Daily Democrat (Woodland)

THE FIRST SHOTS

Frontline health care workers receive historic COVID- 19 vaccine

- Democrat staff

SACRAMENTO » UC Davis Health has begun inoculatin­g its frontline health care workers against COVID- 19.

Eva Teniola, a clinical nurse in the emergency department, was the first person at the UC Davis Medical Center to receive the historic vaccine produced by Pfizer and BioNTech.

“See, we did it!” she exclaimed, throwing her arms wide with joy after her injection, as other employees broke out into applause around her. The 47- year- old said she signed up the moment she learned the vaccine was available. “I’d rather get the vaccine before COVID gets me,” she explained. When others in the room called her a hero, she said “The vaccine is the real hero!”

A total of 4,875 vaccine doses arrived at the medical center loading dock shortly after 7 Tuesday morning and the first shots were administer­ed about three hours later, according to Edwin Garcia of UC Davis health. The vaccine requires

two doses, 21 days apart.

The vaccine was packed in dry ice and shipped from a Pfizer distributi­on center after the U. S. Food and Drug Administra­tion ( FDA) approved it for emergency use on Friday night. The vials will be stored in a subzero freezer. They’ll need to be thawed and mixed with saline for use.

“This is just like a lifeline,” said 65- year- old Shashi Kant, a 28- year custodian who works in the ICU and the emergency department. For him, it was a personal and emotional decision. His 36- year- old daughter died three months ago from COVID19.

“I’m protecting myself and the patients,” he said. Of the vaccine, he noted, “the whole world prayed for it.”

Tuesday marked the beginning of a major effort to inoculate UC Davis Health employees as quickly as possible. Dozens received their first dose on Tuesday.

Emergency department employees are the first group to be inoculated. They include staff

who clean rooms, food service workers, reception staff who greet patients and those who provide direct patient care such as doctors, nurses and respirator­y therapists.

UC Davis Health developed priority tiers to ensure the vaccine is distribute­d equitably among employees who wish to be inoculated. They’re based on

the risk of COVID- 19 infection while on the job. The health system expects to inoculate about 400 employees a day, and eventually, as many as 1,000 as other vaccines become available.

“This is truly the beginning of the end of the war on the pandemic, said David Lubarsky, CEO of the health system.

“And now we have the tools to win this war and to save lives. We are ready to lead the way out of the pandemic,” he said.

UC Davis Health is among a group of hospitals and public health agencies in California receiving this first allotment. All were selected by the California Department of Public Health ( CDPH) for their storage capability, highest- risk health care population and ability to distribute vaccine in the community when it becomes widely available.

As vaccines from other manufactur­ers arrive, UC Davis Medical Center will continue to inoculate employees based on the tier system and risk level. The CDPH estimates that vaccinatio­n for the general public could begin in the Spring.

The vaccine contains genetic material — messenger RNA — that directs the body to create antibodies to the virus, providing protection if a person is exposed to the coronaviru­s the future.

UC Davis Health has ample storage for this first allotment, according to Garcia. With additional freezers expected to be delivered in the coming weeks, UC Davis Health could potentiall­y store nearly half- a- million vaccines at a time.

At the medical center, an auditorium has been turned into a vaccine clinic with seven stations. As the first shots were given, a few employees who came to observe

the historic event teared up, and the excitement in the air was palpable.

“It feels like there’s possibly an end to what’s been going on and I feel very brave doing this and helping other people,” said Jen Shergill, a respirator­y therapist who works with COVID patients and received her first dose of the vaccine on Tuesday.

“Just be brave and get the vaccine. You’re protecting yourself. You’re protecting your family and friends and you’re protecting the community.”

Shergill, who’s 54, is eagerly anticipati­ng a postCOVID world, thanks to

the vaccine.

“I’m most looking forward to going out, being around people and being able to hug them.”

UC Davis and UC Davis Health have been national leaders in diagnosing, treating and researchin­g the coronaviru­s. UC Davis Health is one of just 150 sites worldwide that is participat­ing in the clinical trial for the Pfizer vaccine that is now available for tier one health care workers. More than 40,000 participan­ts are included in the study, including 225 at UC Davis Health.

 ?? PHOTOS BY WAYNE TILCOCK — UC DAVIS HEALTH ?? Registered Nurse Reanne Takara administer­s vaccine shots at UC Davis Medical Center, on Tuesday.
PHOTOS BY WAYNE TILCOCK — UC DAVIS HEALTH Registered Nurse Reanne Takara administer­s vaccine shots at UC Davis Medical Center, on Tuesday.
 ??  ?? Nurse Heather Donaldson administer­s the first COVID- 19 vaccinatio­n at UC Davis Health to emergency medicine nurse Eva Teniola.
Nurse Heather Donaldson administer­s the first COVID- 19 vaccinatio­n at UC Davis Health to emergency medicine nurse Eva Teniola.
 ?? PHOTOS BY WAYNE TILCOCK — UC DAVIS HEALTH ?? Pharmacy technician Joel Miyake and pharmacist Erin St. Angelo transfer 50 bottles of the Pfizer- BioNTech in a cooler from the main pharmacy to the room where they will be administer­ed to the most at- risk employees at the UC Davis Medical Center.
PHOTOS BY WAYNE TILCOCK — UC DAVIS HEALTH Pharmacy technician Joel Miyake and pharmacist Erin St. Angelo transfer 50 bottles of the Pfizer- BioNTech in a cooler from the main pharmacy to the room where they will be administer­ed to the most at- risk employees at the UC Davis Medical Center.
 ??  ?? Vials of the Pfizer- BioNTech COVID- 19 vaccine are removed from cold storage on Tuesday at UC Davis Health.
Vials of the Pfizer- BioNTech COVID- 19 vaccine are removed from cold storage on Tuesday at UC Davis Health.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States