Call & Times

Make seniors a priority in getting vaccines

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Last month, a statement the Rhode Island Department of Health RIDOH announced recommenda­tions from the Rhode Island CO9ID-19 9accine Subcommitt­ee for hospitals that vaccinatio­ns would begin for frontline hospital workers against CO9ID-19. This recommenda­tion was made at an emergency meeting of the Subcommitt­ee. RIDOH has accepted this recommenda­tion and has communicat­ed to hospitals that they may begin vaccinatin­g these workers, as soon as vaccine arrives.

Two doses will be needed for someone to be fully immunized. Second doses will start arriving in Rhode Island in roughly three weeks. Rhode Island expects to receive approximat­ely 10,000 doses of Pfizer vaccine the first week it is available, and approximat­ely 19,000 doses of Moderna vaccine the first week it is available. 9accine will come to Rhode Island in weekly allotments over the coming months, says RIDOH.

Epidemiolo­gists, primary care providers, pharmacist­s, pediatrici­ans, long-term care advocates, ethicists, nonprofit leaders, school leaders, faith leaders serve on Rhode Island’s CO9ID-19 9accine Subcommitt­ee. This group is responsibl­e for performing an independen­t review of the process for evaluating the safety and efficacy of the vaccine. The Subcommitt­ee is advising RIDOH on how to prioritize distributi­on of the vaccine to ensure that it is done eTuitably, and in a way that best protects the State as a whole.

At press time, the U.S. Food and Drug Administra­tion FDA has granted an Emergency Use Authorizat­ion for a CO9ID-19 vaccine developed by Pfizer, and a vaccine made Moderna.

Making COVID-19 Vaccine Available Throughout the Ocean

State

“After a rigorous scientific review, we know that CO9ID-19 vaccine is safe. We also know that it is one of the most effective vaccines ever developed, announced Director of Health Nicole Alexander-Scott, MD, MPH in the Dec. 1 statement. “In the coming weeks and months, as vaccine becomes more available, getting vaccinated will be one of the most powerful things you can do to keep yourself and the people you love safe from CO9ID-19. We are going to work to ensure that every person in every community in Rhode Island has access to the vaccine, especially those communitie­s hardest hit by this virus, she said.

Added, Philip Chan, MD, MS, Consultant Medical Director for RIDOH’s Division of Preparedne­ss, Response, Infectious Disease, and Emergency Medical Services, “We have never had a vaccine that has been or will be more closely monitored than the CO9ID-19 vaccine.

“Teams of scientists at the national level have been scrutinizi­ng thousands of pages of technical data for weeks, focusing on vaccine effectiven­ess, safety, and the manufactur­ing process, and our own local review has happened here in Rhode Island. I absolutely plan on getting vaccinated when it is my turn., said Chan.

According to RIDOH, the national vaccine trials for the CO9ID-19 vaccine involved tens of thousands of people to make sure they meet safety standards and people of different ages, races, and ethnicitie­s. There were no serious safety concerns. When vaccinated against CO9ID-19, people do sometimes develop post-vaccinatio­n symptoms such as soreness at the spot of the shot and headaches. This is normal, healthy, and expected. It means your immune system is working to develop protection. Several systems are in place to do ongoing safety monitoring of the vaccine.

As of -anuary , the last update on RIDOH’s CO9ID-19 Data Tracker, out of the 1,5 1 does administer­ed, 9, have been vaccinated with their first of two doses, only 1, 9 people were fully vaccinated with two doses.

Don’t look for the roll out of CO9ID-19 to take days or weeks, it will take months to complete, warns RIDOH officials. Phase 1 of the vaccinatio­n program is expected to run through late March. At press time, the state is currently working its way through the top three tiers of this phase, including hospital staff, healthcare workers, EMS personnel, home health and hospice workers, nursing home staff and residents, highrisk incarcerat­ed persons, first responders, school nurses, and even hard-hit communitie­s.

Finally, those in the final two tiers of Phase 1 to be vaccinated include outpatient providers Dentists, primary care , Dialysis Center workers and death care profession­als, expected to begin -an. 5, and adults over 5 years of age, expected to start by February.

