A version of this story appeared in the April 26 edition of CNN's Coronavirus: Fact vs. Fiction newsletter. Sign up here to receive the need-to-know headlines every weekday.
The country's brutal second wave of the pandemic, which began in March, has overrun hospitals and forced authorities to hold mass cremations at a scale not seen in the country since the pandemic began. For the past two weeks, medical facilities have been running out of oxygen and intensive care beds, with patients left to die at home or outside hospitals.
Last week, the United States was accused of vaccine nationalism by India's biggest broadsheets after a State Department spokesperson reasoned that the US' temporary export ban on vaccine materials was needed because it was "not only in our interest to see Americans vaccinated; it's in the interests of the rest of the world to see Americans vaccinated."
The United States changed its tune Sunday when White House and senior officials said they will send ventilators, PPE, rapid diagnostic test kits and therapeutics to India, Jessie Yeung reports. They will also send materials for making vaccines.
"Just as India sent assistance to the United States as our hospitals were strained early in the pandemic, the United States is determined to help India in its time of need," President Joe Biden said in a Sunday tweet.
But his administration has yet to make a decision on whether to share the estimated 40 million AstraZeneca vaccine doses it has stockpiled. Those shots have gone unused, with the exception of a few million sent to Canada and Mexico, because AstraZeneca has not been granted emergency use authorization by the US Food and Drug Administration.
Dr. Anthony Fauci, director of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, said Sunday that sending excess vaccines to India was "on the table," though he offered no timetable or plan for such a move.
YOU ASKED. WE ANSWERED.
Q. What can vaccinated people safely do in the US?
A: "In the next few days very likely, the (Centers for Disease Control and Prevention) will be coming out with updating their guidelines of what people who are vaccinated can do and even some who are not vaccinated," Fauci told CNN.
There will be more guidelines coming out "sooner or later" on things like travel, Fauci said, but he highlighted that right now, the thing that's on top of people's minds is what they can do outdoors.
Outdoor activities carry a much lower Covid-19 risk, he said, and for Americans who are fully vaccinated, that risk level drops even further. And with warmer weather now here, Fauci said he expects guidance on outdoor activities to be released soon.
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WHAT'S IMPORTANT TODAY
Americans will be able to travel to Europe in summer, but some are missing second vaccines
Americans who have been fully vaccinated against Covid-19 will be able to visit the European Union this summer, Ursula von der Leyen, president of the European Commission, said in an interview with The New York Times on Sunday. She did not offer a timeline on when exactly tourist travel might open up or how it would occur.
This comes as CDC data shows about 8% of Americans have missed their second dose of the coronavirus vaccine. But this is not worrying health officials. Fauci told CNN he was not surprised some people are missing the second dose, saying it happens frequently with multi-dose vaccines. "Obviously whenever you have a two-dose vaccine, you're going to see people who for one reason or other -- convenience, forgetting, a number of other things -- just don't show up for the second vaccine," Fauci said.
Scores of people, including Covid-19 patients, killed in massive Baghdad hospital fire
At least 82 people died in a huge hospital fire Saturday night in Iraq's capital city of Baghdad, and at least 28 of the victims were being treated in Covid-19 wards. Another 110 people were injured in the blaze at Ibn al-Khatib Hospital, which is believed to have started after oxygen tanks exploded.
Social media videos showed a chaotic scene as firefighters scrambled to put out the blaze and workers tried to evacuate patients. Health workers and civil defense teams were ultimately able to save at least 200 people, including patients.
Streaming services dominates this year's pandemic-defined Oscars
"Nomadland," director ChloƩ Zhao's movie about nomads in America, earned best picture at a 93rd Academy Awards defined by the pandemic. Movies that premiered on streaming services ruled the ceremony -- an in-person event held under Covid protocols -- Brian Lowry writes.
In a year where Covid-19 shuttered theaters and turned movie-goers into couch potatoes, 16 of the 23 statuettes went to projects that at the very least simultaneously premiered on streaming services. Due to the pandemic, this year's Oscars extended the awards calendar by two months and made what was described as a one-time-only exception allowing movies that premiered via streaming and weren't released theatrically to compete.
ON OUR RADAR
- As Covid-19 shots have become more widely available across the United States, the Navajo Nation has reported more than half of its adult members have been inoculated, outpacing the vaccination rate for the rest of the US.
- The long-delayed travel bubble between Hong Kong and Singapore is set to begin on May 26. The scheme will allow visitors to travel between the two cities on dedicated flights without the need for quarantine.
- US states and cities are racing to use the billions in federal relief aid approved by Congress to fight the growing crisis of homelessness -- but the approaching end of some pandemic benefits threatens to make the problem worse.
- The Biden administration is attempting to tackle vaccine hesitancy, particularly among conservative and rural voters in the Southeast and Mountain West.
TODAY'S TOP TIP
Companies want to reward Americans who've been vaccinated with special offers after getting their shots.
CNN Business put together a list of companies, which includes Budweiser and Krispy Kreme, that are providing freebies when you show proof of vaccination. Click here for the list.
TODAY'S PODCAST
"I wanted something that scientists would look at and say, you know, that could happen, and those properties are totally believable." -- Lawrence Wright, New Yorker writer and author of "The End of October"
Pandemics and apocalyptic diseases have long fascinated both writers and readers, but will we want to read about living through Covid-19? CNN Chief Medical Correspondent Dr. Sanjay Gupta hears from writers and industry experts about the past and future of pandemics in fiction. Listen now.
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