Obama: I will take Covid vaccine if Fauci says it's safe

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Former President Barack Obama said on Wednesday he would gladly take the coronavirus vaccine if top health officials deemed it safe.

The former president said he had full faith in Anthony Fauci, the country’s top infectious disease expert, if he backed the latest vaccines as safe and effective. Obama’s remarks, made on SiriusXM’s “The Joe Madison Show” in an interview set to be released Thursday, come as candidates for vaccines have started showing promising signs of effectiveness. Britain on Wednesday granted emergency authorization for a vaccine developed by Pfizer and BioNTech.

“People like Anthony Fauci, who I know, and I’ve worked with, I trust completely,” Obama said. “So if Anthony Fauci tells me this vaccine is safe, and can vaccinate, you know, immunize you from getting Covid, absolutely I’m going to take it.”

He continued: “I promise you that when it’s been made for people who are less at risk, I will be taking it. I may end up taking it on TV or having it filmed, just so that people know that I trust this science.”

Obama said he was cognizant of suspicion in the African American community toward the rapidly developed vaccines, particularly considering the country’s history of medical malfeasance and abuse. He cited the Tuskegee syphilis study, in which federal medical researchers observed impoverished Black men with syphilis for 40 years without notifying them of their diagnoses and withholding treatment.

But Obama urged people of color to take the vaccine if it is approved and dubbed safe, noting the higher rates of infection and death among Latino, Indigenous and Black Americans.

The global coronavirus pandemic has led to an unprecedented race to develop effective vaccines — processes that generally take years. Pfizer, whose vaccine is slated to go under consideration by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration this month, is already shipping out doses to distribution sites to be available immediately should it be granted authorization.

More than 13 million Americans have been infected by the disease and over 272,000 have died.