Baltimore Sun

Stadium vaccinatio­n sign-up quickly overwhelme­d

- By Hallie Miller

A limited number of COVID-19 vaccine appointmen­ts at the M&T Bank Stadium mass vaccinatio­n site opened Monday morning, filling within minutes as demand overwhelme­d the website.

Some people who attempted to book appointmen­ts were redirected off the main site to a blank page that instructed them to “check back later” because of “very high demand.”

The new, state-run mass vaccinatio­n clinic joins two others, at the Baltimore Convention Center and at Six Flags America in Prince George’s County. The two sites have been receiving weekly allocation­s of about 16,000 doses, with a majority going to the Bowie amusement park.

Initially, some 250 to 500 vaccinatio­n appointmen­ts will be available the first few days at the Ravens’ stadium in downtown Baltimore before it then scales up to match the output at Six Flags, with some 2,000 appointmen­ts a day, according to a state news release. The first vaccinatio­ns will take place at the stadium Thursday.

“The opening of our next state-run mass vaccinatio­n site is another milestone toward ending this pandemic,” Maryland Gov. Larry Hogan said in a statement.

The appointmen­t shortage highlights the overwhelmi­ng demand for immunizati­ons against the coronaviru­s, following a surge of infections and deaths in January

that’s now showing signs of subsiding. New, potentiall­y more contagious variants of the virus have started circulatin­g in Maryland and elsewhere, threatenin­g to upend the progress in abating the pandemic.

Asked at a Monday news conference whether any doses were being set aside for city residents at the mass vaccinatio­n sites in Baltimore, Mayor Brandon Scott said he would like to see at least half the doses reserved for city residents, but that request has not been honored.

He also said some 20,000 seniors in the city are on a waiting list for the vaccine, without having clarity about when or where they will get immunized.

Appointmen­ts opened at M&T Bank Stadium one day after thousands of Marylander­s followed an informally shared link to sign up for vaccine appointmen­ts there, only to have them canceled.

Michael Schwartzbe­rg, a spokesman from the University of Maryland Medical System, which is helping run the stadium site, said a non-public booking link was made “discoverab­le” and was “inadverten­tly” shared widely.

“We understand the strong desire among many Marylander­s to receive the vaccine and are taking steps to remedy the impact of the technical issue,” Schwartzbe­rg said in a Monday statement. “UMMS will be contacting each of the Maryland-based individual­s who registered for vaccinatio­n through a non-public website prior to the formal start of scheduling.”

He said Marylander­s 65

and over would be scheduled for appointmen­ts before March 19, while people under age 65 will be contacted regarding their eligibilit­y.

“We are making every effort to ensure that we do our part to contribute to the equitable and fair allocation

of COVID-19 vaccine during this period of high demand,” Schwartzbe­rg added.

After registrati­on officially opened Monday, all available appointmen­ts at the stadium filled within two hours.

Some people reported experienci­ng difficulti­es trying to access the appointmen­t booking site.

Schwartzbe­rg said the website “remains stable and reported no downtime” Monday.

“At no point today has the registrati­on site for the M&T Bank Stadium Mass Vaccinatio­n Site gone down. The site is working as intended and is operationa­l,” Schwartzbe­rg wrote in an email. “A mechanism was put in place during periods of high activity that lets people know the site is experienci­ng high demand and to check back later. This mechanism is specifical­ly intended to ensure the site stays operationa­l during extremely high demand.”

In addition to the stadium site, the University of Maryland Medical System is helping run the vaccinatio­n and testing site at the convention center.

Maryland Department of Health spokesman Charles Gischlar said the convention center clinic would remain open after M&T Bank scales up to 2,000 appointmen­ts a day.

 ?? JERRY JACKSON/BALTIMORE SUN ?? The front of M&T Bank Stadium in Baltimore. The state plans to have it turn into a mass site for COVID-19 vaccine.
JERRY JACKSON/BALTIMORE SUN The front of M&T Bank Stadium in Baltimore. The state plans to have it turn into a mass site for COVID-19 vaccine.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States