Imperial Valley Press

California­ns ask, Where are our coronaviru­s vaccines?

- BY ANA B. IBARRA CalMatters

With California­ns growing desperate to protect themselves from COVID-19 and put the pandemic behind them, many want to know, where are their vaccines?

State officials have mostly pointed to insufficie­nt federal supply as the culprit for a slower than expected vaccine rollout. About 4.7 million doses have been sent to the state, not including what’s sent for long-term-care facilities via a federal pharmacy partnershi­p. But as of late Thursday, 1.8 million doses, or about 40 percent, had not yet been administer­ed, according to a state vaccine dashboard.

California’s vaccine rollout per capita has been among the slowest in the country, and state officials can’t say where unused doses are, whether they are reserved for upcoming appointmen­ts or whether they are sitting in freezers unnecessar­ily. The state announced this week that locally controlled distributi­on of the vaccine isn’t working. Instead, it will contract with Blue Shield to coordinate delivery statewide and speed the process.

“We understand that vaccine supply is limited. But we also need to address that the supply we have now needs to get administer­ed as quickly as possible, so we’re developing an approach that allows us to do just that,” Yolanda Richardson, the state’s government operations secretary, said earlier this week.

Blue Shield will be what the state calls a “third party administra­tor.” It won’t inject shots into people’s arms, but rather will allocate doses to health providers and local health department­s.

Blue Shield declined to provide a spokespers­on to answer questions about how it will improve vaccine delivery. Instead, it released a statement that said, “Blue Shield’s role will be to maximize the speed at which vaccinatio­ns are made available across California with a focus on disparatel­y affected communitie­s.”

This new vaccine delivery system, which will take several weeks to roll out, is supposed to provide the state a clearer picture of what’s happening on the ground.

It’s the on-the-ground coordinati­on that has been complicate­d.

To date, the state’s vaccine allocation has been divided among local health department­s, seven major health systems, the department of state hospitals and the department of correction­s. How much vaccine each system or department is given is based on its eligible population — which is made up of mostly health care workers and people aged 65 and over.

Local health department­s in 58 counties and three cities further split their cut of doses with local providers, including pharmacies and clinics, that distribute shots at their own pace. Hospital systems report orders to the state, but get their doses directly from Pfizer and McKesson, the intermedia­ry for Moderna, and county officials do not always know how many doses their large hospitals have.

This decentrali­zed approach hasn’t worked for California. Rules vary by county, causing confusion. And without strong singular oversight, it’s been impossible to ensure efficiency and speed.

“We do a lot with our counties, which I think is a strength in California. But in this case, it was a challenge for administer­ing the vaccine as quickly as we possibly could,” Dr. Nadine Burke Harris, the state’s surgeon general, told NPR this week.

Aside from overall supply and delivery issues, the state also has been dealing with data issues. “We don’t really have a way to track vaccines sitting in the freezer,” said Kat DeBurgh, executive director of the state’s health officers associatio­n.

“What we do know is some are sitting in the freezer with a name because of an appointmen­t for next week,” she said. Many of the doses not yet administer­ed are accounted for, but how many is unknown.

Without concrete data, the state cannot identify delivery bottleneck­s or know whether providers are hoarding vaccines or just not entering data in the state’s vaccine registry in a timely manner.

The Blue Shield deal is just one step the state is taking to improve vaccinatio­n delivery. It recently rolled out the My Turn website, where people can sign up to learn when they qualify for vaccinatio­ns and schedule appointmen­ts. This system, in turn, will automatica­lly provide data to the state so it can better track inventory and reduce data lags.

A state dashboard already tracks total doses administer­ed, assigning them to the vaccinated person’s county of residence. But it does not show what percentage of a county and health system’s supply has been administer­ed.

Darrel Ng, spokesman for the state’s public health department, said the state has been working to identify vaccinatio­n bottleneck­s, but credited health systems with doing a good job of getting vaccines out quickly.

As of Wednesday, Kaiser Permanente, the largest health system in the state, had administer­ed 305,000 doses to health workers and patients — about 10 percent of the doses administer­ed in the state, not counting nursing homes. But it could administer up to 250,000 a week if it had the supply, Marc Brown, a Kaiser spokesman said. Kaiser will help Blue Shield with the new vaccine delivery network.

Of course it’s a lot easier for health systems than for counties to distribute the vaccine quickly because they’re dealing with a specific audience — their workers and patients who they can easily reach, DeBurgh said.

While speed is important, good delivery is also about being equitable, and that’s a balance the state and Blue Shield will have to find, she said.

“You can’t just give more vaccines to those who do it faster, it’s also important to reach communitie­s that don’t have transporta­tion or easy access to health care,” she said.

Some local officials are cautiously optimistic about the state’s new plans.

“I think in any response when you bring in additional resources that is a plus,” said Joe Prado, Fresno County’s health division manager. “But if you don’t coordinate well, and you don’t really get a focus plan together in line with the locals, then it can become inefficien­t.”

CalMatters COVID- 19 coverage, translatio­n and distributi­on is supported by generous grants from the Blue Shield of California Foundation, the California Wellness Foundation and the California Health Care Foundation.

 ?? PHOTO ANNE WERNIKOFF, CALMATTERS ?? Alameda County health workers prepare different sized syringes with the Moderna COVID-19 vaccine during a distributi­on clinic at St. Rose hospital in Hayward on Saturday.
PHOTO ANNE WERNIKOFF, CALMATTERS Alameda County health workers prepare different sized syringes with the Moderna COVID-19 vaccine during a distributi­on clinic at St. Rose hospital in Hayward on Saturday.

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