Dayton Daily News

CORONAVIRU­S: THE LATEST Ohio hit Biden's target, locals say

All adults could be eligible for vaccine by May 1, public health officials in the Miami Valley agree.

- By Jordan Laird

Ohio is on track to offer the coronaviru­s vaccine to all adults by May 1, in accordance with President Joe Biden’s plan, state and local officials said Friday.

e going to move forward, make it available as quickly as we can,” DeWine said Friday morning while visiting a vaccinatio­n clinic in Cincinnati.

Currently, Ohioans over 50 years old and those with qualifying health conditions and occupation­s are eligible to receive the coronaviru­s vaccine. DeWine said Thursday afternoon that the state will likely continue expanding eligibilit­y for the vaccine by age group or health condition before every adult becomes eligible. He did not specify a date Friday when all residents will become eligible.

The U.S. is expecting delivery of enough doses for the country’s 255 million adults by the end of May. But administer­ing those doses will take time.

“Just be patient and know we’re working as fast as we can to get the vaccine out,” said Vicky Knisley-Henry, a spokeswoma­n for Miami County Public Health.

Area health department­s and hospital networks say they are ready to give doses on a large scale.

“Once we start getting larger allotments, we’ll have more clinics or larger clinics,” Knisley-Henry said.

Public Healt h -Dayton &

Montgomery County will increase its capacity to administer the vaccine “greatly” before May 1, spokesman Dan Suffoletto said. The Ohio Department of Health has designated Dayton a mass vaccinatio­n site and will send thousands of more doses in the coming weeks, he said.

“We’re anticipati­ng a large number of doses well before that May 1 date, and then we will be looking at expanding the number of days that we’re doing the clinics, and potentiall­y the number of hours. Even before the announceme­nt, we were already planning for greatly expanding our capacity,” he said.

Kettering Health Network has seen demand increase for shots as more doses become available, it said in a statement.

“We have been able to meet that demand by filling all appointmen­ts across our network. This week, in order to expand access, we opened a fifth COVID-19 vaccine clinic, this time at a location on the Greene Memorial Hospital Campus in Xenia,” the statement says. “By continuing to use our supply of the COVID-19 vaccine, we believe we will help reach that goal of being able to vaccinate all Ohio adults that are eligible for the COVID19 vaccine by May 1.”

When can children get vaccinated?

Biden specifical­ly said adults will be eligible for the vaccine by May; he did not include children in his announceme­nt. That’s because no coronaviru­s vaccine is yet authorized for use in children; clinical trials have only been completed for adults. The Pfizer-BioNTech vaccine is authorized for use in those 16 and up, and Moderna and Johnson & Johnson’s vaccines are authorized for ages 18 and up.

One local expert predicts a coronaviru­s vaccine or multiple vaccines will be licensed for use in children 12 years and older by August, in time for next school year.

And it will likely be about a year until children younger than 12 can get the vaccine, said Dr. Robert W. Frenck Jr., director of the Gamble Vaccine Research Center at Cincinnati Children’s and the immunizati­on program medical director of the Ohio American Academy of Pediatrics.

“And that’s based on Pfizer already having done a study from 12- to 17-year-olds, and Moderna is just about done with their adolescent trial, too,” he said. “So, I think, at least those two companies will have data for adolescent­s … basically asking the FDA for approval.”

Trials on children younger than 12 have not started yet.

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