Los Angeles Times (Sunday)

COVID shots could be a day away for some in California

Anticipate­d delivery of the vaccines for medical workers is a ray of hope as cases surge statewide.

- By Alex Wiggleswor­th, Soumya Karlamangl­a and Tracy Wilkinson

California will begin providing the COVID-19 vaccine as early as Monday, but officials warned the initial shipment of roughly 327,000 doses won’t alter the rapidly deteriorat­ing conditions in state hospitals as the virus rages out of control.

Medical workers were expected to get the first doses of vaccine through a limited number of hospitals in California that include CedarsSina­i Medical Center, UCLA Health and Rady Children’s Hospital in San Diego. Officials expect to get more doses later this month and again in early January.

It’s a welcome glimmer of hope. But it is expected to be months before the vaccine hits the general population in significan­t numbers. And that leaves health officials struggling with an unpreceden­ted surge of COVID-19 that has swept through California.

On Saturday, officials announced another troubling milestone as the Central Valley hit 0% remaining emergency room capacity. Remaining capacity of Southern California ICUs fell to just 5.3% as officials expected many days of rising cases among people infected over Thanksgivi­ng.

“While vaccines are around the corner, they will

not be here in time to prevent compromisi­ng care for seriously ill individual­s at our hospitals,” Barbara Ferrer, L.A. County’s health director, said.

A doctor at an L.A. County public hospital said healthcare workers are being asked to fill out questionna­ires to determine their priority for a vaccine. The questions ask about how closely workers interact with COVID-19 patients and how regularly, as well as about their own health conditions and age.

The doctor, who requested anonymity because of lack of authorizat­ion to speak to the media, expressed hope that the vaccine would stem the “unrelentin­g onslaught” of COVID-19 patients flooding hospitals recently.

“Everyone I’ve talked to is waiting on bated breath for their vaccine and then will breathe a deep sigh of relief,” the doctor said Saturday, noting the vaccine was expected to become available to employees Thursday or Friday.

Trucks transporti­ng the first shipments of vaccines in the United States will begin rolling out Sunday morning, delivering several million doses Monday to 150 locations in numerous states, officials said Saturday.

The vaccine developed by Pfizer Inc. and BioNTech will reach an additional 450 locations Tuesday and Wednesday, Army Gen. Gustave F. Perna of Operation Warp Speed, the Trump administra­tion’s vaccine developmen­t program, said in a news conference in Washington.

The massive distributi­on operation, which Perna described in military logistical terms, will involve UPS and FedEx, working with California and other local government­s nationwide. He likened Saturday’s announceme­nt to D-day, the turning point in World War II.

“I am absolutely 100% confident that we are going to distribute safely this precious commodity, this vac

cine, needed to defeat the enemy COVID,” Perna said.

Initial shipments of about 3 million shots are expected to leave Pfizer’s manufactur­ing plant in Kalamazoo, Mich., via truck, then be flown to hubs around the country. A similar amount is to be held in reserve for patients’ second dose.

California was granted emergency use authorizat­ion by the FDA on Friday evening after it “met the FDA’s rigorous scientific standards for safety, effectiven­ess, and manufactur­ing quality,” said FDA Commission­er Dr. Stephen Hahn. The vaccine had already been approved in other countries, including the United Kingdom and Canada.

“The FDA’s authorizat­ion for emergency use of the first COVID-19 vaccine is a significan­t milestone in battling this devastatin­g pandemic that has affected so many families in the United States and around the world,” Hahn said in a statement released Friday.

Dr. Peter Marks, director of the FDA’s Center for Biologics Evaluation and Research, said the vaccine “holds the promise to alter the course of this pandemic

in the United States.”

A working group of scientists and experts representi­ng California, Washington, Oregon and Nevada are also reviewing the vaccine separately from the FDA process and will make a recommenda­tion by Sunday, Gov. Gavin Newsom said in a statement.

Still, a very small number of people will receive the vaccine this year, with the initial shipment to California “likely to end up largely in hospital settings,” Dr. Robert Schechter, a medical officer with the California Department of Public Health, told participan­ts in a vaccine advisory panel Wednesday.

Perna said local health authoritie­s would determine who gets the first shots, but generally medical workers and residents in long-term care institutio­ns were being prioritize­d.

