Las Vegas Review-Journal

In Clark County

As COVID-19 vaccine eligibilit­y has expanded, demand has decreased

- By Michael Scott Davidson and Mary Hynes

Just two weeks after extending eligibilit­y for COVID-19 vaccinatio­n to workers in Southern Nevada’s massive hospitalit­y and casino industry, officials are again having trouble filling appointmen­ts.

Some 78,000 Clark County residents received a first dose of vaccine through the week ending Tuesday. That’s a drop of more than 20 percent from the prior week, according to the Southern Nevada Health District’s weekly update.

Although local officials have come to expect an

“ebb and flow” of vaccine demand, Clark County Fire Chief John Steinbeck said he was surprised the numbers had dropped so quickly after members of the region’s dominant industry became eligible.

“Our expectatio­n was that would fill up every slot,” Steinbeck, who helps head the county’s vaccine operations, said of the recent eligibilit­y expansion.

March has proved to be a challengin­g month for Southern Nevada’s vaccinatio­n efforts, even as the federal government has increased the state’s weekly allocation of first and second doses.

Early this month, health district officials reported thousands of vaccinatio­n appointmen­t slots were going unfilled. Days later, state officials opened eligibilit­y to the region’s hospitalit­y and food service workers, a massive category in the gaming and tourism sectors of Las Vegas’ economy.

The county is now finding itself with open appointmen­ts again.

300 thawed doses threatened

Low turnout at the Las Vegas Convention Center mass vaccinatio­n site over the weekend threatened 300 thawed doses with expiration, health district health officer Dr. Fermin Leguen said. Officials opened the site on Monday, when it is usually closed, to offer the leftover vaccines to walk-ins.

The county’s two mass vaccinatio­n sites have accepted more than 5,000 walk-ins for first doses this month, health district data shows.

During a health district meeting Thursday, board member Olivia Diaz said she believed the state’s new vaccine appointmen­t system was contributi­ng to the problem.

“I think that it’s really imperative that we as a health district remove barriers instead of putting barriers in place,” she said. “The vaccinatio­n appointmen­t system is not very user-friendly.”

Joann Rupiper, the health district’s director of clinical services, told the board that the appointmen­t system was “working through bugs.” She said the health district is accepting more walk-in to help sites reach capacity, including people who currently are ineligible.

“When a person’s in front of you, you vaccinate them,” she said. “You don’t wait. Because if they wait, they may never come back.”

Overall, more than 555,000 county residents have received at least one dose of vaccine, and more than 290,000 are fully vaccinated.

Despite the recent drop in new vaccinatio­ns, the county plans to follow the state’s plan to wait until April 5 to open eligibilit­y to all Nevadans 16 and older, County Commission Chairwoman Marilyn Kirkpatric­k said Monday.

“We have about 176,000 hospitalit­y workers, so we wanted to give them the opportunit­y to get in and get out,” she said.

Slack demand at smaller sites too

Southern Nevada’s smaller government-run vaccinatio­n sites are also having trouble filling appointmen­ts.

To make vaccinatio­ns more convenient, North Las Vegas this week has begun offering appointmen­ts at its College of Southern Nevada site until 8 p.m., City Manager Ryann Juden said. The city had been finishing by 3:30 p.m.

“We are a 24-hour town,” Juden said. “We wanted to be more accommodat­ing to that reality.”

An official with UNLV Medicine said its vaccinatio­n appointmen­ts were only half-filled before eligibilit­y was opened to hospitalit­y workers. Appointmen­ts have increased, but not to the levels hoped for.

UNLV’S two sites combined can accommodat­e more than 2,000 people a day. On Wednesday, the sites had about 1,600 appointmen­ts scheduled, said Dr. Michael Gardner, president and CEO of UNLV Medicine, the medical practice of UNLV’S School of Medicine.

Gardner said he’s looking forward to eligibilit­y again being expanded. He’s not worried that sites will be overwhelme­d.

“My biggest fear is the vaccine hesitancy is still very real and … we’re not getting the number of people that we want to be vaccinated,” he said. “I think there’s a lot of misinforma­tion out there. I think we live in a time and an era when there’s a lot of mistrust.”

County officials have been working to increase vaccinatio­ns in minority communitie­s by addressing distrust and hesitancy.

This week, they unveiled the Back to Life campaign, which aims to curb concerns about the vaccine through multimedia and community outreach. Uber has volunteere­d to give rides to distributi­on sites from the 10 hardest-hit ZIP codes in the county.

A similar, longer-standing program for the region’s Latino population, Está en Tus Manos (It’s in Your Hands), appears to be working. About triple the number of Latinos have been vaccinated in March compared with February.

Pharmacies say they are bustling

Meanwhile, open appointmen­ts do not appear to be an issue for Southern Nevada pharmacies providing COVID-19 vaccinatio­ns. Neighborho­od pharmacies may be more convenient for many than mass vaccinatio­n sites, which often have waits of an hour or more.

The number of shots administer­ed each week increased by nearly 10,000 this month after high-risk residents age 55 and older became eligible to receive vaccines at pharmacies. The number remained about the same this past week, after pharmacies were charged with vaccinatin­g residents age 16 and older with certain medical conditions that put them at risk for complicati­ons from COVID-19.

Appointmen­ts fill up quickly at the 35 Smith’s pharmacies in Southern Nevada, which have administer­ed more than 30,000 doses of vaccine, said Dan Heller, health and wellness pharmacy practice coordinato­r for the region.

The dozens of Smith’s pharmacies in the region are prepared to double the number of shots they can give per day, Heller said. The chain is waiting to receive more vaccine from the state through the federal Retail Pharmacy Program.

“We just haven’t had the allocation yet to quite get there with what the state is giving us at the moment, but we expect that to change significan­tly in the coming weeks,” Heller said.

 ?? Erik Verduzco Las Vegas Review-journal @Erik_verduzco ?? Alex Vong, pharmacy manager at Albertsons, administer­s a second dose of COVID-19 vaccine to Elaine Triplett at the Nevada Adult Day Healthcare Center on March 17.
Erik Verduzco Las Vegas Review-journal @Erik_verduzco Alex Vong, pharmacy manager at Albertsons, administer­s a second dose of COVID-19 vaccine to Elaine Triplett at the Nevada Adult Day Healthcare Center on March 17.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States