Los Angeles Times

A scientific review team for four Western states endorses vaccine.

A scientific review team representi­ng four Western states gives its endorsemen­t.

- BY ALEX WIGGLESWOR­TH AND TRACY WILKINSON

The COVID- 19 vaccine developed by Pfizer and BioNTech cleared another hurdle in California on Sunday, when a working group of scientists and experts endorsed its safety.

The group, representi­ng California, Nevada, Oregon and Washington, reviewed the vaccine separately from the U. S. Food and Drug Administra­tion, which on Friday issued emergency use authorizat­ion. The group made its recommenda­tion to the governors of the four states Sunday morning, officials said in a news release.

The move paved the way for vaccines to be distribute­d across California. Los Angeles Internatio­nal Airport’s Twitter account announced Sunday night that the f irst batch had landed in L. A.

“With shipments of the vaccine soon on their way to California,” Gov. Gavin Newsom said in a statement, “we are working hand- in- hand with local public health officials to get the vaccine out to the first phase of recipients.”

California’s f irst allocation of about 327,000 doses is being sent mostly to acutecare hospitals to be administer­ed to healthcare workers, although some counties have said they will also send a portion to skilled nursing facilities. The vaccine isn’t expected to be available to everyone who wants it until the spring.

“We’re really living in and writing history right now,” said Desi Kotis, UC San Francisco Health’s chief pharmacy executive, who is leading the vaccine rollout there.

UC San Francisco Health expects to receive at least 975 doses Monday or Tuesday, followed by more shipments later in the week. If hospital officials obtain the f irst allocation by Tuesday, “which is a big hope,” Kotis said, they plan to start vaccinatin­g people Wednesday morning.

The initial shipment won’t be enough to cover the 20,000 or so people affiliated with the healthcare system who need to be vaccinated, including staff at the UC San Francisco Benioff Children’s Hospital Oakland and multiple affiliate practices; the UC San Francisco police force; and students, staff and researcher­s at the UC San Francisco School of Medicine. Of those, UC San Francisco Health has prioritize­d 10,000 to 11,000 people because they’re at high risk of prolonged exposure to the coronaviru­s.

“It’s not just a doctor, a nurse or a pharmacist,” Kotis said. “It could be a physical therapist or occupation­al therapist working with a COVID patient. It’s a patient transporte­r moving COVID patients around the hospital and clinics. It’s the environmen­tal service worker, the custodial worker who’s cleaning our facility.”

Others who will be prioritize­d include f irst responders, people who are working at coronaviru­s testing sites or administer­ing vaccines, students in clinical rotations in high- risk areas like the emergency department, and researcher­s actively working with COVID- 19 patients or vaccines, Kotis said.

She said the hospital is being careful to vaccinate only about a third of any given work group at a time, so if employees suffer side effects and need a day off, enough workers remain to take care of patients.

The state Department of Public Health selected UC San Francisco Health as a vaccine distributi­on site in early November after it answered a detailed series of questions about its facilities, down to the detail of the serial numbers on its ultracold freezers for storing the vaccine, Kotis said. The hospital also had to attest that it would be willing to vaccinate patients and employees who aren’t affiliated with UC San Francisco.

Based on the latest instructio­ns from health officials, UC San Francisco plans to use the initial doses of vaccine solely on its own employees and students, but that could change, and the hospital is “ready to pivot and do that work,” Kotis said.

“If our health department does say you may need to vaccinate others from long- term care facilities, whether it’s workers or residents, or other hospitals in the area, we will comply with the health department,” she said.

The health system hopes to have its high- risk workforce vaccinated by midJanuary. Students and staff can opt out. UC San Francisco will then move on to the second group of people to be vaccinated, which includes essential workers and highest- risk patients. Discussion­s are already underway concerning how people will be prioritize­d within those groups, Kotis said.

News of the working group’s recommenda­tion came as conditions continued to deteriorat­e at California’s hospitals. There were 13,047 COVID- 19 patients hospitaliz­ed Saturday, according to data released Sunday by the state. That’s a nearly sixfold increase from two months ago, when there were 2,226 patients.

L. A. County saw hospitaliz­ations increase by roughly the same proportion, logging 4,203 patients on Saturday, compared with 723 two months before. County public health officials on Sunday reported 29 deaths from COVID- 19 and 12,731 new coronaviru­s cases, marking the fourth consecutiv­e day the number of new cases topped 11,000.

The high f igures came despite the fact that case numbers are usually lower on weekends because some laboratori­es don’t report results.

As trucks carrying the vaccine departed Pfizer’s manufactur­ing plant near Kalamazoo, Mich., on Sunday, advocates sought to dispel skepticism about a drug that could save lives.

Dr. Francis Collins, director of the National Institutes of Health, said that the level of scrutiny to which the vaccine had been subjected was unpreceden­ted and that the data detailing its safety and efficacy were publicly available.

“This is a very powerful outcome of this incredibly intense yearlong experience to develop this,” Collins said on NBC’s “Meet the Press.” “And I think all reasonable people, if they had the chance to sort of put the noise aside and disregard all those terrible conspiracy theories, would look at this and say, ‘ I want this for my family; I want it for myself.’ ”

Collins acknowledg­ed that the sense the vaccine developmen­t was rushed, plus the “terrible polarizati­on” in the country, created a sense of skepticism. But, he said, it was unfounded.

Collins also cautioned that just because a vaccine is being rolled out, other steps in health safety should not be discarded.

“Masks are still going to be part of our life,” he said. “We need to recognize that and not step away or start to drop our guard.”

Kotis echoed that sentiment.

“There’s still going to be time where we have to abide by the rules and mask and distance and keep our hands clean and not party like it’s 1999 and go to a big rave tomorrow night because I got my vaccine,” she said. “We’re still going to have to be patient, and it’s going to take time. But the light at the end of the tunnel isn’t a train coming back at us anymore. It’s a bright beacon of hope.”

Jay Inslee, the Democratic governor of Washington, said the review by the four states should help assure residents of the region.

“It was crucial that the Western states had their own independen­t review of the vaccine,” Inslee said in a statement, “so we can have additional confidence on its safety and efficacy before we start administer­ing to the people of our states.”

 ?? Frank Augstein Pool Photo ?? A NURSE at a hospital in London holds a vial of the COVID- 19 vaccine developed by Pfizer and BioNTech.
Frank Augstein Pool Photo A NURSE at a hospital in London holds a vial of the COVID- 19 vaccine developed by Pfizer and BioNTech.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States