WASHINGTON — The head of the agency responsible for authorizing COVID-19 vaccines said Tuesday that it would take the time needed to "get this right," despite increasing pressure from President Donald Trump to speed up the process.
"No one at FDA is sitting on his or her hands. Everyone is working really hard to look at these applications and get this done," Stephen Hahn, the head of the Food and Drug Administration, told ABC in an interview on Instagram Live. "But we absolutely have to do this the right way."
Hahn's comments came not long after he was summoned to the White House by Trump's chief of staff Mark Meadows as the agency weighs whether to allow emergency use of the first vaccines that could begin the long road to defeating the coronavirus in the U.S.
Trump has been livid with the FDA for not moving faster to approve the shots, blaming the fact that a vaccine was not available ahead of the Nov. 3 election in part for his loss. He also has leveled unfounded claims that drug companies deliberately delayed vaccine development to hinder his reelection chances, though there is no evidence to suggest that took place.
As he has refused to accept his loss, Trump also has told close confidants that he believes the vaccine is still being slow-walked in a bid to undermine his efforts to challenge the results. If the vaccine were shipped out sooner, he has argued, it would rally public opinion to his side.
Hahn emerged from the White House meeting with his job intact, but it was a sign of the pressure he is under that the FDA offered guidance that "Dr. Hahn remains FDA Commissioner."
Hahn said the FDA will thoroughly review each vaccine before making it available to the public.
"We will make sure that our scientists take the time they need to make an appropriate decision," Hahn said in a statement provided by the FDA. "It is our job to get this right and make the correct decision regarding vaccine safety and efficacy."