Daily Southtown

Illinois leads US in vaccines administer­ed

More than 100,000 vaccinated; Pritzker has no immediate plans to lift Tier 3 mitigation­s

- By Peter Hancock

SPRINGFIEL­D — More than 100,000 doses of COVID-19 vaccines have been administer­ed in Illinois this month, more than any other state, and state officials said Wednesday they expect the pace of the programto speed up as the federal government begins distributi­ng a second drug thisweek.

Gov. J.B. Pritzker made that announceme­nt during a virtual media briefing Wednesday, adding that eventually, larger states like California and Texas will surpass Illinois simply because of the size of their population­s.

“But the vaccine team in Illinois sprinted past them all in week one,” Pritzker said.

The U.S. Food and Drug Administra­tion granted Emergency Use Authorizat­ion Dec. 11 for a vaccine developed by the drug companies Pfizer and BioNTech, and the state began delivering those vaccines lastweek.

On Friday, FDA granted the same authorizat­ion for a vaccine developed by Moderna and shipments of that vaccine are now being distribute­d to hospitals and local health department­s throughout the state.

By Saturday, Pritzker said, the state expects to receive another 23,400 doses of the Pfizer vaccine, plus 174,600 doses of the Moderna vaccine for distributi­on throughout Illinois outside of Chicago. In addition, Illinois is dedicating another 37,050 doses of the Pfizer vaccine for a federal government’s vaccinatio­n program for long-term care facilities, which is being administer­ed by the pharmacy companies CVS and Walgreen’s.

“And with this week’s Moderna shipments, vaccines will have officially reached all 102 counties in Illinois,” Pritzker said.

The city of Chicago, which receives its own shipments directly from the federal government, expects to receive 15,600 doses of the Pfizer vaccine and 48,000 doses of the Moderna vaccine this week.

All of the vaccines being distribute­d in the first phase of the program are earmarked for health care workers and the residents and staff of long-term care facilities. State officials said this week they expect it will take four to six weeks to complete that phase before the program expands to cover people over age 75 and other front-line essential workers.

Meanwhile, the spread of COVID-19 in Illinois continued to show signs of improvemen­t Wednesday as the Illinois Department of Public Health announced 6,762 new cases of the disease out of 82,328 tests performed. That made for a seven- day rolling average positivity rate of 7.5%, the fourth consecutiv­e day below8%.

As of late Tuesday night, 4,593 Illinoisan­s were being hospitaliz­ed for COVID-19, including 953 in intensive care units and 536 patients on ventilator­s. That leaves 28% of the state’s staffed hospital beds available for use, along with 29% of staffed ICU beds and 72% of available ventilator­s.

Despite those trends, however, Pritzker said he has no immediate plans to lift the Tier 3 mitigation­s currently in effect statewide, which includes the closure of bars and restaurant­s to indoor service and strict limits on public gatherings.

“The challenge that we have is, what we don’t want to do is swing back and forth between mitigation­s and not having mitigation­s within days or a week or two of one another,” Pritzker said. “And as we head into the Christmas holiday and NewYear’s, my concern is that we might see— we are going likely to see — some uptick from Christmas and from New Year’s in hospitaliz­ations as well as cases.”

“Having said that,” he added, “even if we brought the entire state or specific regions from Tier 3 to Tier 2, thatwould not open bars and restaurant­s for indoor service yet. We need to bring it down even further and for a longer period of time.”

Pritzker did announce that his administra­tion is increasing funding for child care providers that take part in the state’s Child Care Assistance Program, or CCAP, a program that helps low-income families pay for child care.

Pritzker said the state will invest$ 20 million of its remaining allocation from the federal Coronaviru­s Aid, Relief and Economic Security, or CARES Act, to pay for all eligible days of child care for families enrolled in the program, regardless of the child’s actual attendance, for all of December, January and February.

In addition, he said, the Department of Children and Family Services will lift the capacity limits all licensed family child care providers this month, returning them to full capacity. He said licensed child care centers may return to full capacity in early January, if the COVID-19 rolling positivity rate remains below9%.

The money will also be used to buy and distribute personal protective equipment to child care providers throughout the state.

Pritzker said the intent of the additional funding is to provide some financial stability to child care providers who have seen their enrollment­s decline or have had staff call in sick during the pandemic.

“These tumultuous times have rained down in multiple ways on our early childhood network of providers,” Pritzker said. “And I wanted to make it easier for them so that we can make sure that child care is available to parents who need it.”

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