Posts tagged with "The Guardian US"

Joe Kennedy III is named U.S. economic envoy to Northern Ireland

December 20, 2022

Joe Kennedy III—the 42-year-old scion of one of America’s most famous political families—has agreed to serve as the special envoy to Northern Ireland for economic affairs, the U.S. State Department announced on Monday, December 19, according to a report by The Guardian.

The former Massachusetts congressman and grandson of U.S. Attorney General Robert F. Kennedy (who served from 1961 to 1964) is replacing Mick Mulvaney, a former White House chief of staff under Donald Trump, who stepped down from the role last year.

“In this capacity, he will focus on advancing economic development and investment opportunities in Northern Ireland to the benefit of all communities as well as strengthening people-to-people ties between the United States and Northern Ireland,” the U.S. Secretary of State Antony Blinken said in a statement.

“His role builds on the longstanding U.S. commitment to supporting peace, prosperity, and stability in Northern Ireland.”

Kennedy’s appointment comes at a moment of elevated tensions between Washington and London over the implementation of the Northern Ireland protocol that dictates post-Brexit trade regulations in the U.K. province—and it comes ahead of the 25th anniversary of the Good Friday Agreement next year, an agreement that aimed to end nearly 30 years of political violence in Northern Ireland known as The Troubles.

Kennedy called his appointment “an incredible honor” and said he looked forward to helping the Joe Biden White House “reaffirm US commitment to Northern Ireland and to promote economic prosperity and opportunity for all its people”.

His appointment as envoy to Northern Ireland makes him the third Kennedy family member to serve in a diplomatic post under Biden. Caroline Kennedy, the daughter of former president John F. Kennedy, is Biden’s ambassador to Australia. Victoria Kennedy, the widow of the late senator Ted Kennedy, is ambassador to Austria.

Given his Irish American family’s lineage, Kennedy’s appointment has strong political overtones despite its economic focus.

Research contact: @guardian

President Biden to sign executive actions aimed at ending COVID pandemic

January 22, 2021

On first full day in the Oval Office, President Joe Biden is expected to sign a second set of executive actions, aimed at making good on his plans to use the might of the federal government to end the coronavirus pandemic, The Guardian reports.

His administration plans a coordinated federal coronavirus response aimed at restoring trust in the government and focused on boosting vaccines, increasing testing, reopening schools, and addressing inequalities thrown up by the disease.

“We can and will beat COVID-19. America deserves a response to the COVID-19 pandemic that is driven by science, data and public health—not politics,” the White House said in a statement outlining the administration’s national strategy on COVID-19 response and pandemic preparedness.

The administration’s new strategy is based around seven major goals:

  1. Restoring public trust in government efforts;
  2. Getting more vaccine doses into more arms;
  3. Mitigating the spread—including mask mandates;
  4. Emergency economic relief;
  5. A strategy to get schools and workers functioning ag;
  6. Establishing an equity task force to address disparities in suffering involving issues of race, ethnicity and geography; and
  7. Preparing for future threats.

According to The Guardian, Biden has pledged to vaccinate 100 million people in 100 days and reverse the impact of a year of mismanaged response under Donald Trump that saw more than 400,000 people die and more than 24 million infected – by far the worst rates in the world.

But his executive orders are set to go far beyond just boosting vaccination efforts.

The 46th U.S. president plans to re-engage with the World Health Organization—a reversal from the Trump administration’s move to cut ties during the pandemic. In other moves, the new administration says it plans to set up pandemic testing and vaccination sites, and devise a speedy vaccine distribution program.

On traveling, Biden will sign an executive order requiring people to wear a mask on trains, airplanes and maritime vessels. Another Health and Human Services to give guidance on safely reopening schools.

Biden also will release a presidential memorandum utilizing the FEMA disaster relief fund for providing reimbursement for personal protective equipment (PPE), cleaning, and costs needed to safely reopen schools.

The Biden administration is also looking to fix supply shortfalls. Biden plans to direct federal agencies to fulfill supply shortfalls using the Defense Production Act.

Biden will restore a White House team on global health risks set up under Barack Obama and dismantled under Donald Trump.

