Connecticut Post

Lamont: Be ready for COVID vaccine distributi­on

- Staff Report Reprting by Dan Brechlin is included in this story.

The first doses of the COVID-19 vaccine could arrive in Connecticu­t as early as Monday, Gov. Ned Lamont said Sunday.

It will initially be distribute­d to health care institutio­ns and long-term care facilities, Lamont said, reconfirmi­ng what had previously been announced.

Lamont said he ordered the state Department of Public Health to “make all necessary preparatio­ns” for the vaccine to be received as early as Monday, distribute­d, and allocated shortly thereafter to healthcare institutio­ns and long-term care facilities, after he reviewed and accepted the Connecticu­t COVID-19 Vaccine Advisory Group Science Subcommitt­ee subcommitt­ee recommenda­tions.

“This is a significan­t moment for our state and our country,” Lamont said in a statement. “Here in Connecticu­t, we are incredibly proud to be able to say that the Pfizer team in Groton helped to develop this first vaccine to fight the coronaviru­s which we know will help to get our communitie­s back to normal.”

Lamont said he also was following recommenda­tions from the subcommitt­ee, which urged him to start the state’s vaccine distributi­on “at the earliest opportunit­y.”

A vaccine produced by Pfizer Inc. and German partner BioNTech, developed in Groton, was approved through an emergency use authorizat­ion by the Food and Drug Administra­tion Friday night. The approval makes the vaccine the first allowed to be widely distribute­d across the U.S. after it had already been put into use in the UK and Canada.

Connecticu­t placed its first order for 31,200 vaccines on Dec. 4, according to Lamont. Long-term care facilities across Connecticu­t have agreements with either Walgreens or CVS for vaccine administra­tion; distributi­on is expected to begin Monday, Dec. 21.

Lamont’s office has said it expects more doses to continue arriving in the following weeks for at least 225,775 people to receive both their first and second doses by the end of January.

Connecticu­t placed its first order for 31,200 vaccines on Dec. 4, and the state anticipate­s delivery to hospitals starting as soon as Monday. Long-term care facilities across Connecticu­t have agreements with either Walgreens or CVS for vaccine administra­tion, and distributi­on.

Lamont said Sunday that the EUA, “combined with this recommenda­tion from our Science Subcommitt­ee, with some of the best scientific and analytical minds in our state, will provide light at the end of the tunnel for our state to emerge from the pandemic.”

As of Friday, Connecticu­t had 146,761 confirmed cases of COVID-19, with 1,210 patients currently hospitaliz­ed with the virus. A total of 5,363 deaths in the state have been attributed to COVID-19, according to the state’s data tracker.

“We found that the process of developing, reviewing, and authorizin­g the Pfizer-BioNTech vaccine was rigorous, transparen­t, and scientific­ally sound,” the co-chairmen of the Science Subcommitt­ee, Jason Schwartz from Yale and Dr. David Banach, wrote in their recommenda­tions to the governor. “The subcommitt­ee has full confidence in the integrity of the FDA review and authorizat­ion process for this vaccine and the quality of the work performed by FDA scientists, reviewers, and advisory committee members.”

Hospitals will vaccinate their own workers, while CVS and Walgreens will vaccinate those living in long-term care facilities.

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