Las Vegas Review-Journal

■ A soft launch of a statewide COVID-19 vaccine appointmen­t registrati­on system was planned for next week.

Simplifies setting of appointmen­ts

- By Michael Scott Davidson

Nevada is on the cusp of launching a statewide COVID-19 vaccine appointmen­t registrati­on system, with a soft launch planned in Clark County next week.

Officials expect the new unified system will replace individual ones currently used by local government­s. Several of those systems have been prone to technologi­cal errors as anxious residents try to schedule appointmen­ts.

The technology behind the state’s system will be provided by Salesforce, the same company that Nevada purchased its contact tracing software from last year, according to local officials knowledgea­ble about the project.

Nevada Department of Health and Human Services officials have declined multiple interview requests about the new system. During a news conference Wednesday, DHHS deputy administra­tor Julia Peek confirmed the system would debut in Clark County “in the coming weeks.”

“It is a voluntary system,” she said. “The state purchased it, and it can be used by anyone.”

Clark County Fire Chief John Steinbeck said one of the county’s smaller vaccine clinics will begin using the new registrati­on system next week as part of a soft launch. If all goes well, it will soon be used at the region’s largest immunizati­on operations.

“Our expectatio­n is that everything we run out of Southern Nevada Health District will end up utilizing this site at some point in time,” Steinbeck said. “We expect the city partners will also use this at some point in time.”

Thus far, the county’s mu

nicipal government­s and the health district have operated their own individual appointmen­t registrati­on web portals. Many residents have reported frustratin­g site crashes and technology glitches that prevented them from booking appointmen­ts.

“The big key for us is that it doesn’t crash,” Steinbeck said. “All we want to do is make it easier for people to get their appointmen­ts, and make it less stressful to get vaccinated.”

The disjointed efforts have also led to some residents double-booking appointmen­ts, forcing the health district to cancel the duplicates. Despite such efforts, no-shows continue to miss approximat­ely 15 percent of available appointmen­ts.

“Up to 10,000 of those were identified last week, and it’s very problemati­c,” said Greg Cassell, a former county fire chief who serves on the health district’s incident management team.

It should be simpler for residents to cancel appointmen­ts under the new statewide system, Steinbeck said. It will also help officials reduce time spent on data entry by streamlini­ng the patient informatio­n collection process and automatica­lly uploading it to the state’s vaccinatio­n database.

Having a statewide system will make it easier for workers at the state’s new vaccinatio­n call center to help Nevadans book appointmen­ts if they are having difficulti­es using web portals, Peek said. California began using Salesforce technology to register residents for appointmen­ts this January, the San Francisco Business Times reports.

However, one local government official said he is concerned that his team has not yet received detailed informatio­n about how the Salesforce system will operate.

“Not having eyes on it, not seeing it, not feeling it, is always concerning,” said the official, who spoke about the project on the condition of anonymity. “I honestly know zero about Salesforce.”

Peek said the state will conduct training within days of the system’s launch date. The decision was made based on feedback from local government officials.

“They don’t want to get trained on a system and implement a month later,” she said. “All of us have challenges rememberin­g how to use the system after a month.”

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