Las Vegas Review-Journal

Pharmacy chains in Las Vegas Valley start offering COVID-19 vaccinatio­ns for older residents

Older Nevadans can set times to get COVID-19 vaccinatio­ns

- By Mary Hynes

COVID-19 vaccinatio­n clinics moved into more Las Vegas Valley neighborho­ods this week as pharmacy chains began to offer shots to older residents.

Both Smith’s and Walgreens are now offering vaccinatio­ns to those 70 and older in Clark County, according to nonprofit Immunize Nevada’s nvcovidfig­hter.org website.

Meanwhile, Clark County officials said they would be tightening procedures at Nevada’s largest vaccinatio­n site, Cashman Center in downtown Las Vegas. This step follows a Review-journal report that, contrary to policy, staff there often have not been requiring appointmen­ts and identifica­tion to confirm eligibilit­y.

Both developmen­ts come at a time when older residents, who are at the highest risk of complicati­ons from the coronaviru­s, are venting considerab­le frustratio­n over the limited number of appointmen­ts available to get the potentiall­y life-saving vaccine.

Pharmacy vaccinatio­ns

Tom and Linda Moore, both 78, got their shots Wednesday afternoon after their daughter was able to book appoint

ments online for them at a Henderson Smith’s.

Tom Moore said the couple, who had only a few people ahead of them in line, waited about 15 minutes to get their shots.

“It went one, two, three,” he said. But as with other vaccinatio­n sites, appointmen­ts are going quickly. The couple’s daughter, Tiffany Vaskov, said pharmacy staff told her that appointmen­ts already were booked for the next two weeks.

“We’re encouragin­g people to check the sites frequently and also try nonpeak hours,” said Heidi Parker, Immunize Nevada’s executived­irector.

The limited number of vaccine appointmen­ts available to older residents is “completely driven by the low allocation that we get as a state,” Candice Mcdaniel, a bureau chief in the Nevada Department of Health and Human Services, said during a press briefing by state officials Wednesday.

As of Tuesday, 116,041 doses of COVID-19 vaccine had been administer­ed in Nevada, Mcdaniel said.

As of Wednesday, 212,200 doses had been delivered to the state, department spokeswoma­n Shannon Litz said in an email.

The federal government has allocated 36,825 first doses to Nevada for next week, Mcdaniel said.

In Clark County, the vaccine is being offered not only to the older population but also to people in a wide group of occupation­s that includes not only health care and public safety personnel but, as of this week, teachers, elected officials and essential public transporta­tion workers such as ride-share and taxi drivers, among others.

The county has received 83,200 vaccine doses and administer­ed 60,632, according to informatio­n from the Southern Nevada Health District.

Improvemen­ts at Cashman

County officials said during a separate press briefing that they were tightening procedures at the Cashman site.

“We think that the people coming through there without appointmen­ts,and without the proper proof that they were in the right category or right tier … will be extremely minimal if not totally nonexisten­t,” said county Fire Chief John Steinbeck. “We apologize to anybody that was inconvenie­nced by that and hope to get them in as soon as possible.”

County Commission­er Marilyn Kirkpatric­k said that the Cashman Center would be closing as planned for the weekend to “refine our process,” to provide training and to get “our new system up and running.”

County spokeswoma­n Stacey Welling said in an email, “We are working on the process for checking in people so they are better prepared to show ID to verify their employment and/or age. We also are working on IT improvemen­ts at the site so it’s easier to verify appointmen­ts electronic­ally.”

The new system will provide people with an email or text with a code that can be scanned on site, replacing a manual process.

 ?? K.M. Cannon Las Vegas Review-journal @Kmcannonph­oto ?? Floor stickers show COVID-19 vaccinatio­n informatio­n at Smith’s at Flamingo and Sandhill roads on Wednesday.
K.M. Cannon Las Vegas Review-journal @Kmcannonph­oto Floor stickers show COVID-19 vaccinatio­n informatio­n at Smith’s at Flamingo and Sandhill roads on Wednesday.
 ??  ?? Tiffany Vaskov, right, checks on her parents, Tom and Linda Moore, after they received COVID-19 vaccinatio­ns Wednesday at Smith’s pharmacy on Green Valley Parkway, as her son Benjamin Vaskov looks on.
Tiffany Vaskov, right, checks on her parents, Tom and Linda Moore, after they received COVID-19 vaccinatio­ns Wednesday at Smith’s pharmacy on Green Valley Parkway, as her son Benjamin Vaskov looks on.
 ?? L.E. Baskow Las Vegas Review-journal @Left_eye_images ?? PFC Wendy Garcia hands out vaccinatio­n paperwork Tuesday at the Cashman Center site operated by the Southern Nevada Health District and the Nevada National Guard.
L.E. Baskow Las Vegas Review-journal @Left_eye_images PFC Wendy Garcia hands out vaccinatio­n paperwork Tuesday at the Cashman Center site operated by the Southern Nevada Health District and the Nevada National Guard.

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