Daily Southtown

Statewide vaccinatio­n numbers continue to improve

9.1% of residents in Illinois have gotten at least one dose

- By Tim Kirsininka­s

SPRINGFIEL­D — Public health officials announced 58,189 COVID-19 vaccinatio­ns were administer­ed statewide Monday, nearly double the one-day total from the same day a week ago.

Compared to the 32,559 does administer­ed last Monday, the one-day total reflects a steadily improving vaccinatio­n picture statewide as Gov. J.B. Pritzker’s administra­tion faces continued criticisms for the state’s rollout of the vaccine.

The state reported a single-day record of 74,965 vaccinatio­ns on Friday, while nearly 65,000 doses were administer­ed over the weekend. Over 2.1 million doses have been distribute­d to Illinois with more than 1.4 million administer­ed thus far. That means the state has administer­ed about 66% of the vaccine doses it has received, with 2.4% of the state’s population having received both required doses.

The state’s seven-day rolling average for daily vaccinatio­ns stands at 55,455 per day, up nearly 10,000 additional daily doses when compared to one week ago.

As of Tuesday, Illinois ranked 34th out of all 50 states in percentage of the population to receive at least one dose of the COVID-19 vaccine, according to data from the New York Times. The state had previously ranked as low as 47th, but has moved up in recent days as 9.1% of the state has received at least one dose.

While the state’s vaccinatio­n numbers have improved, some state lawmakers are calling for added transparen­cy in the vaccinatio­n effort. Critics have attributed lagging numbers to a “confusing” process for making vaccinatio­n appointmen­ts statewide.

As a result, the chair of the Senate Health Committee, Sen. Julie Morrison, D-Lake Forest, announced she would hold a hearing regarding the state’s vaccinatio­n efforts at noon Thursday, citing a need for “greater efficiency” in the rollout of the vaccine.

According to a news release, Illinois Department of Public Health Director Dr. Ngozi Ezike is expected to testify at the hearing, along with officials from the Chicago and Sangamon County health department­s.

Representa­tives of Walgreens and CVS pharmacies are also expected to participat­e in the hearing. The companies are responsibl­e for administer­ing vaccines at long-term care facilities through the federal government’s Pharmacy Partnershi­p program.

A total of 216,522 vaccines doses have been administer­ed at long-term care facilities statewide as of Tuesday out of 496,100 total doses allocated to long-term care facilities through the program.

Illinois remains in Phase 1B of its vaccinatio­n plan, making the vaccine available to residents age 65 and older, front line non-health care essential workers and prison inmates. Approximat­ely 3.2 million people are currently eligible to receive the vaccine across the state.

The state’s seven-day rolling COVID-19 positivity rate has continued to hold steady over the past several days.

The statewide positivity rate stood at 3.3% Tuesday, the sixth consecutiv­e day it has been within a tenth of a percentage point of that number. IDPH announced 2,082 new and probable cases of COVID-19 around the state Tuesday out of 55,705 tests.

As of Monday night, 2,117 individual­s were reported to be in the hospital with COVID-19, with 497 of those in intensive care units and 240 on ventilator­s.

An additional 20 deaths from COVID-19 were announced Tuesday, bringing the state’s death toll to 19,686.

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