The executive orders aim to help people of color in particular. One will set up the COVID-19 health equity taskforce.

Biden will issue an order to develop a national strategy to reopen schools, hoping to meet his goal of having most elementary and middle schools open within his first 100 days in office and will ask Congress to provide $130 billion additional aid to schools, $35 billion for colleges and universities, $25 billion for child care centers at risk of closing and $15 billion in childcare aid for struggling families.

Research contact: @GuardianUS

The buddy system: Provider of Trump COVID drug is president’s golf pal

October 11, 2020

New questions have emerged over the circumstances under which Donald Trump was prescribed an experimental antibody drug cocktail to treat his coronavirus infection now that the public knows that the source of the pharmaceuticals was the president’s golfing buddy.

As Trump wrongly hailed his treatment–which included a drug called REGN-COV2 produced by Tarrytown, New York-based Regeneron—as a “cure”, it emerged that the company’s CEO Leonard Schleifer  is a member of the Trump National Golf Club in Westchester County, New York, and had met the president in May to talk about drugs his company was developing The Guardian reports.

REGN-COV2 is a combination of two monoclonal antibodies designed to both treat people with coronavirus and to prevent Sars-CoV-2 infection. The antibodies are designed to prevent the coronavirus spike protein from attaching to Ace2 receptors in the body–the path the virus uses to infect people.

While some ethicists have defended Trump’s privileged access as president to experimental treatments, others have suggested it raises questions of fairness among other concerns, including his history of touting unproven treatments.

Trump’s relationship with Schleifer, whom he reportedly calls “Lenny,” adds to growing questions over the president’s almost exclusive access to experimental treatments unavailable to most other Americans, even as he has continued to downplay the threat of coronavirus based on his own experience.

The price of Regeneron stocks–which Trump has owned in the past–soared after it was revealed the drug had been made available for his treatment and Trump stated it would be made freely available for all, although he didn’t explain how.

“I call that a cure,” Trump said in a video, adding that everyone should have access to the not-yet-approved drug and that he would make sure it was in every hospital as soon as possible.

Trump’s comments were quickly criticized by doctors treating patients on the frontline of the COVID-19 pandemic in the United States.

Frankly, he is an anecdote, and he is an anecdote meaning he is one person who took this drug, but he has also taken dexamethasone,” said ER professional Dr Rob Davidson, who works in west Michigan, on Twitter.

Davidson added in his interview with the Guardian that Dexamethasone (a corticosteroid that prevents the release of substances in the body that cause inflammation) “makes you feel like a million bucks, it makes you feel like you’re on top of the world”.

He concluded: “Do everything the opposite of what this administration is telling you.”

After the president’s comments, Regeneron announced it had applied to the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) for an emergency use authorization.

“There are doses available for approximately 50,000 patients, and we expect to have doses available for 300,000 patients in total within the next few months,” the company said in a statement.

However, America is seeing more than 50,000 new cases of Covid-19 each day. Further, monoclonal antibody therapies are notoriously difficult to produce and expensive. The median cost of monoclonal antibody therapies approved over the last 20 years is more than $96,000 per treatment course.

Regeneron’s therapy has only been tested in 275 people, in a promising study that some scientists nevertheless said, “doesn’t cut it” for emergency use authorization.

The drug has also stirred debate because of how it was developed, The Guardian notes–using an “immortalized” cell line originally derived from an elective abortion in the Netherlands in the 1970s—a common process that the Trump administration opposes.

Republicans opposes embryonic stem cell research, according to the party platform.

The White House doctor, Sean Conley, said Trump had been given a single 8g dose that was made available under a compassionate use clause. Compassionate use requests are decided on a case-by-case basis—and both the drug company and the FDA must agree.

The Regeneron spokeswoman Alexandra Bowie said fewer than 10 of these requests had been granted, and with the drug in limited supply the priority was to use it in ongoing studies. Emergency access was granted “only in rare and exceptional circumstances”, she said.

Regeneron also contacted the Democratic presidential candidate, Joe Biden, to alert him to the availability of the drug under the compassionate use rule.

Alison Bateman-House, an ethicist at New York University Langone Health, told The Guardian that Regeneron’s overture to Biden should raise concerns.

