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Why America s vaccine rollout was a total disaster - and what it means for the next few months hbrueck@businessinsider.com (Hilary Brueck)
The US developed coronavirus vaccines in record time last year.
But the process of getting those shots into people s arms is going horrendously slow, just as more Americans are dying from the virus than ever before.
The blame lies with a president who either forgot or didn t care enough to finish off the country s vaccination plan, setting the US on the back foot.
There are promising signs that this vaccine drive is going to accelerate soon.
But the delay has already caused thousands of deaths, and it will be a challenge to come back from.
Fact check: Hospital TikTok dancing aimed at boosting morale
The claim: Health care workers took Spanish influenza pandemic more seriously than health care workers during COVID-19
With more than 20 million confirmed cases in the USA, more than 353,000 deaths and a strain newly emerged from the United Kingdom, coronavirus is no laughing matter. But according to one social media post, health care workers don t seem to be taking the pandemic too seriously.
A Facebook meme shared Dec. 30 by Texas radio show Walton and Johnson juxtaposes the Spanish flu of 1918 against the COVID-19 pandemic. A black-and-white photo of occupied hospital beds manned by solemn doctors and nurses is a sedate contrast to two images of health care workers grinning and dancing during COVID-19. The meme suggests medical professionals are not taking the present pandemic seriously compared with their historical counterparts.