Daily Local News (West Chester, PA)

Pa. orders providers to speed up shots

- By Michael Rubinkam

After weeks of complaints about Pennsylvan­ia’s halting COVID-19 vaccine rollout, the Health Department on Friday ordered providers to get shots into arms more quickly, offer more convenient scheduling and make sure that scarce supplies are only going to eligible recipients.

The state also plans to dramatical­ly cut the number of providers that are administer­ing the vaccine so that more doses will go to those that have proven adept at swiftly using their weekly allotments.

Acting Health Secretary Alison Beam said the moves are intended to hold hospitals, pharmacies and other providers accountabl­e for the vaccine doses they’ve been entrusted with, and to address widespread frustratio­ns among Pennsylvan­ia residents about how difficult it can be to secure an appointmen­t. Pennsylvan­ia is among the lowest-ranked states in how efficientl­y it is vaccinatin­g its population.

“I want Pennsylvan­ians to know that we have heard you and we are taking bold, decisive action,” Beam said at a media briefing.

Under the order, hospitals, pharmacies and other providers must administer at least 80% of their allotment of first doses of vaccine within a week of getting them, and offer live telephone operators to assist people who don’t have the ability to schedule their appointmen­ts online.

Providers must also adhere to the state’s phased rollout, which currently limits the vaccine to health providers, nursing home residents, people age 65 and older and younger people with serious medical conditions. In practice, however, federal health privacy laws limit the ability of any vaccine provider to confirm eligibilit­y — meaning recipients are on the honor system.

Beam said providers who fail to abide by the order will have their weekly allocation­s reduced or suspended.

The Wolf administra­tion has been pummeled by Republican­s, Democrats, health providers and interest groups alike over the sluggish pace of vaccinatio­ns and the state’s confusing, patchwork system for signups. Pennsylvan­ia consistent­ly ranks poorly among the states in the number of shots given per 100,000 people, and in the percentage of allocated vaccine doses that have been administer­ed.

“To say the COVID-19 vaccine distributi­on plan has been abysmal is a severe understate­ment,” Rep. Valerie Gaydos, R-Allegheny, wrote Friday ahead of the Health Department announceme­nt.

Health officials say the state’s mediocre showing partly reflects a decision to hold second doses in reserve, but Democratic Gov. Tom Wolf himself has said repeatedly that the state needs to do a better job of getting shots into arms.

Statewide, about 780 health providers have received vaccine shipments. The Health Department said it will begin limiting deliveries to between 200 and 300 providers — hospitals, federally funded health centers, municipal health department­s and pharmacies — that have been most effective at rapidly administer­ing the shots.

“With the limited number of vaccines ... we need to make sure that we focus in on the providers that are able to reach the communitie­s quickly,” Beam said.

Lack of supply remains the major problem facing Pennsylvan­ia and every other state. Of the more than 4 million people currently eligible in the state, a little more than a quarter, about 1.2 million people, have received at least one dose. Apart from Philadelph­ia, which gets its vaccine directly from the federal government, Pennsylvan­ia received about 175,000 first doses this week.

Providers, meanwhile, have been swamped with requests.

The Allentown Health Bureau said Friday that its vaccine scheduling call center system is getting an “overwhelmi­ng number” of calls, with busy signals confrontin­g residents trying to get through.

“We understand the challenges this creates, and we thank you for your patience as we work to improve our service and manage the thousands of requests from our community,” the city said in a statement.

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 ?? AP PHOTO/MATT ROURKE ?? A person wearing a face mask as a precaution against the coronaviru­s walks in Philadelph­ia on Wednesday.
AP PHOTO/MATT ROURKE A person wearing a face mask as a precaution against the coronaviru­s walks in Philadelph­ia on Wednesday.

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