Ordinary New Yorkers may get vaccines by early April: Fauci
On Monday, Dr. Anthony Fauci painted a grim future for the United States if Americans don't adhere to public health measures during the holidays. "Without substantial mitigation, the middle of January can be a really dark time for us," Fauci said during a news conference held by New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo.
Americans need to keep social distancing until 75% to 80% of the population can get the COVID-19 vaccine, which would provide an umbrella of community-level protection, Fauci explained. "By the time you get to the beginning of April, you’ll start getting people who have no high priority, just the normal man and woman, New Yorker in the street who's well, has no underlying conditions [getting the vaccine]," he added.
As of Monday, New York State's testing positivity rate was 4.7%, according to Cuomo. The governor estimated that more than 70% of infections spreading in the state were connected to small gatherings.
-ABC News' Rachel Katz contributed to this report.