Los Angeles Times

L. A. County is opening vaccine eligibilit­y to more health workers

Following state rules, officials expand pool to speed up rollout.

- By Colleen Shalby

In the f irst major expansion of the vaccine eligibilit­y list, Los Angeles County announced Monday that all healthcare industry workers can now receive vaccinatio­ns, including staffers at urgent and primary care clinics, research laboratori­es, pharmacies and dentist offices.

The announceme­nt follows last week’s guidance from the state and opens up the eligibilit­y list from the highest priority group. That pool includes healthcare workers in hospitals and nursing homes that deal directly with infected or highrisk patients. Officials expanded the list to speed up the vaccine rollout and ensure that leftover vaccine doses are not wasted.

By the end of the month, the county plans to vaccinate 500,000 more healthcare workers. To handle the surge, officials this week announced five additional vaccine distributi­on sites across the county would be opening, starting Jan. 19. In addition, Los Angeles said Sunday that Dodger Stadium would also be open for vaccinatio­ns.

The baseball venue had been the largest coronaviru­s testing site in the country before transition­ing to a vaccinatio­n site this week.

“We anticipate, at minimum, every site will be open seven days a week and has the capacity to vaccinate 4,000 to 5,000 people each day,” L. A. County Public Health Director Barbara Ferrer said, referring to the county- run sites.

The sites will be open for at least four weeks.

Currently, 180,174 PfizerBioN­Tech and Moderna doses have been administer­ed in the county, including 25,840 second doses. As of Wednesday, the county had received 490,995 vaccine doses.

Less than a third of doses that have been shipped to California have been administer­ed throughout the state.

Health and state officials have said that counties may move through the rollout at different speeds, depending on population.

In L. A. County, the rollout to the next group — 1B — is expected to start in early February. That group includes individual­s who work in education, child care, emergency services, food and agricultur­e, as well as those 75 and older.

Next in line would be people ages 65 to 74, those who work in critical manufactur­ing, industrial commercial facilities and transporta­tion, as well as homeless individual­s.

Incarcerat­ed people are also included in this tier, although at least one state prison has already started to receive the vaccine.

Following them would be individual­s in 1C who are ages 50 to 64 as well as workers in water and wastewater, defense, energy, chemical and hazardous materials, communicat­ions and IT, f inancial services and government operations.

Those county residents would probably start receiving the vaccine in March, Ferrer said.

Individual­s will be required to set up an appointmen­t and show verificati­on in order to receive the vaccine, she said.

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