The state Department of Public Health selected at least seven hospitals to receive the first batch of vaccine based on their storage capacity, the relatively high risk of their healthcare population­s and their ability to distribute the vaccine in the community once it becomes widely available, UC

Davis Health said in a news release.

In Northern California, designated hospitals include UC San Francisco Medical Center, Mercy Medical Center in Redding and UC Davis Health in Sacramento.

The hospitals also must be able to store the vaccine at extremely low temperatur­es: minus 70 degrees Celsius (about minus 95 degrees Fahrenheit).

Officials at hospitals slated to receive the vaccine said they were working to distribute the first doses equitably and in accordance with guidelines issued by federal and local health authoritie­s.

UC Davis Health formed a working group that’s spent several weeks developing a tiered approach to vaccinatin­g employees based on the risk of infection that’s associated with the type of work they perform, the healthcare system said.

In the emergency department, top-tier job classifica­tions include custodial workers, physicians, nurses, first responders and clerks, officials said. The health system says it’s prepared to inoculate up to 400 employees each day.

Vaccine shipments can’t arrive in California soon enough. The state Friday marked another milestone, tallying a cumulative 1.5 million coronaviru­s cases. The state is adding an average of nearly 29,000 new infections a day, a staggering toll. More than 20,700 California­ns have died, a state tally eclipsed only by Texas and New York.

The U.S. hit another grim daily record Friday, recording 3,309 deaths related to COVID-19. That surpassed the previous one-day high of 3,124 reported Wednesday, according to data compiled by Johns Hopkins University. Friday also saw a new high in daily confirmed infections, with more than 231,000. That’s nearly 4,000 more than the previous record, set on Dec. 4.

COVID-19 hospitaliz­ations in California have reached new highs every day this week, growing to 12,444 patients as of Friday, according to data released Saturday. Remaining ICU capacity continued to drop in many regions, with Southern California reporting availabili­ty of 5.3% Saturday, down from 6.2% a day earlier, and the San Joaquin Valley region reporting zero remaining capacity, down from 4.5% a day earlier.

In L.A. County, which has been particular­ly hard hit, the number of COVID-19 patients topped 4,000 for the first time since the start of the pandemic, according to data released Saturday.

County public health officials Saturday reported 11,476 new cases of the virus and 70 related deaths, and ticked off a list of sobering statistics illustrati­ng how quickly transmissi­on has risen. Over the past month, the five-day average of new cases has shot up 370%, deaths have increased 416%, the rate of tests coming back positive has risen 141% and hospitaliz­ations have increased 303%, officials said.

L.A. County will receive its first shipment of nearly 83,000 COVID-19 vaccines as soon as Monday, according to County Supervisor Janice Hahn. They will first be sent to nine facilities that have ultracold freezers, then distribute­d to 83 acute care hospitals and administer­ed to healthcare workers based on their level of risk, the county Department of Public Health said.

Vaccines will also be sent directly to skilled nursing facilities to be given to staff and residents; other types of long-term care facilities will be able to receive vaccines from CVS and Walgreens through a federal partnershi­p program, L.A. County health officials said.

The county expects to receive two more batches of vaccine in December, then weekly batches during the new year, according to the Department of Public Health.

County health officials said they are planning a three-phase rollout. After the first phase consisting of healthcare workers and institutio­nal residents and staff, the second will focus on essential workers and the third on high-risk groups, including seniors and people with chronic health conditions. Officials were still working out the details of exactly how people would be prioritize­d within the broad groupings.

Hahn said she hopes that essential workers will begin to be vaccinated by early February.

“This is great news — but we aren’t out of the woods yet,” Hahn said in a statement Saturday.

A second vaccine, created by the pharmaceut­ical company Moderna in partnershi­p with the National Institutes of Health, could be granted emergency use authorizat­ion next week, said Schechter of the California Department of Public Health.

In total, California expects at least 2 million doses of COVID-19 vaccines by the end of December and approximat­ely 6 million by the end of January, he said.

 ?? Robert Gauthier Los Angeles Times ?? HOSPITALS SLATED to receive the first batches of COVID-19 vaccine include Cedars-Sinai Medical Center in Los Angeles, above, and UCLA Health.
Robert Gauthier Los Angeles Times HOSPITALS SLATED to receive the first batches of COVID-19 vaccine include Cedars-Sinai Medical Center in Los Angeles, above, and UCLA Health.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States