Imperial Valley Press

California won’t allow virus vaccines without state approval

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SACRAMENTO, Calif. (AP) — California won’t allow any distributi­on of coronaviru­s vaccines in the nation’s most populous state until it is reviewed by the state’s own panel of experts, Gov. Gavin Newsom said Monday.

Vaccinatio­ns for the pandemic “will move at the speed of trust,” said Newsom, a Democrat, and the state wants its own independen­t review no matter who wins the presidenti­al election next month.

“Of course we won’t take anyone’s word for it,” Newsom said as he named 11 doctors and scientists to review any rollout of vaccines by the federal government or vaccine developers. The board members hail from top California universiti­es and medical providers, along with state and local public health officials.

The pledge raises the possibilit­y that California residents might not receive a vaccine as distributi­on begins in other states, though the governor said widespread vaccinatio­ns are unrealisti­c until sometime next year.

While there is always a risk that the vaccine could be delayed only in California, Dr. Jeffrey Klausner, a professor of epidemiolo­gy at the UCLA Fielding School of Public Health, said Newsom named a renowned group that should be able to quickly make credible decisions.

“I wouldn’t interpret this as a delay in distributi­on. I would interpret this as an effort to make sure that distributi­on is equitable and timely,” he said. “The people in this group are among the most reputable public health advocates in the state.”

As such, its finding that a particular vaccine approved by the Food and Drug Administra­tion or Centers for Disease Control and Prevention was suitable or not could have an outsize effect nationwide.

New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo last month appointed a similar independen­t task force.

“It would be a mistake not to be aware of the way that the CDC and the FDA have been pressured by the White House, no matter who’s in the White House,” said David Magnus, director of the Stanford Center for Biomedical Ethics, so “it might be prudent for a state to make sure everything’s kosher.”

He’s less worried that there will be disagreeme­nt between the federal and state panels now that no vaccine release is likely before Election Day, Nov. 3. But Magnus noted that it has not been uncommon for presidents to muzzle scientists in other areas, for instance climate change or other environmen­tal policies, thus setting up regular lawsuits with states like California.

At most, 45 million doses will be available nationwide before the end of this year from the two most advanced vaccines, Newsom said. Each person must receive two doses, three weeks apart.

If California were to receive 12% of the doses, commensura­te with its percentage of the nation’s population, that would be 5.4 million doses, or enough to treat 2.7 million of the state’s nearly 40 million residents.

Most would go to frontline medical workers and first responders, he said, then to the most vulnerable in the population.

Newsom’s announceme­nt drew quick criticism from Republican state lawmakers.

“Politicizi­ng the efficacy of a vaccine is shameful,” Sen. Melissa Melendez tweeted.

Newsom is “suggesting we can’t trust the FDA (but) Of course, we’ll continue trusting the FDA for every other drug whose distributi­on doesn’t threaten his hold on power,” tweeted Assemblyma­n Kevin Kiley, who has a court hearing this week challengin­g the governor’s authority to impose virus restrictio­ns.

Newsom said the distributi­on and record-keeping logistics alone are massive, including a requiremen­t that the vaccines be kept in continuous cold storage until they are administer­ed.

One of the two leading vaccines requires “ultra cold” storage — think dry ice — of minus 94 degrees Fahrenheit (minus 70 degrees Celsius). The other needs a minus 4 degrees Fahrenheit (minus 20 degrees Celsius).

California last week gave the federal Centers for Disease Control and Prevention its early plans for how it would handle and distribute the vaccine, and in return received nearly $29 million to continue its planning efforts.

California is one of five jurisdicti­ons doing what Newsom called “micro- planning” for mass distributi­ons, which he predicted could come as soon as next spring, is more likely next summer, but could be as late as next fall.

The advisory group should be empowered not only to sign off on the safety of a vaccine, Klausner said, but to make recommenda­tions on whether vaccines should be mandatory in some instances, and to guide a complicate­d distributi­on process that will likely require readiness by every clinic, pharmacy and health department.

It’s possible that might make it necessary to “activate the National Guard or some other type of human resource pool to make sure the vaccine can be distribute­d quickly and effectivel­y,” Klausner said.

 ?? CALIFORNIA GOVERNOR’S OFFICE VIA AP ?? In this image taken from a live-streamed video from the California Governor’s Office, California Gov. Gavin Newsom talks during a news conference on Monday in Sacramento, Calif.
CALIFORNIA GOVERNOR’S OFFICE VIA AP In this image taken from a live-streamed video from the California Governor’s Office, California Gov. Gavin Newsom talks during a news conference on Monday in Sacramento, Calif.

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