Week” — Transportation Secretary Pete Buttigieg; Rep. Adam Kinzinger, R-Ill.; Dr. Anthony Fauci, director of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases.

    ——

    NBC’s “Meet the Press” — Sen. Bernie Sanders, I-Vt.; Rep. Stephanie Murphy, D-Fla.; Evan McMullin, independent candidate for Senate in Utah.

    ——

    CBS’ “Face the Nation” — Buttigieg; Ukrainian Ambassador to the U.S. Oksana Markarova; Betsey Stevenson, professor of economics and public policy at the University of Michigan.

    ———

    CNN’s “State of the Union” — National security adviser Jake Sullivan; White House economic adviser Cecilia Rouse; Sen. Michael Bennet, D-Colo.; the nominees for Arizona governor, Republican Kari Lake and Democrat Katie Hobbs; Joe O’Dea, Republican nominee for Senate in Colorado.

    ———

    “Fox News Sunday” — Rep. Steve Scalise, R-La.; White House economic adviser Jared Bernstein.

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  • Fauci Addresses ‘The Pandemic Is Over’

    Fauci Addresses ‘The Pandemic Is Over’

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    Several days after President Joe Biden declared that “the pandemic is over,” Anthony Fauci weighed in on the president’s controversial remarks during an interview at The Atlantic Festival, an annual live event in Washington, D.C.

    “He was saying we’re in a much better place with regard to the fulminant stage of the pandemic,” Fauci, the president’s chief medical adviser, said. “It really becomes semantics and about how you want to spin it.”

    By “the fulminant stage,” he meant the phase of the coronavirus pandemic during which we saw sudden, unpredictable spikes in disease and death. Thanks in large part to vaccines and antivirals, Fauci explained, we are now in a new phase, one in which even as case counts and hospitalization numbers fluctuate, death tolls hold fairly constant. The United States is no longer seeing thousands of deaths a day, and for many Americans, the risk of serious illness has declined dramatically.

    Still, the idea that declaring the pandemic over is truly a matter of semantics is a fraught message coming from the nation’s top public-health communicator. Especially during the rollout of the country’s first Omicron-specific boosters, some experts and insiders worry that the declaration could have real consequences: Six administration officials told The Washington Post that the president’s comments would likely make the tasks of persuading Americans to get shots and securing funding from Congress even more challenging than they already were.

    Watch: Atlantic deputy editor Ross Andersen in conversation with Anthony Fauci

    Fauci is not the only administration official who has walked back the president’s remarks, which came just a few days after Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus, the head of the World Health Organization, said, “We are not there yet, but the end is in sight.” According to Politico, Biden’s remarks caught senior administration health officials off guard, and indeed, in the following days, the White House clarified that the president was referring to public sentiment, not epidemiological reality. “The president,” Health and Human Services Secretary Xavier Becerra told Yahoo Finance, “was reflecting what so many Americans are thinking and feeling.” (In today’s interview, Fauci built on Ghebreyesus’s sentiment with a trademark Fauci-ism: Easing up on our efforts to fight the pandemic now, he said, would be like saying, “Just because I see what the finish line is, I’m gonna stop and get a hot dog. No, you don’t want to do that.”)

    Fauci himself is no stranger to the delicate art of discussing the pandemic’s end. In a late-April interview with PBS NewsHour, he said that the United States was “out of the pandemic phase,” only to reverse course the next day and say that the country (along with the entire world) was “still experiencing a pandemic.” Last month, when he announced that he would step down from his government position by the year’s end, Fauci said that he was not satisfied with this state of affairs. “I’m not happy about the fact that we still have 400 deaths per day,” he said. “We need to do much better than that … But I hope that over the next couple of months, things will improve.”

    So far, they have not. Statistically speaking, not a whole lot has changed since last month—or, for that matter, since late April: Average daily cases, which Fauci acknowledged are an underestimate, are up slightly, from about 50,000 to just under 60,000. The numbers of people hospitalized and in ICUs rose to a peak in late July and have slowly declined since. Death tolls have held fairly constant, as Fauci said, at about 400 a day. And modelers think they may remain there for a while yet. “I’ll say it even today,” Fauci repeated. “Four hundred deaths per day is not an acceptable number as far as I’m concerned.”

    Meanwhile, America has done away with nearly all of its pandemic precautions, and Congress has declined to renew funding for vaccines and therapeutics. Whether or not the pandemic really is behind us, many people are living as if it is. An Axios/Ipsos poll released last week found that nearly half of Americans have returned to their pre-COVID lives, and 66 percent only occasionally or never wear a mask in public indoor spaces—by far the highest percentage that has given that answer since pollsters first posed the question in May 2021.

    In his wide-ranging interview at The Atlantic Festival, Fauci touched on a number of other topics, including his decades of work on the HIV/AIDS crisis, the politicization of public health, and how during the pandemic he’s become something of a larger-than-life figure—to both those who adore him and those who despise him. He laughed about the Dr. Fauci–themed candles, bobbleheads, and other paraphernalia that are sent to him. “That is as unrealistic in many respects as the craziness of people who want to decapitate me because I’m ruining the economy,” he said.

    Fauci also addressed the origins of the coronavirus, repeating his oft-cited position that while he keeps an open mind to theories that the virus leaked out of a lab in Wuhan, China, evidence points toward natural spillover from animals in a market in the city. It’s unlikely that we’ll ever get definitive proof in either direction, he said, but one thing that would help is greater transparency from the Chinese government, beginning with answers to the question of what exactly happened at the Wuhan wet market to which some of the earliest COVID cases have been traced.

