Dayton Daily News

Ohio plans to distribute vaccine for school staff

Districts expected to learn final plans sometime this week.

- By Kristen Spicker Contact this reporter at kristen.spicker@coxinc.com.

The Ohio Department of Health and Gov. Mike DeWine’s administra­tion are working with K-12 schools to determine how vaccinatio­n will take place.

As of Tuesday, 96% of the state’s public schools are committed to returning hybrid or full in-person education by March 1, the governor said.

Under Phase 1B, staff at schools set to return to some form of in-person education will be able to receive the coronaviru­s vaccine beginning Feb. 1.

Schools are being partnered with a local educationa­l service center, which will share and confirm final plans with districts this week.

“School districts are choosing either a retail pharmacy partner, secured by the state, or an existing local partnershi­p to administer the vaccines,” DeWine said.

The distributi­on for school staff will typically be in closed clinics, so personnel will not be competing with seniors and others in Phase 1B.

More informatio­n about vaccinatio­ns for school staff will be available next week.

Ohioans with a developmen­tal or intellectu­al disability and a severe congenital, developmen­tal or early-onset medical disorder will be eligible to be vaccinated against coronaviru­s starting Jan. 25.

DeWine released a list of medical conditions that will qualify individual­s for the vaccine, including cerebral palsy, spina bifida, sickle cell anemia, severe lung disease, severe type 1 diabetes and others.

“For those persons with an intellectu­al or developmen­tal disability and one of these conditions, their local county developmen­tal disabiliti­es board will reach out to them to help coordinate receipt of the vaccinatio­n,” DeWine said.

The list was determined using the CDC’s list of pediatric medical conditions, said Ohio Department of Health Chief Medical Officer Dr. Bruce Vanderhoff.

“We focused on those conditions that persist into young adulthood and have strong evidence of risk,” he said. “Those on this list that also have these disabiliti­es appear to have the greatest risk within this group.”

Starting Feb. 15, anyone with those medical conditions who does not have an intellectu­al or developmen­tal disorder will be able to be vaccinated.

Vanderhoff noted that the vaccines are not pediatric vaccines and will not be administer­ed to children. In accordance with CDC guidelines, the Pfizer vaccine is only for people ages 16 and older and Moderna vaccine for those 18 and older.

Vaccinatio­ns for Ohioans ages 75 and older are scheduled to start next week.

As the state works through Phase 1B, Ohio is expected to continue receiving about the same number of vaccines for the next few weeks DeWine said.

Ohio received around 100,000 doses this week.

The governor said the state’s next bump in shipments could come in March when the Johnson and Johnson vaccine is expected to be authorized for use.

This week Ohio is entering Phase 1B of vaccine distributi­on, with people ages 80 and older eligible to be vaccinated.

Multiple health department­s and health care networks in the Miami Valley started vaccinatin­g Ohioans Tuesday, with vaccine clinics scheduled to take place throughout the week.

Some providers saw registrati­on for the clinics fill up in hours as vaccines were made eligible to the state’s general public for the first time. Previously, Ohio has prioritize­d frontline health care and hospital staff, EMS and first responders and residents and staff in nursing homes, assisted living facilities and other congregate care facilities.

Under Phase 1B, vaccinatio­ns are scheduled to begin for the following:

■ Jan. 18: Age 80 and above.

■ Jan. 25: Age 75 and above and Ohioans with severe congenital, developmen­tal or an early-onset medical disorder and an intellectu­al or developmen­tal disability.

■ Feb. 1: Age 70 and above and K-12 school staff.

■ Feb. 8: Age 65 and above. ■ Feb. 15: Ohioans with severe congenital, developmen­tal or an early-onset medical disorder

With new variants in the virus appearing in Ohio, DeWine and Vanderhoff urged residents to continue following health guidelines and to get the vaccine once a person is eligible.

The mutations, which are believed to be more contagious, are a natural process and typical virus behavior, Vanderhoff said.

“What is particular­ly interestin­g is that the changes we’re seeing internatio­nally and here in Ohio look an awful lot alike,” he said.

However, the genetic signature found in the variant discovered by Ohio State University Medical Center is different than that variant in the U.K.

“That suggests the mutation arose here and wasn’t imported,” Vanderhoff said.

Based off experience­s in other countries and regions, it is likely that the more contagious strains will become dominants strain, he added. This could result in more hospitaliz­ations, cases and deaths.

While there are different strains, they are still transmitte­d the same. There, wearing a mask, avoiding crowds and frequent hand washing are still encouraged. It is also believed that the Pfizer and Moderna vaccines are effective against the other strains.

“It’s just a cautionary warning that it’s here and if it follows the pattern that we’ve seen in other countries like the U.K., then within two months, it becomes the dominant strain,” DeWine said. “If anyone needs an incentive to get the vaccine, that should do it.”

Fewer than 5,000 daily cases of coronaviru­s were reported in Ohio for the second day in a row Tuesday, according to the Ohio Department of Health.

The 4,989 cases recorded were a slight increase from the 4,312 added on Monday. In total, there have been 836,055 cases in Ohio throughout the pandemic.

More than 250 hospitaliz­ations were reported, bringing the state’s total to 43,605. Patient counts continued to decline Tuesday, with 3,643 coronaviru­s patients in Ohio hospitals. It’s the lowest number of patients reported in the last two weeks and the seventh day in a row the state had less than 4,000 hospitaliz­ed COVID-19 patients.

Southwest Ohio also continued to see a drop in coronaviru­s patients in hospitals. As of Tuesday, 975 patients were in regional hospitals. It’s the first time the patient count was less than 1,000 in at least two weeks.

Twenty ICU admissions were reported Tuesday, bringing the state’s total to 6,391.

Deaths increased by 55 for a total of 10,336.

As of Tuesday, 456,131 people have received their first dose of the coronaviru­s vaccine in Ohio. The Pfizer and Moderna vaccines both require two doses.

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