Las Vegas Review-Journal

LV offers new COVID therapy

Rate of vaccinatio­n lagging in Nevada

- By Michael Scott Davidson

Nevada has one of the worst COVID-19 vaccinatio­n rates per capita in the U.S., according to federal data released Friday.

About 1,450 of every 100,000 Nevadans have received their first vaccine dose, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention reported. The state ranked 44th, landing alongside neighborin­g California, Arizona and Idaho.

Candice Mcdaniel, who leads Nevada government’s vaccinatio­n efforts, said Friday that the data does not truly reflect the state’s most current vaccinatio­n numbers, which take time to be catalogued and then reported to the CDC.

“I personally hold that we probably have additional vaccine administer­ed into arms,” she said.

Mcdaniel said at least 45,435 first doses had been administer­ed as of Thursday, about 800 more than reported by the CDC. The state has also administer­ed at least 4,301 second doses, which the CDC did not track.

Nevada has received 170,400 doses of vaccine as of Friday, state officials said, about 17,000 less than the total CDC had reported shipping here. That means about 27 percent of doses the state has received have been reported administer­ed.

Vaccines are being administer­ed by a collection of public health agencies, hospitals and pharmacies.

This creates a lag in reporting total vaccinatio­n numbers to the state, and Mcdaniel said the total statewide is higher than the number she provided Friday. The state has been promising a new vaccine dose dashboard, similar to its COVID-19 data dashboard, but it has yet to be launched.

Despite well more than 100,000 doses in Nevada waiting to be administer­ed, Mcdaniel said the state’s distributi­on of the vaccine to Tier 1 recipients – including health care workers, first responders and nursing home residents – had “progressed smoothly.”

Nevada’s biggest problem in

distributi­ng the vaccine has been inconsiste­nt shipments from the federal government, Mcdaniel said.

State officials are not given insight into how many doses to expect beyond one week, and the doses do not always arrive on the same day each week, she said.

As a result, Mcdaniel said she could not predict when people age 75 and older will have access to the COVID-19 vaccine statewide.

“We are going to be asking for more predictabi­lity from the federal government,” she said. “We know

that if we can get to a place where our allocation numbers are set a month or even two weeks in advance, we can start to create a more stable and predictabl­e timeline for Nevadans.”

Still, Gov. Steve Sisolak has ordered a team of state agencies to convene next week to come up with improvemen­ts to the distributi­on of the vaccine, Nevada COVID-19 response director Caleb Cage said. Those agencies include the state’s immunizati­on team, Division of Emergency Management and Nevada National Guard.

“The governor is committed to using every resource available to work through any challenges,” Cage said.

Cage noted that state officials were in contact with President-elect Joe Biden’s transition team about their planned changes to the federal government’s vaccine distributi­on.

Mcdaniel said she and Sisolak plan to address the public next week about changes coming to Nevada’s vaccine distributi­on playbook.

The Southern Nevada Health District announced Wednesday it had administer­ed some 21,000 doses, roughly one-third of what it had received from the state. The agency is preparing to start a “mass vaccinatio­n campaign beyond the hospital setting,” acting chief health officer Dr. Fermin Leguen said.

The VA Medical Center in North Las Vegas, which receives its vaccine through a separate distributi­on system from the rest of the state, began this week giving shots to its highest-risk veterans.

The Washoe County Health District announced it had administer­ed about 6,600 doses as of Thursday, out of close to 21,000. Local teachers and people older than 75 will be able to begin receiving the vaccine this weekend, meaning the county is entering Tier 2 of the state’s vaccinatio­n plan.

 ?? Erik Verduzco Las Vegas Review-journal @Erik_verduzco ?? Lynn Hayes, with the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, at the monoclonal antibody clinic Friday at Sunrise Hospital.
Erik Verduzco Las Vegas Review-journal @Erik_verduzco Lynn Hayes, with the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, at the monoclonal antibody clinic Friday at Sunrise Hospital.
 ?? Erik Verduzco Las Vegas Review-journal @Erik_verduzco ?? Registered nurse Cass Petrykowsk­i, center, waits after receiving the second dose of the Pfizer COVID-19 vaccine Monday at UMC’S Delta Point building in Las Vegas.
Erik Verduzco Las Vegas Review-journal @Erik_verduzco Registered nurse Cass Petrykowsk­i, center, waits after receiving the second dose of the Pfizer COVID-19 vaccine Monday at UMC’S Delta Point building in Las Vegas.

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