Albuquerque Journal

When can I get a vaccine?

Answering questions about NM’s vaccinatio­n rollout

- BY DAN MCKAY

SANTA FE — New Mexico and the rest of the United States are in the early stages of a mass vaccinatio­n effort to crush the COVID-19 pandemic. The vaccines now on the market are proving to be incredibly effective at preventing severe cases of the virus, but the national vaccine rollout has been complicate­d by logistical challenges as states wrestle with how to get the vaccines out quickly, while also targeting residents most at risk.

Many New Mexicans are contacting the Journal with questions ranging from the very general to the very specific.

Here’s a look at some questions intended to help readers better understand how New Mexico is pursuing vaccinatio­n.

Q. Is New Mexico using a phased approach to vaccine distributi­on?

A. Yes. There are four main phases (1A, 1B, 1C and 2), but with some subphases that outline the priorities even more specifical­ly. (For more informatio­n on the main phases, see accompanyi­ng graphic.)

Exceptions are permitted to ensure no vaccine goes to waste.

New Mexico is now at the beginning of Phase 1B — a massive group expected to cover at least one-quarter of the state’s population.

Q. How can I make sure I get a vaccine as soon as I’m eligible?

A. New Mexico is using a website to manage the distributi­on. Sign up at cvvaccine.nmhealth.org to get in line.

People who lack internet service or need help can call 1-855600-3453, press option 0 for vaccine questions, and then option 4 for tech support. (The call center has been overwhelme­d at times and the state is boosting the number of calls it can field. More details are below.)

Q. I signed up early last week but have not been contacted. Do those who signed up early get vaccinated earlier?

A. Your place in the line for a vaccine isn’t determined by when or how you sign up. It is randomized. That means that once you’re registered, you have the same chance as anyone else in your subgroup to be notified of an appointmen­t when it’s the group’s turn.

It doesn’t hurt to sign up even before the state has moved to your subgroup — because providers may pull from the next group if they have extra appointmen­ts available to ensure no vaccines are wasted.

Q. Now that New Mexico has moved into vaccinatin­g people in Phase 1B, how are people prioritize­d within that group? Is it first come, first served?

A. Most vaccinatio­n phases have subgroups. For instance, Phase 1B covers adults 75 and older; people 16 and older with medical conditions that increase their COVID-19 risk; certain front-line employees who cannot work remotely; and some vulnerable population­s in group settings, such as inmates — all in that order.

The state is just at the beginning of Phase 1B, meaning adults 75 and older are now the priority.

But within the subgroup, the order in which you’re called for vaccinatio­n is random. In other words, everyone who’s 75 or older and preregiste­red for the vaccine has the same chance of being notified of an appointmen­t. A person who is, say, 95 isn’t ahead of someone who is 85.

Q. How do vaccine providers verify or vet the responses?

A. People who qualify as frontline essential workers will be required to verify their employment and must sign a statement affirming that they’ve provided correct informatio­n.

People who qualify because of a medical condition should be prepared to verify the condition through a provider’s note, hospital documents, prescripti­on bottle, prescripti­on or other means.

Verificati­on should be brought with you to the vaccine appointmen­t.

Q. Why do some people who register receive an acknowledg­ment and code immediatel­y, while others — in the same household and with the same conditions — receive no acknowledg­ment or code? Yet when they try to register again, they are told they are already registered. Should they worry?

A. The website has had some hiccups as New Mexico built it out and added capabiliti­es.

Anyone who believes they’ve registered but didn’t receive a profile code or ID may call 1-855600-3453 and press option 0 for vaccine questions, then option 4 for tech support. Also, some have received the code through text or email several days after they registered.

Q. Why is it so hard to get through to the call center? When will it be improved?

A. Gov. Michelle Lujan Grisham last week acknowledg­ed that the call center was overwhelme­d and said her administra­tion takes responsibi­lity. The state, she said, had underestim­ated the number of people who would call.

The center started with six call-takers and was up to 20 by Friday. The goal is to have 41 this week.

The call line offers the option of leaving a message and it is returning calls. One person who left a message Monday received a call back within three hours.

Q. Does the state Department of Health have daily numbers on how many vaccines it has, and how many first and second doses have been administer­ed in New Mexico?

A. New Mexico has launched a public vaccine dashboard — cvvaccine.nmhealth.org/publicdash­board.html — with plans to update it daily Monday through Friday.

The dashboard offered this breakdown Monday:

■ 137,531 doses have been administer­ed.

■ 44,927 were administer­ed in the past seven days.

■ The state has received 175,750 doses.

The vast majority of doses administer­ed are first doses. Both vaccines on the market now require two doses, spaced three or four weeks apart.

The state intends to disclose how many people have received one dose vs. two as the booster shots become more common.

Q. Does the state have any estimate of how many people are eligible in each vaccine group? How quickly will New Mexico move through each group?

A. About 120,000 New Mexicans are 75 and older, the subgroup now prioritize­d for vaccinatio­n. The state vaccinatio­n plan released Jan. 8 said it may take “several weeks” for eligible seniors to receive a vaccine.

