Chattanooga Times Free Press

State reports 2,700 initial vaccinatio­ns

- BY JONATHAN MATTISE

NASHVILLE — State health officials say 2,711 COVID-19 vaccinatio­ns have been administer­ed in the initial days of their availabili­ty in Tennessee, now the worst state in the country for new cases per capita.

The Tennessee Department of Health on Friday unveiled its online vaccinatio­n dashboard, which will be updated on Tuesdays and Fridays.

Tennessee frontline hospital health care workers on Thursday began receiving the Pfizer vaccine. Tennessee estimates it has received more than 67,000 doses, including up to 11,000 extra ones because the vials may contain enough for one or two more doses than expected.

Over the next two weeks, Tennessee expects to receive 115,000 doses of the Moderna vaccine, which do not require ultracold storage that the Pfizer ones need. The state says the Moderna vaccines will be shipped to all 95 Tennessee county health department­s, with smaller hospitals that are not receiving the Pfizer vaccine expected to receive them the week of Dec. 28.

Priority groups for the Moderna doses include frontline hospital health care workers, first responders, long-term care facility residents and staff, home health providers and student health providers, the state said.

The vaccines arrive at Tennessee’s darkest time during the pandemic.

According to researcher­s at Johns Hopkins, there were 1,640 new cases per 100,000 people in Tennessee over the past two weeks, which ranks first in the country for new cases per capita. The seven-day rolling average of daily deaths has risen in Tennessee from 50 on Dec. 4 to 74 on Friday.

The surge has drawn a repeat recommenda­tion from the White House for Tennessee to implement a statewide mask requiremen­t, which Republican Gov. Bill Lee has declined to put in place in favor of letting counties decide whether to require them within their own borders. He has stressed mask-wearing is a matter of personal responsibi­lity. Only a dozen other states lack a statewide mask requiremen­t.

Researcher­s at Vanderbilt Univers i ty, meanwhile, have found higher rates of COVID19 deaths and hospitaliz­ations in the areas that didn’t require masks. Doctors in a Tennessee physicians group that has been calling for the statewide mask requiremen­t for months say their facilities and staffs are now more overwhelme­d by COVID-19 patients than ever during the pandemic. Former U.S. Senate Majority Leader

Bill Frist, a surgeon and Tennessee Republican, has become a prominent voice in the push for a statewide mask mandate.

“Virus levels remain high and continue to increase, with new hospital admissions at all-time high,” the Dec. 13 White House report states. “Face masks must be required in all public settings statewide to reduce transmissi­on across the state.”

The White House offered grim expectatio­ns for those in the virus-riddled state.

“All public health officials must make it clear that if you are over 65 or with significan­t health conditions, you should not enter any indoor public spaces where anyone is unmasked due to the immediate risk to your health; you should have groceries and medication­s delivered,” the report recommends. “If you are under 40, you need to assume you became infected if you gathered beyond your immediate household.”

The state’s new vaccine dashboard plans to include data on vaccinatio­ns reported in total, in the last day and within the last week. It will display the percentage of each county that has been vaccinated. Future versions will also provide data on Tennessean­s who have also received their second doses for full vaccinatio­n.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States