The Peterborough Examiner

Governors scramble to speed up vaccine effort

About 5.3 million Americans have gotten their first shot out of 17 million doses that have been distribute­d

- MICHELLE R. SMITH

New York’s governor threatened to fine hospitals if they don’t use their allotment of COVID-19 vaccine fast enough. His South Carolina counterpar­t warned health-care workers they have until Jan. 15 to get a shot or move to the back of the line. California’s governor wants to use dentists to vaccinate people.

With frustratio­n rising over the sluggish rollout of the vaccine, state leaders and other politician­s around the U.S. are turning up the pressure, improvisin­g and seeking to bend the rules to get shots in arms more quickly.

Meanwhile, U.S. Health and Human Services Secretary Alex Azar said Wednesday that the government will allow more drugstores to start giving vaccinatio­ns to speed delivery. If health workers aren’t lining up fast enough, he said, it is OK to expand eligibilit­y to lower-priority groups.

“We need to not be overly prescripti­ve in that, especially as we see governors who are leaving vaccines sitting in freezers rather than getting it out into people’s arms,” he said.

As of Wednesday, more than three weeks into the U.S. vaccinatio­n campaign, 5.3 million people had gotten their first shot out of 17 million doses distribute­d, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. While that is believed to an undercount because of a lag in reporting, health officials are still well behind where they wanted to be.

Across much of the U.S., health-care workers and nursing home residents are being given priority for the initial, limited supplies of the vaccine at this stage, but pressure is building to let other groups step up, and some states have given the OK for the elderly to start receiving shots.

The slow rollout has been blamed on a multitude of problems, including a lack of funding and direction from Washington, mismatches between supply and demand, a patchwork of approaches by state and local government­s, distrust of the vaccine, and disarray created by the holidays.

The U.S. has an estimated 21 million health-care workers and three million residents of nursing homes and other longterm-care centres. The CDC reported that about 512,000 people in such centres have been vaccinated through a partnershi­p between the government and the drugstore chains.

Azar announced that in addition to the nursing home program, pharmacies from 19 chains will be allowed to help now with dispensing shots to ease pressure on hospitals, which have been the main vaccine providers so far. More than 40,000 drugstores will be eventually be involved, he said. The pharmacies will still have to follow state guidelines for who gets in line first.

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