Las Vegas Review-Journal

Vaccine doses dwindling

Limited allocation to Nevada forces inoculatio­n slowdown

- By Mary Hynes

Vaccinatio­n sites in Southern Nevada are scaling back COVID-19 inoculatio­ns as the state continues to receive very limited doses from the federal government, state officials said Friday.

“Many vaccinatio­n sites are having to scale down because of the limited allocation we are set to receive next week,” Candice Mcdaniel, a bureau chief with the Nevada Department of Health and Human Services, said during an online news briefing.

The shortage played a role in the temporary closure this weekend of the largest site in the state, Cashman Center in downtown Las

Vegas. It also has contribute­d to the scramble for limited appointmen­ts as well as the postponeme­nt of some appointmen­ts.

Now that the Cashman site has been tested, local officials “want to make sure that, with the allocation that they have available, that their local partners get an opportunit­y to run their programs, as well,” Caleb Cage, who directs the state’s COVID-19 response, said of the closure.

The state in recent weeks has received 36,000 doses of vaccine per week from the federal government, officials said. Yet Clark County alone now has the capability to administer 92,000 doses per week, Cage said.

The allocation from the federal government is “not enough to meet our needs or our capacity at the state level,” he said.

Appointmen­ts postponed

Another sign of shortage: The city of Henderson on Friday was notifying people who were scheduled to be inoculated at a Sun City Anthem site during the first half of February that their appointmen­ts had been postponed.

One such email stated that according to the Southern Nevada Health District “demand is temporaril­y outpacing their supply for the COVID-19 vaccine.”

“SNHD has assured us that there are enough vaccinatio­ns for appointmen­ts scheduled Jan. 25-31 at Sun City Anthem,” the email stated. The site is vaccinatin­g only people 70 and older.

“If sites not operated by the health district are scheduling appointmen­ts in advance and through February, they will need to be aware that everything is contingent on the amount of vaccine that we are receiving,” district spokeswoma­n Jennifer Sizemore said in an email.

Limited supplies

Nevada is currently ranked second

to last in doses per capita distribute­d to states, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. It also is second to last in shots administer­ed per capita, which state officials have blamed on reporting lags.

On Friday, state officials said that more than 137,000 doses of vaccine had been administer­ed across Nevada, including 2,000 second doses. Both of the vaccines currently in use in the U.S. require two doses. On Wednesday, state spokeswoma­n Shannon Litz said in an email that Nevada had received 212,200 doses to date.

Clark County had received 83,200 vaccine doses and administer­ed 60,632, the health district said the same day.

During a news briefing Wednesday, the health district’s acting chief health officer, Dr. Fermin Leguen, said he expected available doses to be administer­ed by the weekend.

The Cashman Center site administer­ed 15,323 vaccinatio­ns during its first week of operation, which ended Friday, Clark County spokeswoma­n Stacey Welling said in an email. The by-appointmen­t-only site is scheduled to reopen Monday.

County officials said that the site would be tightening controls after the Review-journal reported that some people leaving the site after getting shots said they had no appointmen­ts and had not been required to show identifica­tion verifying their age or occupation.

The squeeze on the vaccine supply has intensifie­d as a result of new occupation­al groups becoming eligible for the vaccine.

The newly eligible include teachers, child care workers, essential public transporta­tion workers, court officials, elected officials and their staff members and many other employment groups dubbed collective­ly as “frontline community support.”

 ?? L.E. Baskow Las Vegas Review-journal @Left_eye_images ?? Medical worker Jennifer Gorden, left, winces as Nevada State College School of Nursing student Edgar Ayala gives her a COVID-19 vaccinatio­n Friday in UNLV’S new clinic at CSN in Henderson.
L.E. Baskow Las Vegas Review-journal @Left_eye_images Medical worker Jennifer Gorden, left, winces as Nevada State College School of Nursing student Edgar Ayala gives her a COVID-19 vaccinatio­n Friday in UNLV’S new clinic at CSN in Henderson.
 ?? K.M. Cannon Las Vegas Review-journal @Kmcannonph­oto ?? Nursing student Alaysia Robinson administer­s a COVID-19 vaccine shot during a UNLV Medicine clinic Friday in the university’s student union.
K.M. Cannon Las Vegas Review-journal @Kmcannonph­oto Nursing student Alaysia Robinson administer­s a COVID-19 vaccine shot during a UNLV Medicine clinic Friday in the university’s student union.

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