Hartford Courant

Panel recommends next vaccine recipients

Teachers, elderly and inmates among those on committee’s list

- By Emily Brindley

A subcommitt­ee of Connecticu­t’s vaccine advisory group on Tuesday recommende­d that the next wave of coronaviru­s vaccinatio­ns be allocated to frontline essential workers, residents of congregate settings and those aged 75 and older.

The phase will include teachers, grocery store workers, police officers, food service workers and sanitation workers, as well as residents of homeless shelters, prisons, psychiatri­c facilities and group homes.

However, the subcommitt­ee has yet to decide if the next phase will also include residents whoare under the age of 75 but have underlying health conditions that place them at high-risk of serious illness from COVID-19.

The Allocation­s Subcommitt­ee of Connecticu­t’s COVID-19 vaccine advisory group has so far based its discussion­s on federal recommenda­tions. But the subcommitt­ee is free to issue its own recommenda­tions, whether or not they align with the federal recommenda­tions, for Connecticu­t’s vaccine rollout. The subcommitt­ee only issues recommenda­tions for the state — the ultimate decision on the vaccine distributi­on timeline is in the hands of Gov. Ned Lamont.

For the first phase of vaccinatio­ns, known as Phase 1A, both the Allocation­s Subcommitt­ee and the governor followed the federal recommenda­tion and instructed the first vaccines to be given to health care workers and nursing home residents. That phase, which began in mid-December, is slated to wrap up at the end of January. (The Courant reported Monday that some health care workers aren’t likely to receive their second dose of the vaccine until February.)

But for the upcoming Phase 1B, the subcommitt­ee has decided to modify the federal recommenda­tions by adding more groups to the

phase. Thesubcomm­ittee on Tuesday formally affirmed the federal recommenda­tion to include in the next phase frontline essential workers and people aged 75 and over. But the subcommitt­ee also decided to add residents of congregate settings — including people who live in homeless shelters and the state’s prisons.

The subcommitt­ee also discussed adding people who are under 75 but have comorbidit­ies — such as cancer or diabetes — but the group did not come to a consensus during its two-hour meeting Tuesday. The group plans to meet again soon to wrap up that portion of the discussion and to potentiall­y add more people to Phase 1B.

Dr. Deidre Gifford, the state’s acting public health commission­er and also the co-chair of the state’s vaccine advisory group, told the subcommitt­ee on Tuesday that any additions to Phase 1B will delay the vaccinatio­n of the existing Phase 1B groups.

She centered her concern on elderly residents. That’s because, according to state data, 57% of Connecticu­t’s confirmed coronaviru­s deaths have been among those who are 80 and older. A full 80% of confirmed deaths have been among those who are 70 and older.

“Deaths are extremely highly concentrat­ed in the oldest individual­s,” Gifford said. “Everything we do to lengthen [Phase] 1B means that those at highest risk of death are subject to a longer [Phase] 1B period. So they’ll be getting in line with lots of individual­s whoare at lower risk of death from COVID.”

The subcommitt­ee’s discussion focused on this balancing act — the

members r epeatedly acknowledg­ed that while they would like to vaccinate everyone immediatel­y, they also know that broadening the early vaccinatio­n groups will mean delays for others.

Some members, however, also raised concerns that people of color — who are statistica­lly at a higher risk

of both contractin­g and dying from COVID-19 — are not being given adequate priority.

Tekisha Dwan Everette, the executive director of Health Equity Connecticu­t and a member of the subcommitt­ee, said the federal recommenda­tions include “no considerat­ion

about race and ethnicity.”

In part because of these concerns, officials agreed to pull more state data on illness and death so that race could be included in the final discussion about adding more groups to Phase 1B.

The Allocation­s Subcommitt­ee initially planned to use its Tuesday meeting to issue a recommenda­tion for Phase 1C of vaccinatio­ns. However, the subcommitt­ee didn’t have enough time to discuss that phase on Tuesday. The subcommitt­ee’s next meeting has not yet been scheduled.

The federal government has recommende­d that Phase 1C include other essential workers, people between the ages of 65 and 74 and those who are younger than 65 but have high-risk conditions. In Connecticu­t, some of those groups may be included in the earlier Phase 1B.

 ?? STEPHEN DUNN/AP ?? Margaret Dubois, 87, a resident at The Reservoir nursing facility, was given the second COVID-19 vaccinatio­n in a Ct. nursing home Dec. 18 in West Hartford, Conn.
STEPHEN DUNN/AP Margaret Dubois, 87, a resident at The Reservoir nursing facility, was given the second COVID-19 vaccinatio­n in a Ct. nursing home Dec. 18 in West Hartford, Conn.
 ??  ?? Out of Connecticu­t’s approximat­ely 5,000 confirmed coronaviru­s deaths, 80% have been among those who are 70 or older, according to state data.
Out of Connecticu­t’s approximat­ely 5,000 confirmed coronaviru­s deaths, 80% have been among those who are 70 or older, according to state data.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States