KEY POINTS
  • The U.S. has shipped over half a million doses of antibody treatments from Eli Lilly and Regeneron that have the potential to keep high-risk Covid patients out of hospitals.
  • Top health officials said the drugs are still being underutilized and urged hospitals to prescribe the drugs much more frequently.
  • Despite the difficulties that come with administering the drugs, hospitals should arrange infusion centers to administer the drugs that could help prevent strain on the health-care system, they said.
In this May 2020 photo provided by Eli Lilly, researchers prepare mammalian cells to produce possible COVID-19 antibodies for testing in a laboratory in Indianapolis.

The U.S. has shipped over half a million doses of antibody treatments that have the potential to keep high-risk Covid patients out of hospitals if given early enough in their infection.

This would help already overburdened hospitals avoid additional strain, but the drugs are still being underutilized despite their promising results, Trump administration health officials said Thursday. That's because many patients don't know how to access them, and hospitals aren't prescribing the medications or arranging the infusion sites necessary to administer the drugs, they said.