Marin Independent Journal

States submit vaccine orders as coronaviru­s death toll grows

- By Farnoush Amiri and Bob Christie

States faced a deadline on Friday to place orders for the coronaviru­s vaccine as many reported record infections, hospitaliz­ations and deaths, while hospitals were pushed to the breaking point — with the worst feared yet to come.

The number of Americans hospitaliz­ed with COVID-19 hit an all-time high in the U.S. on Thursday at 100,667, according to the COVID Tracking Project. That figure has more than doubled over the past month, while new daily cases are averaging 210,000 and deaths are averaging 1,800 per day, according to data compiled by Johns Hopkins University.

Arizona reported more than 5,000 new COVID-19 cases for the second straight day Friday as the number of available intensive care unit beds fell below 10% statewide. Hospital officials have said the outbreak will exceed hospital capacity this month.

The state expects to get enough doses of new coronaviru­s vaccines by the end of the year to inoculate more than 383,000 health care workers and long-term care facility residents, the state’s health director said Friday. Next in line are teachers and other essential workers, followed by older Arizonans or people otherwise at higher risk of serious cases of COVID-19.

Nevada reported 48 new deaths from the coronaviru­s Thursday, marking the deadliest day since the onset of the pandemic as cases and deaths continued to rise more than a week after new restrictio­ns were implemente­d on businesses. One hospital was so full it was treating patients in an auxiliary unit in the parking garage.

State officials said Friday that they expect to receive 164,000 doses this month.

North Carolina reported a record 5,600 new confirmed cases Thursday and 2,100 hospitaliz­ations, as it awaited nearly 85,000 doses of the Pfizer vaccine, perhaps as early as Dec. 15.

Health care workers at a limited number of mostly large hospitals will be the first in line to receive the vaccine, prioritizi­ng those who are at highest risk of exposure to the virus, officials said. Future doses will be distribute­d to more hospitals and to local health department­s, followed by nursing home staff and residents.

Health officials fear the pandemic will get worse before it gets better because of delayed effects from Thanksgivi­ng, when millions of Americans disregarde­d warnings to stay home and celebrate only with members of their household.

At the same time, hospitals — and their workers — were stretched to the limit.

In Pennsylvan­ia, almost half of all hospitals in the south-central region and a third of those in the southwest anticipate­d staffing shortages within a week, according to the state Department of Health.

The state’s top health official, Dr. Rachel Levine, said Thursday that 85% of the state’s intensive care beds were occupied and modeling shows they’ll be full this month. Meanwhile, nurses in the Philadelph­ia area said the overwhelmi­ng number of COVID-19 patients was affecting the quality of care they can provide.

“I hear from physicians and from hospital leadership all the time about how strained the hospitals are,” Levine said.

Officials also are concerned that Americans will let down their guard once states begin administer­ing vaccines.

It will take weeks to months before many of the nation’s most vulnerable residents can be immunized, White House coronaviru­s response coordinato­r Dr. Deborah Birx said Thursday. Until then, Americans should not hold indoor gatherings with people they don’t live with or take off their masks when they’re outdoors, and should continue to keep their distance from others and wash their hands, she said.

“I think everyone can see that this current surge that we’re experienci­ng is much faster and broader across the United States and is lasting longer,” Birx said after a meeting at United Nations headquarte­rs in New York.

Nationwide, the coronaviru­s is blamed for almost 277,000 deaths and 14 million confirmed infections.

An inf luential modeling group at the University of Washington said Friday the expected U. S. vaccine rollout will mean 9,000 fewer deaths by April 1. The Institute for Health Metrics and Evaluation predicts that warmer temperatur­es and then rising vaccinatio­n rates will lead to steady declines in the daily death toll starting in February.

But even with a vaccine, the death toll could reach 770,000 by April 1 if states do not act to bring current surges under control, the group said.

States learned only this week how many doses to expect and when, and received guidance from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention recommendi­ng that health care workers and nursing home patients get the first doses. That meant that some had to make last-minute adjustment­s.

“2020 has taught us to plan for what you can and then expect something to happen that you never dreamed would happen,” Dr. Michelle Fiscus, medical director of the Tennessee Department of Health’s immunizati­on program, said during a Friday webinar. “I can’t tell you how many plans we’ve crumpled up and thrown away.”

Connecticu­t Gov. Ned Lamont said nursing home residents, along with frontline health care workers, will get the first doses in his state.

“These are the folks most likely to suffer complicati­ons. These are the older folks who most likely suffer fatalities. And these are the folks most likely to go into the hospital,” Lamont said Thursday. Connecticu­t expects to receive its first shipment of 31,000 doses of vaccine from Pfizer on Dec. 14 and its first shipment of 61,000 from Moderna on Dec. 21.

But states also were balancing concerns about the economy and protecting essential workers.

 ?? DAVID GOLDMAN — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE ?? A worker on Tuesday walks through the hallway of a newly opened field hospital operated by Care New England in Cranston, R.I., to handle a surge of COVID-19 patients.
DAVID GOLDMAN — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE A worker on Tuesday walks through the hallway of a newly opened field hospital operated by Care New England in Cranston, R.I., to handle a surge of COVID-19 patients.

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