Daily Southtown (Sunday)

Ill. to expand vaccine eligibilit­y ahead of universal rollout

- By Peter Hancock

The Illinois Department of Public Health announced Friday that more groups of people will be eligible to receive COVID-19 vaccinatio­ns ahead of April 12 when everyone over age 16 will become eligible.

Starting Monday, higher education staff, government workers and members of the media will be eligible to receive shots.

A week later, on March 29, restaurant staff, constructi­on trade workers and religious leaders will become eligible.

“As more vaccine becomes available in the coming weeks and months, we will continue to make sure we are reaching people who are at greater risk of exposure to the virus or from suffering severe illness due to COVID-19,” IDPH Director Dr. Ngozi Ezike said in a news release. “While we will continue to prioritize individual­s who are 65 years and older, as well as health care workers and individual­s with underlying medical conditions, we want to maintain our momentum going forward and continue to increase our march toward herd immunity.”

Vaccines first became available in Illinois Dec. 15. At that time, only front line health care workers and the staff and residents of long-term care facilities were eligible.

That list was expanded Jan. 25 to include all individual­s over age 65 as well as front line essential workers, including first responders, kindergart­en through 12th grade teachers and other public-facing industries.

It was expanded again Feb. 25 to include anyone age 16 and over with certain high-risk conditions or disabiliti­es.

As of Thursday night, according to IDPH, a little more than 4.5 million doses of vaccine have been administer­ed in Illinois, including 359,850 for longterm care facilities.

On Thursday, 135,525 doses were administer­ed. The seven-day rolling average for doses administer­ed daily stood at 102,775.

During a news conference in Belleville Friday, Gov. J.B. Pritzker said a little more than 60% of seniors age 65 and over had received at least one vaccine dose. Under a plan announced earlier in the week, when that number reaches 70%, and as long as certain other metrics are met, the state will enter what he is calling a “bridge phase” to full reopening of the economy that will allow for larger capacity limits in public gatherings.

IDPH reported Friday that 2,380 new confirmed and probable cases of COVID-19 had been recorded over the previous 24 hours out of 92,161 tests performed. The seven-day rolling average positivity rate of new cases as a percent of total tests stood at 2.5%, up one-tenth of a point from the day before.

As of Thursday, 1,132 patients were reported hospitaliz­ed with COVID19 while 29% of the state’s hospital beds remained available. Of those, 242 were being treated in intensive care units, while nearly 27% of the state’s ICU beds were available. There were 105 COVID-19 patients on ventilator­s.

IDPH also reported Friday that 12 additional residents had died of COVID-19 over the previous 24 hours, bringing the statewide death total since the pandemic began to 21,034 out of a total of just over 1.2 million cases of the disease.

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