Almost one-quarter of the state population — about 500,000 people — may qualify under the next priority subgroup, which is anyone 16 or older with certain chronic conditions that increase their risk of COVID-19 complicati­ons.

Determinin­g how quickly the state will vaccinate each group is difficult. For one thing, some people in a certain phase may initially opt against signing up for vaccinatio­n, but they will move to the front of the line if they register later.

Medical first responders, for example, were covered under Phase 1A. But if they haven’t already been vaccinated, they can still sign up while the state is in Phase 1B.

The subgroups themselves also overlap. Some of the frontline workers who cannot work remotely — a teacher, say — will be eligible to be vaccinated before the state gets to their occupation if they have a chronic medical condition.

The supply of vaccine delivered by the federal government and the approval of other vaccine manufactur­ers will also influence the pace of vaccinatio­ns.

Broadly speaking, Lujan Grisham said she hopes to move through all the Phase 1 groups and begin offering vaccines to the general public — Phase 2 — by early summer.

The state has averaged about 6,400 doses a day over the past week, but state officials have expressed optimism that the pace will grow as new vaccinatio­n sites come online and doses arrive from the federal government.

To expand the vaccine rollout, New Mexico will begin using the Pit at the University of New Mexico this week as a shot clinic.

Q. Why are people who aren’t a priority receiving the vaccine already?

A. The vaccines are stored at low temperatur­es, and vaccine providers are directed not to waste any as they thaw the supplies.

Vaccine providers can then pull from the next priority group if they have more appointmen­ts available than people who sign up for the shots. Some adults over 75, for example, were offered appointmen­ts even when the state was in Phase 1A, which focused on hospital personnel and first responders.

The state also acknowledg­ed that some New Mexicans jumped the line when people shared the access codes necessary to book an appointmen­t. State officials say they’ve made technical adjustment­s to keep that from happening again.

Q. How does New Mexico compare with other states?

A. States are developing their own strategies for vaccine distributi­on. New Mexico’s phased approach generally matches recommenda­tions from the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

New Mexico ranked No. 8 among states Monday for doses administer­ed per capita, according to the CDC vaccine data tracker. The ranking fluctuates daily, but New Mexico has generally been among the top 15 states.

Q. Why does the national CDC vaccine data tracker have different numbers for New Mexico than reported by the state?

A. Health officials say there’s a lag in reporting to the federal government.

Some vaccine distributi­on in New Mexico is also being handled outside the state’s control. Most Native American communitie­s, for example, are receiving doses from the federal government.

Q. Why isn’t New Mexico making adults 65 and older a priority?

A. Federal recommenda­tions initially suggested targeting people 75 and older, but a more recent recommenda­tion suggested opening up vaccinatio­ns to those 65 and over.

The state Department of Health is reviewing the new recommenda­tion to determine whether to alter its priorities to include adults 65 and older.

Q. Where can New Mexicans view state informatio­n themselves?

A. Visit cv.nmhealth.org/ covid-vaccine for general informatio­n on the phases. To see the state’s most detailed plan, scroll down and click on “learn more” next to the box that says “Current Phase: 1B.”

 ?? JIM THOMPSON/JOURNAL ?? People enter Tingley Coliseum, a Department of Health vaccinatio­n site, on Jan. 6. Health care workers estimated they averaged just under 300 shots an hour for the 945 people scheduled to receive shots that day.
JIM THOMPSON/JOURNAL People enter Tingley Coliseum, a Department of Health vaccinatio­n site, on Jan. 6. Health care workers estimated they averaged just under 300 shots an hour for the 945 people scheduled to receive shots that day.
 ?? JIM THOMPSON/JOURNAL ?? Jose Villegas, an Army National Guard medic, administer­s a vaccine to Chris Daskalos at a drive-up distributi­on site.
JIM THOMPSON/JOURNAL Jose Villegas, an Army National Guard medic, administer­s a vaccine to Chris Daskalos at a drive-up distributi­on site.
 ?? EDDIE MOORE/JOURNAL ?? Christus St. Vincent registered nurse Jeremy Willard prepares a dose of the Pfizer COVID-19 vaccine last month.
EDDIE MOORE/JOURNAL Christus St. Vincent registered nurse Jeremy Willard prepares a dose of the Pfizer COVID-19 vaccine last month.
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 ?? EDDIE MOORE/JOURNAL ?? Vials containing five doses each of the Pfizer COVID-19 vaccine fresh out of a freezer.
EDDIE MOORE/JOURNAL Vials containing five doses each of the Pfizer COVID-19 vaccine fresh out of a freezer.
 ??  ?? The state has launched a public vaccine dashboard — cvvaccine. nmhealth.org/public-dashboard.html. It will be updated Monday through Friday.
The state has launched a public vaccine dashboard — cvvaccine. nmhealth.org/public-dashboard.html. It will be updated Monday through Friday.

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