Marin Independent Journal

State targets vaccine for the vulnerable

40% of all doses will be sent to high-risk areas

- By Janie Har and Kathleen Ronayne

California will begin sending 40% of all vaccine doses to the most vulnerable neighborho­ods in the state to try to inoculate people most at risk from the coronaviru­s and get the state’s economy open more quickly, Gov. Gavin Newsom said Thursday in the latest shake-up to the state’s rules.

The doses will be spread among 400 ZIP codes where there are about 8 million people eligible for shots, said Dr. Mark Ghaly, the state’s health and human services secretary. Many of the neighborho­ods are in Los Angeles County and the central valley, which have had among the highest rates of infection.

The areas are considered most vulnerable based on metrics such as household income, education level and access to health care. Newsom said that not only is this the right thing to do, it’s critical to opening up more of the state’s economy.

“It is a race against the variants. It’s a race against exhaustion. It’s a race to safely, thought

fully open our economy, mindful that it has to be an economy that doesn’t leave people behind, that is truly inclusive,” Newsom, a Democrat, said at a news conference. He also encouraged people to wear two masks.

The announceme­nt is the latest change in an evolving approach to getting nearly 40 million residents vaccinated, adding to ongoing confusion among people clamoring for shots. The move to ease reopening also comes days after several Republican-led states lifted COVID-19 restrictio­ns as the U.S. now has three vaccines available.

Tying reopening to vaccinatio­n equity metrics was cheered by representa­tives of the legislativ­e Black and Latino caucuses, as well as social justice and equity groups. Latinos make up roughly half of cases and

deaths in California even though they are 39% of the population.

Dr. Sergio Aguilar-Gaxiola, director of the UC Davis Center for Reducing Health Disparitie­s, said the dedicated vaccine hasn’t come soon enough given the disparate numbers of deaths and the lack of access to vaccines in the hardest hit communitie­s.

“They are living dayto-day, so they have to go and work in order to survive and they don’t have the luxury to take half a day to go where the vaccine sites are,” he said.

The current standards for who can get a vaccine won’t change. Right now that’s people 65 and over, farmworker­s and grocery clerks, educators and emergency service workers. Transit workers, flight attendants and hardware store clerks are among those clamoring to be added to the priority access list.

“I wouldn’t say it’s

not fair, but it should be thought out a little bit more,” said Lee Snyder, assistant manager at Brownies Ace Hardware in San Francisco.

Setting aside 40% of vaccine supply essentiall­y means that hard-hit ZIP codes will be administer­ing double what they are currently, Ghaly said. Data show that of shots given, only about 17% were administer­ed in vulnerable communitie­s that have been disproport­ionately affected by the pandemic.

Double that amount was going to those in the top quarter of what California deems the healthiest communitie­s, Ghaly said.

Newsom has called equity the state’s “North Star.” Yet community health clinics that serve low-income and vulnerable California­ns say they haven’t been getting enough doses and are hopeful that will change. Ghaly said Thursday that the administra­tion will work with communitie­s

to make sure the vaccine gets to those patients, not to day-trippers from wealthier ZIP codes who have the time and tech savvy to schedule appointmen­ts online. Newsom said addressing the problem is like playing “whacka-mole.”

The health centers want to protect appointmen­ts for patients and others from underserve­d communitie­s “to ensure those people we are targeting are coming, not the vaccine seekers” from wealthier neighborho­ods, said Andie Martinez Patterson, vice president of government affairs at the California Primary Care Associatio­n. She said a recent South Los Angeles clinic recently found its appointmen­ts had been booked by people from Beverly Hills.

Ghaly said that people with certain disabiliti­es or underlying health conditions who will be eligible in mid-March will not be left out, as many live in some

of the disadvanta­ged areas. He said he expects all communitie­s to receive at least as many doses of vaccine as they’re receiving now.

As more doses are administer­ed in the targeted neighborho­ods, the state will make it easier for counties to move through tiers that dictate business and school reopenings.

Right now, counties can move from the most restrictiv­e purple tier to the lower red tier based on metrics including the number of new COVID-19 cases per 100,000 people per day over a period of several weeks. The strict standard for that rate will be lowered, allowing businesses such as restaurant­s and gyms to reopen indoors at limited capacity.

While race and ethnicity are not explicit factors in designatin­g vaccinatio­ns, the 400 vulnerable ZIP codes overlap heavily with neighborho­ods with higher population­s of Blacks, Latinos and Asian and Pacific Islanders, officials said.

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