Dr. Scott Gottlieb says Americans will be getting together well before Biden’s July 4 target

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Dr. Scott Gottlieb on Friday he thinks many Americans will start holding group gatherings well before President Joe Biden’s target of Independence Day.

In an interview on “Squawk Box,” the former Food and Drug Administration commissioner said he believes the timeline Biden laid out in his primetime address Thursday was too conservative compared with how people will actually behave.

“I think the majority of Americans are going to be getting together long before July,” said Gottlieb, who led the FDA during the Trump administration from 2017 to 2019. He now serves on the board of Pfizer, which makes one of the three Covid vaccines cleared for emergency use in the U.S.

Biden’s speech Thursday night on the pandemic sought to highlight the collective toll Covid has taken over the past year, while also offering two forward-looking public-health targets. The first: Directing states to make all adults eligible for coronavirus vaccines by May 1. The second: A goal for Americans to safely gather in small groups with friends and loved ones to celebrate the Fourth of July.

“I think we should be giving public health advice that is in line with where people are,” Gottlieb said. ”[When] people feel the risk declining because they’ve been vaccinated, because they see infection levels going down in many parts of the country, they’re going to be willing to take more risk because they sense that their vulnerability is declining. And you know what? They’re right.” He predicted, “People are going to be out this summer and they’re going to be out well before July.”

The White House did not immediately request for comment on Gottlieb’s comments.

Earlier this week, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention issued new guidance that said fully vaccinated people can safely gather indoors with other fully vaccinated people — and certain unvaccinated individuals — without masks or social distancing.

The guidance came as states across the U.S. have been lifting pandemic-era restrictions in recent weeks as vaccinations roll out and daily coronavirus infections drop well below their January peak. However, top health officials in the Biden administration have warned that the decline in cases is starting to level off, contending states should be more cautious about removing capacity restrictions on businesses and mask mandates.

Last Friday, Gottlieb said mask mandates should be the last policies states and localities lift after Texas and Mississippi announced the end of their face covering rules.

The U.S. overall is averaging 53,798 new cases per day, over the past seven days, Johns Hopkins University data. That’s down 15% compared with a week ago. New U.S. cases on Thursday totaled 49,356, which was down nearly 84% from the single-day record high on Jan. 2.

A key factor helping to slow the spread of the virus is growing levels of immunity in the U.S. population, Gottlieb said. He estimated around half of the U.S. population has some form of protective immunity for the coronavirus, factoring in both diagnosed and undiagnosed infections along with those who have been vaccinated.

About 64 million Americans have received at least one Covid vaccine dose, equating to roughly 19% of the U.S. population of 330 million people, according to data compiled by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. One in 10 Americans are fully vaccinated.

Pfizer and Moderna’s vaccines, which Americans have been receiving since December, require two shots for full protection against developing Covid. However, studies suggest some immunity is created after the initial dose. Johnson & Johnson’s vaccine, the latest entrant to the U.S. market, is just a single shot.

The U.S. has about 29.3 million confirmed coronavirus cases, according to Johns Hopkins. The true number is higher than that, Gottlieb said, reiterating a position he’s held since the early days of the pandemic. He reasons that not every person who became infected was tested and had their positive result recorded.

“We’re probably diagnosing one in four infections, maybe a little bit better than that right now,” said Gottlieb, who has previously estimated about one-third of Americans may have gotten Covid. “So we’re above 50%” of the population with some form of immunity, he added.

“At that level, you’re not going to get as rapid transfer of the infections. It’s not quite herd immunity, but you’re going to get immunity in the population,” he said.

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