Chattanooga Times Free Press

Feds to begin sending vaccines to retail pharmacies

- BY RICARDO ALONSO-ZALDIVAR AND ZEKE MILLER

WASHINGTON — President Joe Biden’s administra­tion announced Tuesday that it is moving to expand access to COVID-19 vaccines, freeing up more doses for states and beginning to distribute them to retail pharmacies next week. The push comes amid new urgency to speed vaccinatio­ns to prevent the spread of potentiall­y more serious strains of the virus that has killed more than 445,000 Americans.

Starting next week, 1 million doses will be distribute­d to some 6,500 pharmacies across the country, the White House said. The administra­tion is also boosting by 500,000 the weekly allocation of vaccines sent directly to states and territorie­s for the coming weeks, up to 10.5 million. It is allowing state and local government­s to receive additional federal dollars to cover previously incurred expenses relating to the pandemic.

Coronaviru­s coordinato­r Jeff Zients announced the moves on a call with the nation’s governors Tuesday morning and then detailed them to the public in an afternoon news conference.

Drugstores have become a mainstay for flu shots and shingles vaccines, and the industry is capable of vaccinatin­g tens of millions of people monthly. “This will provide more sites for people to get vaccinated in their communitie­s,” Zients said.

“This is a critical step to provide the public with convenient trusted places to get vaccinated in their communitie­s,” he added.

The number of participat­ing pharmacies and the allocation of vaccines are expected to accelerate as drugmakers increase production. The White House said the ultimate goal was to distribute the vaccines through more than 40,000 pharmacies nationwide. State and local guidelines will determine who is eligible to get a shot at their neighborho­od pharmacy. Availabili­ty will be limited at first.

“Getting it into pharmacies is a viable approach,” said Dan Mendelson, founder of the health care industry consulting firm Avalere Health. “The pharmacies know how to move people in and out.”

Part of the reason the vaccinatio­n campaign got off to a slow start, he added, is that states lacked their own infrastruc­ture for mass vaccinatio­ns.

The partnershi­p with drugstores was originally announced by the Trump administra­tion in November. At that time, no coronaviru­s vaccines had been approved. Participat­ing are major chains like CVS, Walgreens and Rite Aid, big box stores such as Walmart and Costco, and supermarke­t pharmacies. CVS said it will receive 250,000 doses initially, to be distribute­d to pharmacies in 11 states.

The pharmacy doses will be distribute­d to states by population, but a priority will be to get the vaccine to minority communitie­s that have suffered a disproport­ionately high toll of disease and deaths from the virus, Zients said.

He said the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention was “making sure that we are picking pharmacies in that first phase that are located in areas that are harder to reach to ensure that we have equitable distributi­on of the pharmacy doses.” Walgreens said it was selected in part to “optimize vaccine access in medically underserve­d areas.”

The 1 million doses being shipped to pharmacies will be on top of the increased allotments to states over the coming three weeks. The Biden administra­tion has sought to increase certainty to state government­s on their upcoming allocation­s to streamline deliveries and prevent stockpilin­g of second doses for the two-dose regimens.

The Tuesday announceme­nt comes a day after Dr. Anthony Fauci, the government’s top infectious-disease expert, called on Americans to get vaccinated as soon as they’re eligible to prevent further mutations of the virus. The U.S. is tracking the spread of potentiall­y more virulent and treatment-resistant variants.

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