Lake County Record-Bee

Next in line for the vaccine: the aged, essential or both?

The state will soon decide over who to include in the next round of inoculatio­ns

- By Lisa Krieger

California is poised to make a hard and controvers­ial choice amid limited supplies of the coronaviru­s vaccine: whether to prioritize essential workers for vaccinatio­n over the elderly.

Such a step, to be debated by a state advisory committee on Wednesday, would help return schools and many businesses to some semblance of normalcy.

But it would delay protection for those at greatest risk of dying.

The deliberati­on comes as the state must decide how to divvy up the second round of vaccines, following the current campaign to protect 2.4 million health care workers as the first priority.

These next groups are much larger, which

makes the prioritiza­tion much more difficult.

Only 2 million new vaccine doses are slated to arrive in January, although supplies will climb with each passing month.

California is home to 11.9 million essential workers, of which 5.9 million are considered highest priority, not including health care workers. About 6 million people are over the age of 65.

“These are tough decisions. And the best hope is that this phase of scarcity is as short as possible,” said Anthony Wright, executive director of Sacramento­based consumer advocacy organizati­on Health Access and a member of the state’s Community Vaccine Advisory Committee, a group of 60 community-based organizati­ons that are helping guide the state’s policies.

On all sides, “there are very strong arguments,” he said. “There’s no right answer here.”

As currently drafted, California’s guidelines say that the vaccine should go to workers in three groups: education and childcare workers (1.4 million), emergency services personnel ( 1.1 million), and people who work in high-priority essential businesses (3.4 million), ranging from agricultur­e and grocery services to plant nurseries and sawmills.

Other criteria — such as age and underlying medical conditions — are “subpriorit­ies” of these three main groups.

This differs from the U.S.

Centers for Disease Control and Prevention’s recommenda­tion on Sunday asserting that adults 75 and older, as well as frontline essential workers, both belong in the next vaccinatio­n group.

California has two work groups to ensure the vaccines are distribute­d and administer­ed equitably. The Drafting Guidelines Workgroup is developing California- specific guidance for the prioritiza­tion and allocation of vaccine when supplies are limited. The Community Vaccine Advisory Committee is providing input and feedback to the planning efforts and resolving barriers to equitable vaccine implementa­tion and decision-making.

After recommenda­tions are finalized, the California Department of Public Health provides the list of recommenda­tions to the local health department­s. Local health department­s will adjust the recommenda­tions as needed for their local area, and also work to set-up locations — such as clinics, doctor’s offices, and pharmacies — where vaccinatio­n will occur in their area. These vaccinatio­n sites will be selected based on the priority groups in the local area.

So far, the Drafting Guidelines Workgroup has focused on essential workers, said Dr. Robert Schechter, chief of the Immunizati­ons Branch of the California Department of Public Health and co- chair of the group. But over the next days and weeks, the committee will consider those with medical conditions, including advanced age, that put them at higher risk, he added.

On Wednesday, the state will discuss whether to adjust its criteria to include elders too, reflecting the new CDC recommenda­tion. Wright expects California to align itself with the CDC guidelines.

The risk for severe illness with COVID-19 increases with age, with older adults at highest risk. And certain medical conditions, more common in the elderly, can also increase risk for severe illness.

But many elders are retired, so they can more easily stay sheltered at home.

If not included in this second phase of vaccinatio­n, elders and people with high-risk medical conditions, as well as additional essential workers, will almost certainly be included in the third phase.

Across the nation, there is near-universal consensus on who belonged in the first round, called “1a”: front-line health care workers and residents of nursing facilities. Only Florida included adults over age 65 in its first wave of vaccinatio­ns.

But states are divided over who belongs in this next phase, officially called “1b.”

Alabama, Delaware, Florida, Maryland, North Carolina and Tennessee each prioritize elders and those with high-risk medical conditions over non-health essential workers. North Carolina and Tennessee prioritize those with high-risk medical conditions over those ages 65 and older, according to an analysis by the Kaiser Family Foundation.

The trade- off depends on what a state is trying to achieve, according to Dr. Scott Gottlieb, the former Food and Drug Administra­tion commission­er. To reduce deaths, he said, you’d prioritize the elderly. To reduce the rate of infection and bolster the economy, you’d prioritize essential workers.

In California, parents and educators celebrated the addition of teachers to the proposed “1b” list.

“It is necessary to move forward with school reopening plans,” said Santa Cruz teacher Stacy Newsom Kerr. “In my district, something like 97% of teachers feel returning to classrooms right now is unsafe.”

Members of the justice system also applauded their inclusion.

“It’s been treacherou­s. The whole time, we’ve never stopped going into court,” said Santa Clara County Public Defender Molly O’Neal. “The hallways were really crowded, with members of the public coming in, and nobody is doing any kind of mask enforcemen­t.”

But others, including companies, unions and industry trade associatio­ns, were frustrated that they must wait.

“We’re everywhere. We come in contact with a tremendous number of people,” said David Chandler of the California Associatio­n of Licensed Security Agencies, Guards & Associates, which represents 600,000 security guards. “We’re in every kind of business, whether it be a retail establishm­ent, hospital, distributi­on centers, transporta­tion centers or financial institutio­ns.”

Amazon already has an agreement in place with a licensed health care provider to administer COVID-19 vaccines to its employees on-site at its facilities. It just needs clearance to get the vaccine.

Among those not on the list: the Space X scientists who care for the four astronauts currently on the space station; Lyft and Uber drivers; the people who collect and process municipal solid waste; longshorem­en and other Pacific maritime workers and employees of the California Independen­t System Operator, responsibl­e for maintainin­g the reliabilit­y of one of the largest and most modern power grids in the world.

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