“That crosses lines of appearing to promote a potentially unapproved product,” she told Associated Press, which would violate FDA rules. Rather than directing people to enrol in studies, she said it suggested that “we’ll cut the line for you”.

New questions have emerged over the circumstances under which Donald Trump was prescribed n experimental antibody drug cocktail to treat his coronavirus infection now that the public knows that the source of the pharmaceuticals was the president’s golfing buddy.

As Trump wrongly hailed his treatment–which included a drug called REGN-COV2 produced by Tarrytown, New York-based Regeneron—as a “cure”, it emerged that the company’s CEO Leonard Schleifer  is a member of the Trump National Golf Club in Westchester County, New York, and had met the president in May to talk about drugs his company was developing The Guardian reports.

REGN-COV2 is a combination of two monoclonal antibodies designed to both treat people with coronavirus and to prevent Sars-CoV-2 infection. The antibodies are designed to prevent the coronavirus spike protein from attaching to Ace2 receptors in the body–the path the virus uses to infect people.

While some ethicists have defended Trump’s privileged access as president to experimental treatments, others have suggested it raises questions of fairness among other concerns, including his history of touting unproven treatments.

Trump’s relationship with Schleifer, whom he reportedly calls “Lenny,” adds to growing questions over the president’s almost exclusive access to experimental treatments unavailable to most other Americans, even as he has continued to downplay the threat of coronavirus based on his own experience.

The price of Regeneron stocks–which Trump has owned in the past–soared after it was revealed the drug had been made available for his treatment and Trump stated it would be made freely available for all, although he didn’t explain how.

“I call that a cure,” Trump said in a video, adding that everyone should have access to the not-yet-approved drug and that he would make sure it was in every hospital as soon as possible.

Trump’s comments were quickly criticized by doctors treating patients on the frontline of the COVID-19 pandemic in the United States.

Frankly, he is an anecdote, and he is an anecdote meaning he is one person who took this drug, but he has also taken dexamethasone,” said ER professional Dr Rob Davidson, who works in west Michigan, on Twitter.

Davidson added in his interview with the Guardian that Dexamethasone (a corticosteroid that prevents the release of substances in the body that cause inflammation) “makes you feel like a million bucks, it makes you feel like you’re on top of the world”.

He concluded: “Do everything the opposite of what this administration is telling you.”

After the president’s comments, Regeneron announced it had applied to the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) for an emergency use authorization.

“There are doses available for approximately 50,000 patients, and we expect to have doses available for 300,000 patients in total within the next few months,” the company said in a statement.

However, Americais seeing more than 50,000 new cases of Covid-19 EaCH day. Further, monoclonal antibody therapies are notoriously difficult to produce and expensive. The median cost of monoclonal antibody therapies approved over the last 20 years is more than $96,000 per treatment course.

Regeneron’s therapy has only been tested in 275 people, in a promising study that some scientists nevertheless said, “doesn’t cut it” for emergency use authorization.

The drug has also stirred debate because of how it was developed, The Guardian notes–using an “immortalized” cell line originally derived from an elective abortion in the Netherlands in the 1970s—a common process that the Trump administration opposes.

Republicans opposes embryonic stem cell research, according to the party platform.

The White House doctor, Sean Conley, said Trump had been given a single 8g dose that was made available under a compassionate use clause. Compassionate use requests are decided on a case-by-case basis—and both the drug company and the FDA must agree.

The Regeneron spokeswoman Alexandra Bowie said fewer than 10 of these requests had been granted, and with the drug in limited supply the priority was to use it in ongoing studies. Emergency access was granted “only in rare and exceptional circumstances”, she said.

Regeneron also contacted the Democratic presidential candidate, Joe Biden, to alert him to the availability of the drug under the compassionate use rule.

Alison Bateman-House, an ethicist at New York University Langone Health, told The Guardian that Regeneron’s overture to Biden should raise concerns.

“That crosses lines of appearing to promote a potentially unapproved product,” she told Associated Press, which would violate FDA rules. Rather than directing people to enrol in studies, she said it suggested that “we’ll cut the line for you”.

Research contact: @GuardianUS