    “The thing I think would be the best thing to do would be to open up those markets,” which are now closed to investigation, Fauci said. “If we were able to go and do surveillance easily in China, we would get a lot more information than we have now.”

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  • Ron DeSantis praised Anthony Fauci for Covid response in spring 2020 for ‘really doing a good job’ | CNN Politics

    Ron DeSantis praised Anthony Fauci for Covid response in spring 2020 for ‘really doing a good job’ | CNN Politics

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    CNN
     — 

    Republican presidential candidate Ron DeSantis is attacking former President Donald Trump for “turning the country over to [Dr. Anthony] Fauci in March 2020” but DeSantis was praising the chief public health official at the same time in previously unreported quotes, saying Fauci was “really, really good and really, really helpful” and “really doing a good job.”

    In other comments, the Florida governor said he deferred to Fauci’s guidance on COVID-19 restrictions and later cited his guidance when communicating the policies he was putting in place early in the pandemic in the state of Florida.

    “You have a lot of people there who are working very, very hard, and they’re not getting a lot of sleep,” DeSantis said on March 25, 2020, at a briefing on Florida’s response. “And they’re really focusing on a big country that we have. And from Dr. Birx to Dr. Fauci to the vice president who’s worked very hard, the surgeon general, they’re really doing a good job. It’s a tough, tough situation, but they’re working hard.”

    In one of his first appearances as a candidate for the Republican nomination for president, DeSantis attacked Trump for following Fauci’s guidance during the Covid pandemic. Fauci served as the director of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases until retiring in 2022. He played a key early role in crafting the administration’s response to the pandemic, but often was criticized and sidelined by then-President Trump.

    “I think [Trump] did great for three years, but when he turned the country over to Fauci in March of 2020 that destroyed millions of people’s lives,” DeSantis said last Thursday. “And in Florida, we were one of the few that stood up, cut against the grain, took incoming fire from media, bureaucracy, the left, even a lot of Republicans, had schools open, preserved businesses.”

    “If you are faced with a destructive bureaucrat in your midst like a Fauci, you do not empower somebody like Fauci. You bring him into the office and you tell him to pack his bags: You are fired,” DeSantis said Tuesday at one of his first campaign events in Iowa.

    Bryan Griffin, a spokesman for DeSantis, told CNN he initially followed guidance from Fauci but changed course and didn’t look back.

    “Like most Americans, the governor initially assumed medical officials were going to serve the interests of the people and keep politics out of their decision making. When it became clear that this wasn’t the case, the governor charted his own course and never looked back,” Griffin told CNN in an email. “Governor DeSantis would’ve fired Anthony Fauci.”

    In a news conference on Tuesday, DeSantis also acknowledged mistakes early in the pandemic.

    “And what I’ve said about it is it was a difficult situation and we didn’t know a lot,” he said. “So I think people could do things that they regret. I mean I’ve said there are things we did in those first few weeks that I pivoted from.”

    Though Fauci did help craft the administration’s Covid response, Trump was often critical of Fauci as he attacked his own administration’s pandemic guidelines. Trump began criticizing Fauci early in spring 2020, retweeting calls to fire him in April of that year and in May blasting comments Fauci made against reopening schools. In July 2020, the White House’s deputy chief of staff for communications, Dan Scavino, posted a cartoon on Facebook that showed Fauci as a faucet flushing the American economy for his COVID guidance.

    In spring 2020, Fauci was provided with around-the-clock security after he began receiving escalating threats after his providing guidance to Trump for the country to remain as locked down as possible to help control the spread of the virus, which to date has claimed more than a million lives in the US.

    DeSantis, like Trump, later broke with Fauci over reopening Florida in July 2020, but he didn’t begin regularly harshly criticizing Fauci until spring 2021.

    Trump urged reopenings by May 2020 and DeSantis was one of the first to put in place plans to do so – for which Trump praised the Florida governor at an October 2020 rally.

    Last week, DeSantis’ campaign’s rapid response account and a spokesperson also shared a video from a Republican congressman that attacked Trump for praising Fauci, which used comments from March and February 2020, the same time DeSantis himself was praising Fauci.

    But DeSantis’ attacks rewrite history, according to a CNN KFile review of public appearances by DeSantis in 2020 as Trump began harshly criticizing Fauci much earlier than DeSantis. And in at least 10 different instances at press briefings in April and March, DeSantis cited Fauci or mentioned his guidance when discussing his own support for restrictive policies like closing beaches and putting in place curfews.

    Speaking at a news briefing on March 21, 2020, DeSantis made similar comments praising Fauci.

    “The president’s task force has been great,” DeSantis said. “I mean, you’ve called, you know, we’ve talked Dr. Fauci number of times, talked to, you know, the surgeon, US surgeon general number of times, VP, you know, they’ve been really, really good and really, really helpful.”

    At other press briefings in March 2020, DeSantis also cited Fauci’s guidance on mobile testing, individual testing, and how long the timeline on COVID might be.

    “I would defer to people like Dr. Fauci,” DeSantis said on March 14, 2020. “I think Dr. Fauci has said nationwide, you’re looking at six to eight weeks of where we’re really gonna be having to dig in here.”

    On March 25, 2020, DeSantis cited Fauci’s guidance on isolating.

    “So please, please if you’re one of those people who’ve come from the hot zone, Dr. Fauci said yesterday, you know, you have a much higher chance being infected coming out of that region than anywhere else in the country right now. So please, you need to self-isolate. That’s the requirement in Florida.”

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