Los Angeles Times

Rollout begins for Moderna vaccine

Advisors suggest shot be given to people 75 and older and to key workers like police, firefighte­rs, teachers.

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Essential workers and people 75 and older join priority list.

OLIVE BRANCH, Miss. — A federal advisory panel put people 75 and older and essential workers including f irefighter­s, teachers and grocery store workers next in line for COVID- 19 shots as a second vaccine began rolling out Sunday to hospitals.

The two developmen­ts come as the nation seeks to ramp up a vaccinatio­n program, begun just in the last week, that has given initial shots to about 556,000 Americans, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

The COVID- 19 vaccine developed by Pfizer and Germany’s BioNTech already is being distribute­d, and regulators last week authorized one from Moderna and the National Institutes of Health.

This month, the Advisory Committee on Immunizati­on Practices said healthcare workers and nursing home residents — about 24 million people — should be first in line for the vaccines.

Sunday’s vote by the panel concerned who should be next, and by a vote of 13 to 1, it decided that next in line should be people 75 and older, who number about 20 million, as well as certain front- line workers, who total about 30 million.

Those essential workers include f irefighter­s and police; teachers and school staff; those working in food, agricultur­al and manufactur­ing sectors; correction­s workers; U. S. Postal Service employees; public transit workers; and grocery store workers.

They are considered at very high risk of infection because their jobs are critical and require them to be in regular contact with other people.

It’s unclear how long it will take to vaccinate those groups. Vaccine doses have come out slower than was earlier projected, though some experts note that not everyone who is recommende­d to get vaccinated may choose to get a shot.

The committee also

voted that behind those groups should be people ages 65 to 74, numbering about 30 million; those ages 16 to 64 with certain medical conditions such as obesity and cancer who are at higher risk if they become infected with COVID- 19, numbering as many as 110 million; and a tier of other essential workers. This group of as many as 57 million includes a wide category of food service and utility workers but also those in legal and f inancial jobs and the media.

The expert panel’s recommenda­tion next goes to the CDC director and to states as guidance to put together vaccinatio­n programs. CDC directors have almost always signed off on committee recommenda­tions. No matter what the CDC says, there will be difference­s from state to state, because health department­s have various ideas about who should be closer to the front of the line.

Federal officials expect that vaccine doses will be limited for several months. CDC officials say up to 20 million are projected to start getting shots this month, an

additional 30 million next month, and 50 million in February. That’s 100 million people, out of a population of more than 330 million.

Pfizer’s shots were f irst shipped out a week ago and started being used the next day, kicking off the nation’s biggest vaccinatio­n drive.

Public health experts say the shots — and others in the pipeline — are the only way to stop a virus that has been spreading wildly. Nationwide, more than 219,000 people per day on average test positive for the virus, which has killed more than 317,000 in the U. S. and nearly 1.7 million worldwide.

On Sunday, trucks left the Olive Branch, Miss., factory, near Memphis, Tenn., with the vaccine developed by Moderna and the National Institutes of Health. The much- needed shots are expected to be given starting Monday, just three days after the Food and Drug Administra­tion authorized their emergency- use rollout.

In Louisville, Ky., UPS driver Todd Elble said his vaccine shipment was the “most important load that I’ve hauled” in a 37- year ca

reer. His parents contracted COVID- 19 in November, and his 78- year- old father died. He said the family speculated that his father became infected while traveling on a hunting trip with four other relatives to Wyoming, and some are still sick.

“I’m going to take the vaccine myself. I’m going to be f irst in line for my father — I’ll tell you that much — and any others that should follow,” he said. “I feel in my heart that everybody should, to help get this stopped.

“To bring this back, I feel Dad was in the truck with me today.”

Dr. Moncef Slaoui, the chief science advisor to the federal government’s vaccine distributi­on effort, said on CNN’s “State of the Union” that nearly 8 million doses would be distribute­d Monday, about 5.9 million of the Moderna vaccine and 2 million of the Pfizer vaccine.

Slaoui also predicted the U. S. would experience “a continuing surge,” with larger numbers of coronaviru­s cases possible from gatherings for Christmas.

“I think, unfortunat­ely, it will get worse,” he said.

There won’t be enough shots for the general population until spring, so doses will be rationed at least for the next several months. President- elect Joe Biden pledged this month to have 100 million doses distribute­d in his f irst 100 days in office, and his surgeon general nominee said Sunday that it was still a realistic goal.

But Vivek Murthy told NBC’s “Meet the Press” it was more realistic to think it might be midsummer or early fall before vaccines were available to the general public, rather than late spring. Murthy said Biden’s team was working toward having the shots available to lower- risk individual­s by late spring but doing so required “everything to go exactly on schedule.”

Meanwhile, President Trump’s surgeon general, Jerome Adams, defended the administra­tion’s handling of the Pfizer vaccine Sunday, a day after the Army general in charge of getting COVID- 19 vaccines across the U. S. apologized Saturday for “miscommuni­cation” with states over the number of doses to be delivered in the early stages of distributi­on. At least a dozen states reported they would receive a smaller second shipment of the Pfizer vaccine than they had been told.

Gen. Gustave Perna told reporters in a telephone briefing that he made mistakes by citing numbers of doses that he believed would be ready. Slaoui said the mistake was assuming vaccines that had been produced were ready for shipment when there was a twoday delay.

“And unless it’s perfectly right, we will not release vaccine doses for usage,” he said. “And, sometimes, there could be small hiccups. There have been none, actually, in manufactur­ing now. The hiccup was more into the planning.”

But Adams told CBS’ “Face the Nation” that “the numbers are going to go up and down.”

“It absolutely was not poor planning,” he said. “There’s what we plan. There’s what we actually allocate. There’s what’s delivered, and then there’s what’s actually put in people’s arms.”

Adams, who is Black American, said he understood that mistrust of the medical community and the vaccine among Black Americans “comes from a real place,” the mistreatme­nt of communitie­s of color. He cited the decades- long Tuskegee experiment in Alabama, where Black men with syphilis were not treated so the disease could be studied.

He also said immigrants in the U. S. illegally should not be denied the vaccine because of their legal status because “it’s not ethically right to deny those individual­s.”

“I want to reassure people that your informatio­n when collected to get your second shot, if you get the Pfizer or Moderna vaccine, will not be used in any way, shape or form to harm you legally,” Adams said. “That is something that I have been assured of.”

The Moderna- NIH vaccine and the Pfizer- BioNTech shot require two doses to be given several weeks apart. The second dose must come from the same company as the f irst. Both vaccines appeared safe and strongly protective in large, still unfinished studies.

 ?? I rfan Khan Los Angeles Times ?? FIREFIGHTE­RS are among the essential workers who should next receive a COVID- 19 vaccine because of their high risk of infection, according to a federal panel. Above, a f ire crew in the Angeles National Forest.
I rfan Khan Los Angeles Times FIREFIGHTE­RS are among the essential workers who should next receive a COVID- 19 vaccine because of their high risk of infection, according to a federal panel. Above, a f ire crew in the Angeles National Forest.

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