Miami Herald

COVID-19 vaccine shipments begin in historic U.S. effort

- BY MARTHA IRVINE AND MORRY GASH

The first of many freezerpac­ked COVID-19 vaccine vials made their way to distributi­on sites across the United States on Sunday, as the nation’s pandemic deaths approached the new milestone of 300,000.

The rollout of the Pfizer vaccine, the first to be approved by the Food and Drug Administra­tion, ushers in the biggest vaccinatio­n effort in U.S. history — one that health officials hope the American public will embrace, even as some have voiced initial skepticism or worry. Shots are expected to be given to health care workers and nursing home residents beginning Monday.

Quick transport is key for the vaccine, especially since this one must be stored at extremely low temperatur­es — about 94 degrees below zero. Early Sunday, workers at Pfizer — dressed in fluorescen­t yellow clothing, hard hats and gloves — wasted no time as they packed vials into boxes. They scanned the packages and then placed them into freezer cases with dry ice. The vaccines were then taken from Pfizer’s Portage, Michigan, facility to Gerald R. Ford Internatio­nal Airport in Grand Rapids, where the first cargo plane took off amid what airport officials called a “jubilant” mood.

“This is a historic day,” said Richard W. Smith, who oversees operations in the Americas for FedEx Express, which is delivering 630some packages of vaccine to distributi­on sites across the country. United Parcel Service also is transporti­ng a share of the vaccine.

Helping with the transport of the vaccine has special meaning to Bruce Smith, a FedEx package handler at the Grand Rapids airport, whose older sister, Queen, died after she contracted the coronaviru­s in May. She was hospitaliz­ed in Georgia one day after he saw her on a video chat, and they never spoke again.

“I think she would be ecstatic to know that something that has ravaged our family — that a family member is going to be part of such a big project,” said Smith, 58, whose nephew, Queen’s son, also got sick and is still undergoing therapy for stroke-like symptoms. “It is very, very important.”

Tracked with GPS-enabled sensors, the initial shipments were expected to contain about 3 million doses, with many more to come. Federal officials say the first shipments of Pfizer’s vaccine will be staggered, arriving in 145 distributi­on centers Monday, with another 425 sites getting shipments Tuesday, and the remaining 66 on Wednesday. Doses of the vaccine, co-developed by German partner BioNTech, are given out based on each state’s adult population. Then the states decide where they go first.

In California, where health care workers will be among the first to be vaccinated, state health officials are prioritizi­ng hospitals that have adequate storage capacity, serve high-risk population­s and have the ability to vaccinate people quickly.

Initial surveys have found that even some health care workers don’t want to be first in line. Dr. Graham Snyder, who’s led the vaccine task force at Pennsylvan­ia health care giant UPMC, estimates that about half of its employees are willing to get the vaccine as soon as it’s offered.

“There’s that thought that maybe they don’t have to be so afraid to come to work if they can be vaccinated and be immune,” said Dr. Sandra Kemmerly, medical director of hospital quality at the 40-hospital Oschner Health System in Louisiana and Mississipp­i. Employees approved for the first round are getting texts and emails directing them to schedule their initial injection, she said. Enough vaccine is being saved so that each person who gets the first dose of vaccine can get a second required shot a few weeks later.

A survey from The Associated Press-NORC Center for Public Affairs Research found that about half of Americans want to get the vaccine as soon as possible. Another quarter aren’t sure, while the remaining quarter say they aren’t interested. Some simply oppose vaccines in general. Others are concerned that the vaccines have been rushed and want to see how the rollout goes.

Speaking to Fox News Sunday, Dr. Moncef Slaoui, chief science adviser to Operation Warp Speed, a U.S. effort to get vaccines developed quickly, also said he is “very concerned” about the skepticism about the vaccine in some circles.

He called the developmen­t of vaccines from several pharmaceut­ical companies, including Moderna and AstraZenec­a, “a remarkable achievemen­t of science, academia, the industry ecosystem and the U.S. government, working together.”

 ?? MICHAEL CLEVENGER Getty Images ?? Boxes containing the first shipments of the Pfizer and BioNTech COVID-19 vaccine are unloaded from air shipping containers at UPS Worldport on Sunday in Louisville, Kentucky. Each box contains dry ice to keep the temperatur­e at minus-94 degress and contains a GPS tracker.
MICHAEL CLEVENGER Getty Images Boxes containing the first shipments of the Pfizer and BioNTech COVID-19 vaccine are unloaded from air shipping containers at UPS Worldport on Sunday in Louisville, Kentucky. Each box contains dry ice to keep the temperatur­e at minus-94 degress and contains a GPS tracker.

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