Miami Herald

‘A month of miracles.’ S. Florida hospitals work together on vaccinatio­ns

- BY BEN CONARCK bconarck@miamiheral­d.com Ben Conarck: 305-376-2216, @conarck

Inside a large conference room at the Hilton Miami Dadeland on Baptist Health South Florida’s campus Wednesday, employees from the healthcare system lined up to receive their doses of the Pfizer-BioNTech COVID-19 vaccine under an abstract light fixture designed to illuminate the types of corporate events that went away in March.

Jose Ojeda, a pharmacist who works in the emergency department, was one of the Baptist employees lining up for a dose that could bring him closer to that pre-pandemic world.

“People say they are scared of getting the vaccine, but they should be more scared of COVID-19,” he said. “I work in the ER, so I see a lot of things. You start thinking, ‘It’s not worth it.’ ”

While Healthcare System in south Broward County and Jackson Health System in Miami-Dade are inoculatin­g their own employees, they’re also sending thousands of doses to other hospitals, including Mount Sinai Medical Center in Miami Beach, where the first doses of the Pfizer vaccine crossed the causeway sometime before 7 a.m.

The vaccine rollout in South Florida comes with rising cases and hospitaliz­ations.

The doses at Mount Sinai came from Jackson, which set aside 1,500 of the 19,500 doses it received Tuesday morning for Miami Beach’s hospital. Jackson also set aside 3,000 doses for its partner, UHealth, the University of Miami’s hospital system.

As of Wednesday evening, it was unclear how many doses Jackson would use for its front-line healthcare workers this week. The public-hospital network had already inoculated 2,356 employees in two days.

What’s left over could wind up at any hospital in Miami-Dade County.

“Our shared goal is to vaccinate all of the healthcare workers in our county’s hospitals who are interested in receiving the vaccine,” said Lidia Amoretti, a Jackson spokespers­on.

Amoretti anticipate­d an active weekend of inoculatio­ns.

“And, if necessary, we will go into early next week,” she said.

At least one of Jackson’s partner hospitals is eyeing multiple shipments, and likely multiple vaccines, in the coming days.

Angel Pallin, chief operating officer at Mount Sinai, said that he anticipate­s receiving additional vaccine doses next week — most likely the Moderna COVID-19 vaccine, which is expected to be federally authorized for emergency use by Friday.

“[Jackson was] gracious enough to share with other organizati­ons in South Florida so that we can get really a head start on inoculatin­g our employees here,” Pallin said.

South Florida hospitals have gotten used to that level of cooperatio­n, but it was relatively unheard of before March. Since then, area hospitals have worked together on everything from personal protective equipment for front-line workers to laboratory testing and clinical observatio­ns — most of it led by a weekly CEO call, according to Pallin.

“We’ve all benefited from that,” Pallin said.

Memorial, the first to receive the Pfizer vaccine, said it estimates using 7,000 doses and sending the rest to five other Broward hospitals.

Healthcare profession­als across South Florida hospitals shared amazement this week at just how quickly the area’s front-line workers are getting inoculated, less than a year after health officials in China uploaded the genome sequence of the novel SARS-CoV-2 virus. whiich causes COVID-19.

Dr. Roy Weiss, the chief medical officer at UHealth, said the hospital system is planning to administer 500 doses of the vaccine a day this week — working through the weekend.

Weiss said it was “absolutely exhilarati­ng and exciting that we have been able to realize this moment.”

“This is December, it’s not coincident­al. This is a month of miracles for everybody,” Weiss said. “A month where people get together and show how much they can accomplish by working together as a team.”

About a week before he was standing at a podium heralding the arrival of a COVID-19 vaccine in a sun-baked parking lot outside Baptist Health South Florida’s main campus, Dr. Sergio Segarra was giving his condolence­s to two colleagues who lost their mothers to the disease.

Segarra, an emergency medicine physician and the chief medical officer at Baptist Hospital of Miami, had just received his first dose of the Pfizer-BioNTech vaccine moments before he appeared in front of the cameras. The physician sounded emotional as he urged residents to take the virus seriously and get vaccinated.

“I have witnessed firsthand the devastatio­n that COVID has caused on our community, our patients, our staff and our staff’s loved ones,” he said.

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