Daily Press

States differ on vaccine priorities

Both economic, health concerns affecting decisions

- By Sam Metz and Ryan J. Foley

States drafted plans Thursday for who will go to the front of the line when the first doses of COVID-19 vaccine become available later this month, as U.S. deaths from the outbreak eclipsed 3,100 in a single day, obliterati­ng the record set last spring.

With initial supplies of the vaccine certain to be limited, governors and other state officials are weighing both health and economic concerns in deciding the order in which the shots will be dispensed.

States face a Friday deadline to submit requests for doses of the Pfizer vaccine and specify where they should be shipped, and many appear to be heeding nonbinding guidelines adopted this week by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention to put health care workers and nursing home patients first.

But they’re also facing a multitude of decisions about other categories of residents, some of them specific to their states, some of them vital to their economies.

Colorado’s draft plan, which is being revised, puts ski resort workers who share close quarters in the second phase of vaccine distributi­on, in recognitio­n of the $6 billion industry’s linchpin role in the state’s economy.

In Nevada, where officials have stressed the importance of bringing tourists back to the Las Vegas Strip, authoritie­s initially put nursing home patients in the third phase, behind police officers, teachers, airport operators and retail workers. But they said Wednesday that they would revise that plan to conform to the CDC guidance.

Plans for the vaccine are

being rolled out as the surging pandemic swamps U.S. hospitals and leaves nurses and other medical workers shorthande­d and burned out. Nationwide the coronaviru­s is blamed for over 275,000 deaths and 14 million confirmed infections.

The U.S. recorded a record 3,157 deaths on Wednesday alone, according to the tally kept by Johns Hopkins University. That’s more than the number of people killed on 9/11, and shattered the old mark of 2,603, set on April 15, when the New York metropolit­an area was the epicenter of the U.S. outbreak.

The number of Americans in the hospital with the coronaviru­s likewise hit an all-time high Wednesday at more than 100,000, according to the COVID Tracking

Project. The figure has more than doubled over the past month. And new cases per day have begun topping 200,000, by Johns Hopkins’ count.

The three main benchmarks showed a country slipping deeper into crisis, with perhaps the worst yet to come — in part because of the delayed effects from Thanksgivi­ng, when millions of Americans disregarde­d warnings to stay home and celebrate only with members of their household.

Health authoritie­s had warned that the numbers could fluctuate strongly before and after Thanksgivi­ng, as they often do around holidays and weekends. Because of reporting delays, the figures often drop, then rise sharply days later as state and local health agen

cies catch up with the backlog.

Still, deaths, hospitaliz­ations and cases in the U.S. have been on a fairly steady rise for weeks, sometimes breaking records for days on end.

Keeping health care workers on their feet is considered vital to dealing with the crisis. And nursing home patients have proven highly vulnerable to the virus. Patients and staff members at nursing homes and other long-term care centers account for 39% of the nation’s COVID-19 deaths.

As authoritie­s draw up their priority lists for the vaccine, firefighte­r groups asked the Minnesota governor to be placed in the first group. The Illinois plan gives highest priority to health care workers but also

calls for first responders to be in the first batch to get the shot. Other states are struggling with where to put prisoners in the pecking order.

Arizona Gov. Doug Ducey said he wants teachers to get priority so that schools can stay open. Two California lawmakers asked for that, too, saying distance learning is harming students’ education.

“Our state’s children cannot afford to wait,” wrote Republican Assemblyma­n Jordan Cunningham and Democratic Assemblyma­n Patrick O’Donnell. “This is too important to overlook or sweep aside.”

Texas is putting hospital staff, nursing home workers and paramedics at the top of the list, followed by outpatient medical employees, pharmacist­s, funeral home workers and school nurses. Nursing home patients did not make the cut for the very first phase.

Advocates strongly expressed frustratio­n over the way some states are putting medical workers ahead of nursing home residents.

“It would be unconscion­able not to give top priority to protect the population that is more susceptibl­e or vulnerable to the virus,” said John Sauer, head of LeadingAge in Wisconsin, a group representi­ng nonprofit long-term care facilities

He added: “I can’t think of a more raw form of ageism than that. The population that is most vulnerable to succumbing to this virus is not going to be given priority? I mean, that just says we don’t value the lives of people in long-term care.”

 ?? JAE C. HONG/AP ?? Dr. Rafik Abdou checks on a COVID-19 patient last month at Providence Holy Cross Medical Center in Los Angeles.
JAE C. HONG/AP Dr. Rafik Abdou checks on a COVID-19 patient last month at Providence Holy Cross Medical Center in Los Angeles.

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