Las Vegas Review-Journal

Unfilled appointmen­ts? Lower the eligibilit­y age

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Gov. Steve Sisolak last week slammed Southern Nevada officials for allowing healthy, young city and county government employees to jump the vaccine line. He’s absolutely correct. But it didn’t help that guidance from the governor’s own state health officials, under the dubious guise of “continuity of governance,” included the vague loophole that facilitate­d the scandal in the first place.

It’s another example of the lack of coordinati­on and mixed messaging that has plagued the process from the beginning.

Gov. Sisolak, however, has the chance to remedy another unnecessar­y roadblock when it comes to getting shots in the arms of those who need them most.

On Monday, Clark County public health officials said that many vaccine appointmen­ts remain available. The county’s two major inoculatio­n sites — Cashman Center and the Las Vegas Convention Center — can each handle 4,000 shots a day but are currently operating well below capacity. Cashman is running at about 2,500 vaccinatio­ns daily, while the Convention Center is below 3,000.

“We really are struggling right now to fill our vaccinatio­n sites,” said Dr. Fermin Leguen, the chief health officer for the Southern Nevada Health District.

The tale is similar at other locations. Officials at UNLV’S clinic, which can administer 2,000 shots a day, said they’ve been operating at half capacity in recent days, the Review-journal reported Wednesday.

Dr. Leguen stressed that the situation has not led to an increase in wasted doses. But that may become increasing­ly likely as appointmen­ts go unfilled.

In recognitio­n of the situation,

Dr. Leguen has asked the state to expand eligibilit­y — now limited to those in certain profession­s and seniors 65 years and up — to members of the general public who are 55 and older.

The suggestion makes eminent sense, as does opening up appointmen­ts to those with serious pre-existing conditions. Yes, health officials must continue and expand outreach to those who are currently eligible. Mobile vaccinatio­n clinics to reach homebound seniors and drive-thru sites would also encourage more participat­ion. But it defies logic to remain beholden to arbitrary bureaucrat­ic guidelines if a few thousand appointmen­ts in Southern Nevada go unused every day. Filling those slots would hasten the ultimate objective.

Yet state officials have so far brushed off Clark County’s suggestion, offering little more than “stay the course.” But this unpreceden­ted mass vaccinatio­n effort demands a nimble and flexible response rather than bureaucrat­ic inertia. The Clark County proposal is a no-brainer, and Gov. Sisolak needs to step up quickly and do what’s right.

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