Lodi News-Sentinel

Data issues thwart COVID-19 vaccine distributi­on efforts

- Melody Gutierrez

SACRAMENTO — Omitted doses, uploading errors, lag times and software mishaps. California’s vaccine rollout has been plagued by data issues, leaving the state unable to keep track of how many doses of the lifesaving COVID-19 vaccine are available at any one time.

The implicatio­ns are farreachin­g: Gov. Gavin Newsom has pushed to speed up inoculatio­ns in part because the state’s data appeared to show vaccine providers were sitting on doses, prompting the governor to threaten to take supplies from those who are not moving quickly enough. Now county officials say they are worried the data accuracy issues will cause future allotments to be curtailed based on flawed conclusion­s from faulty figures.

“We’ve been pointing out that their data is bad since the end of December,” said Fresno County Supervisor Ernest Mendes.

After being pushed to make public more informatio­n on the progress counties were making in their vaccinatio­n efforts, the state published a dashboard to “make vaccine data transparen­t and accessible to all California­ns.”

But the dashboard was so riddled with errors — including displaying a handful of doses from counties in Arizona and other states — that Kat DeBurgh, executive director of the Health Officers Associatio­n of California, said she initially told the state it should be taken down. Officials in smaller California counties also reported that the dashboard was drasticall­y underrepor­ting doses for them.

“When it first went up it was extremely inaccurate, but (the dashboard) looks much better now,” DeBurgh said.

The accuracy of the state’s vaccine data overall is improving, which has helped California raise its national ranking for doses administer­ed, but the effort has often been a manual and painstakin­gly slow process, said California Department of Public Health spokesman Darrel Ng.

And the work is not done. Yolo County public health officer Aimee Sisson told lawmakers during a hearing Wednesday that uploading errors have caused the state’s database to undercount the vaccines administer­ed in that county by nearly 30%.

“Neither the number received, nor the number administer­ed being reported by the state matches what we know to be true in Yolo County,” Sisson said. “Yolo County staff have been

working with a state contractor to troublesho­ot the discrepanc­ies to no avail.”

With California warning providers that a failure to administer vaccines fast enough could result in the state taking back doses, Sisson emphasized that the data the state relies on need to be accurate.

“If the state uses its current data to determine future allocation­s, Yolo County could be penalized for what the state sees as an administra­tion rate of 51%, but is actually an administra­tion rate of 74%,” Sisson said.

The data problems have made it appear that counties have been slow to get doses out to the public, Sisson said, prompting the state to look for new ways to speed up administra­tion. Newsom said the state will sign a contract with Blue Shield of California to overhaul the way the state allocates vaccines and to improve data collection. That contract is expected to be released this week.

Some county officials have expressed concerns about retooling the state’s vaccine delivery system, saying the issues are with the state’s data collection, not with how doses are distribute­d.

“The system isn’t broken,” Sisson said. “It just looks like it is because doses being administer­ed aren’t showing up.”

Part of the issue with the state’s data is the large number of vaccine providers entering informatio­n using different types of software. At times, the errors and delays have been the result of the software itself, some county officials have said. Other times the state’s immunizati­on registry indicates the dose informatio­n has been uploaded, but then fails to update the totals, according to county officials.

“I’m hearing from multiple local health department­s in the greater Sacramento region that they’re experienci­ng the same issue with missing doses (in the state registry),” Sisson said during the hearing. Dr. Paul Simon, chief science officer for the Los Angeles County Department of Public Health, added that

“we’re seeing the same thing here in Los Angeles.”

The Urban Counties of California legislativ­e advocacy organizati­on wrote in a letter to Newsom this month noting that its member counties were “significan­tly challenged by the lack of accurate data at the state level.”

Last month, Newsom touted how far the state had come in increasing daily vaccinatio­n numbers, but said the “two-, three-day data lag ... is killing us in terms of some of the national numbers.”

California’s significan­t vaccine data collection problems were first exposed when Newsom told California­ns to “hold me accountabl­e” to a goal of administer­ing 1 million doses of COVID-19 vaccine in 10 days. After that deadline passed, state officials said coding errors and data lags made it difficult to say whether Newsom met the goal.

The state’s pandemic response has been hampered in other ways by poor or outdated data systems, including the August discovery that a public health computer database failure rendered numbers unreliable and prompted secondgues­sing about actions taken to stem the spread of the coronaviru­s.

Facing criticism from county officials about the persisting vaccine data issues, Dr. Tomás Aragón, director of the California Department of Public Health and state’s public health officer, told lawmakers during Wednesday’s hearing that there is an “incredibly intense focus” on “cleaning up the data, improving the quality.”

“We have to improve the data,” Aragón said.

 ?? IRFAN KHAN/LOS ANGELES TIMES ?? COVID-19 vaccinatio­ns for health care workers were administer­ed at Dodger Stadium on Jan. 15 in Los Angeles. The site was forced to close last week due to shortages of the vaccine.
IRFAN KHAN/LOS ANGELES TIMES COVID-19 vaccinatio­ns for health care workers were administer­ed at Dodger Stadium on Jan. 15 in Los Angeles. The site was forced to close last week due to shortages of the vaccine.

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