Phase is expected to kick-in by late March. A number of factors are being considered to target the distributi­on of CO9ID-19 vaccinatio­ns a person’s age, high-risk conditions, occupation and geography.

Make Older Rhode Islanders a Priority in Receiving Vaccines

AARP Rhode Island, representi­ng 1 ,000 older Rhode Islanders, calls for overnor ina Raimondo to make the state’s seniors a priority in its timeline for on distributi­ng CO9ID-19 vaccines. The -an. correspond­ence, cosigned by .athleen Connell, State Director of AARP Rhode Island and Phil arlengo, the group’s State President, called on Raimondo “to increase CO9ID vaccinatio­n transparen­cy, as it relates to older Rhode Islanders.

AARP Rhode Island asked the overnor to include the numbers of Rhode Islanders vaccinated by age and other criteria on a daily weekly basis on RIDOH’s CO9ID-19 Data Tracker. Specially, the largest state-wide advocacy group called for the state’s website to include the numbers and percentage­s of older Rhode Islanders by race and ethnicity, that have been vaccinated the number of Rhode Islanders vaccinated and their age demographi­cs on a daily weekly basis a clear and easy-to-understand schedule of vaccine administra­tion for all population­s and the process by which individual­s may seek and obtain a vaccine the numbers and percentage­s of long-term care residents, by facility, that have received their first and second doses of vaccines the numbers and percentage­s of long-term care staff, by facility, that have received their first and second doses of vaccines.

While acknowledg­ing the many challenges the state officials must tackle in determinin­g how to eTuitably, safely and effectivel­y distribute CO9ID-19 vaccines, Connell and arlengo call for Rhode Islanders age 50 and older to be made a priority in receiving a vaccine.

“The data clearly show that the older people are, the higher risk they face if they contract CO9ID-19. iven that older individual­s are at a greater risk of death from CO9ID-19, we strongly urge you to ensure that Rhode Islanders age 50 and older are prioritize­d to receive a vaccine. These individual­s must be given priority access to vaccines, in addition to those individual­s receiving care in nursing homes and other long-term care facilities, say Connell and arlengo.

“For years, the long-term care system has been shifting away from institutio­nal care in nursing homes to home and community-based settings HC S . Here in Rhode Island, a significan­t percentage of long-term services and supports are provided in the home or settings such as assisted living facilities, residentia­l care facilities, veterans homes, and in individual­s’ own homes, says Connell and arlengo, stressing that this why the state should prioritize seniors, especially those with underlying conditions, receiving care in these additional settings and the staff providing care, to receive a CO9ID-19 vaccine.

Finally, AARP Rhode Island’s correspond­ence urges the overnor to ensure that all providers are fully complying with establishe­d state procedures for vaccine distributi­on and prioritiza­tion. “We urge you to investigat­e and take swift action against anyone who attempts to commit fraud, including by inappropri­ately selling the vaccine or intentiona­lly providing vaccines to those who do not meet Tualifying criteria in an attempt to circumvent the distributi­on process.

From AARP’s National

“We urge public health officials at the state and local level, as they decide on vaccine allocation­s, to rely on the evidence and make plans backed by science. As production is ramping up, AARP is advocating hard to ensure every older American who wants to get the vaccine can get it. It’s also vital that distributi­on plans for authorized vaccines are smoothly implemente­d. There’s no time to waste it’s time for full-scale mobilizati­on, and any delays or early bottleneck­s in distributi­on systems need to be addressed urgently, says AARP Executive 9ice President and Chief Advocacy Engagement Officer Nancy A. LeaMond in a Dec. statement.

Herb Weiss, LRI’12, is a Pawtucket writer covering aging, health care and medical issues. To purchase Taking Charge: Collected Stories on Aging Boldly, a collection of 79 of his weekly commentari­es, go to herbweiss.com.

 ?? SENIOR BEAT ?? HERB WEISS
SENIOR BEAT HERB WEISS

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