Chicago Sun-Times

Lightfoot: Not enough vaccine

Mayor says if feds don’t speed up, it could take nearly a year and a half to vaccinate entire city

- BY BRETT CHASE, STAFF REPORTER bchase@suntimes.com | @brettchase Brett Chase’s reporting on the environmen­t and public health is made possible by a grant from The Chicago Community Trust.

Mayor Lori Lightfoot called on President- elect Joe Biden to deliver significan­tly more COVID-19 vaccines to Chicago and other cities or face a drawn- out pandemic that will last well into 2022.

Lightfoot, at a media event showcasing the first five Chicago health care workers receiving their second doses of vaccine, said that the rate of distributi­on to cities is way too slow and added that it will take Chicago almost a year and a half to vaccinate all the city’s residents unless things speed up.

“We do not have enough vaccine,” Lightfoot said. “If you want to have us bend this curve and give people confidence that they can resume their normal lives, there must be an exponentia­l increase in the amount of vaccine that is available to cities and towns all over this country.”

Lightfoot directed her criticism at President Donald Trump for falling well short of a promised 20 million doses to be delivered nationally by the end of 2020 but called upon his administra­tion and Biden to fix the problem.

“Whatever problems there were before, we cannot solve them, but we have an obligation to solve them going forward and solve them we must,” Lightfoot said. “The federal government absolutely, 100% must step up.”

The city has distribute­d 95% of the vaccines it has received so far, Lightfoot said. There have been more than 36,500 shots administer­ed through Monday, according to city data.

Dr. Allison Arwady, the city’s top health official, said the city expects the arrival this week of nearly 33,000 more doses of the two vaccines approved for emergency use, made by Pfizer and Moderna. She urged those who received shots to get their second doses because only after the second shot can the vaccines be more than 90% effective.

“There hasn’t been as much discussion about the second dose,” Arwady said.

Citing clinical research, Arwady said only after the second doses of the Pfizer vaccine (administer­ed three weeks after the first dose) or the Moderna vaccine (given four weeks after the first dose) that near complete protection against the virus can be assured.

Saying there have been more than 4.5 million people nationally receiving a COVID vaccine, the shots have shown to be safe and effective so far, Arwady said.

At Norwegian American Hospital in Humboldt Park on Tuesday,

the first five Chicagoans to receive a COVID vaccine three weeks ago were given their second dose. The five health care workers are: Dr. Marina Del Rios, director of Social Emergency Medicine at University of Illinois Health; Elizabeth Zimnie, an emergency room nurse at Norwegian; Barbara Shields Johnson, a critical care nurse at The Loretto Hospital; Jermilla Hill, a patient care technician at Loretto; and Mark Hooks, an emergency room nurse at Loretto.

The Norwegian hospital location was selected to highlight the disproport­ionate number of COVID cases on the West Side.

 ?? ASHLEE REZIN GARCIA/SUN-TIMES ?? Dr. Marina Del Rios of University of Illinois Health, the first person to get a COVID-19 vaccine in Chicago, receives her second and final dose at Norwegian American Hospital on Tuesday.
ASHLEE REZIN GARCIA/SUN-TIMES Dr. Marina Del Rios of University of Illinois Health, the first person to get a COVID-19 vaccine in Chicago, receives her second and final dose at Norwegian American Hospital on Tuesday.

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