Las Vegas Review-Journal

Some providers allowing early sign-up for shot

- By Katelyn Newberg

Some COVID-19 vaccine providers are allowing teenagers and healthy Nevadans to make appointmen­ts ahead of Monday’s expanded eligibilit­y.

Monday’s expansion means that 2.47 million Nevadans 16 and older will be eligible to receive the vaccine. As of Friday, 33.9 percent of that population has received at least one dose of the vaccine, according to data from the U.S. Census Bureau

and Department of Health and Human Services.

State officials say they are anticipati­ng a big response to the expansion and expect appointmen­ts to be grabbed up quickly. As a result, not everyone will be able to immediatel­y get a shot, they say.

“Currently there is not enough vaccine to administer to every resident, but please be patient and check back as more appointmen­ts will be added,” Candice Mcdaniel, a Nevada Department of Health and Human Services official, said at a news briefing Friday.

To get a rolling start, University Medical Center and the state’s vaccinatio­n portal both began accepting online appointmen­ts Friday for appointmen­ts early next week.

The Southern Nevada Health District and a city of Henderson-sponsored clinic said they will begin taking appointmen­ts on Saturday for appointmen­ts as early as Monday.

UMC, which will administer doses at its large vaccine clinic at the Encore, said appointmen­ts are required and can be scheduled on a first-come, first-served basis at www. umcsn.com/covidvacci­ne, or by calling 702-789-5160.

As of late Friday afternoon, the state vaccinatio­n website was showing its first appointmen­t availabili­ty on Thursday of next week .

Cashman, LVCC closed Monday

The Southern Nevada Health District, which had to cancel vaccine appointmen­ts along with all other clinical services on Friday due to a boiler malfunctio­n, said it will begin taking appointmen­ts for those who are newly eligible beginning Saturday at www.snhd.info/covid-vaccine.

The Cashman Center and Las Vegas Convention Center vaccinatio­n sites, which are operated through the county health district, are not open on Mondays. Health district spokeswoma­n Jennifer Sizemore said Friday that there are no immediate plans to change operating days at the sites amid the increased eligibilit­y.

The City of Henderson also said in a news release that it will begin taking appointmen­ts for Nevada residents 16 and up on Saturday for its Sun City Anthem vaccinatio­n site, with the shots to be administer­ed beginning Monday.

Appointmen­ts can be scheduled by visiting the City of Henderson website at cityofhend­erson.com/

COVID19, it said. Appointmen­ts also can be scheduled on weekdays calling the city’s informatio­n hotline at 702-267-INFO (4636) from 7:30 a.m.-5 p.m.

Additional informatio­n for clinic locations in Clark County is available at www.nvcovidfig­hter.org or by calling 1-800-401-0946.

More than a dozen other states, including Texas, Oklahoma, Louisiana, Ohio, North Dakota and Kansas, have already opened COVID-19 vaccinatio­ns to all age groups with no underlying health conditions,

The Associated Press reported this week. Alaska was the first state to drop its eligibilit­y requiremen­ts in early March.

President Joe Biden has directed states to make vaccines available to all adults by May 1.

In Nevada, thousands of vaccinatio­ns appointmen­ts went unfilled in early March as demand slackened among eligible groups. Even after the state opened eligibilit­y to hospitalit­y and food service workers, appointmen­ts were still open.

However, state officials don’t expect that reaction this time.

No open appointmen­ts foreseen

Mcdaniel said Friday that waitlists already are long as people await their turn to be vaccinated.

“I don’t anticipate there being appointmen­ts available next week without being filled, just based on the interest that has been expressed by Nevadans across the state,” she said.

Dr. Michael Gardner, president and CEO if UNLV Medicine, told the Review-journal last week that he does not believe the university’s vaccinatio­n site, which can accommodat­e more than 2,000 people a day, 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.”

Even as more and more Nevadans get the shot, the state is preparing more education and outreach efforts to persuade the hesitant.

“We’re at a place now where we are trying to embed more in community-based locations to help support vaccine confidence,” Mcdaniel said. “So that will be an ongoing process to sort of address any hesitancy that people may have.”

 ?? L.E. Baskow Las Vegas Review-journal @Left_eye_images ?? Some providers are allowing early vaccine registrati­on ahead of Monday’s expanded eligibilit­y, when 2.47 million Nevadans 16 and older become eligible.
L.E. Baskow Las Vegas Review-journal @Left_eye_images Some providers are allowing early vaccine registrati­on ahead of Monday’s expanded eligibilit­y, when 2.47 million Nevadans 16 and older become eligible.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States