Miami Herald

After weeks of waiting, a push to vaccinate residents of Florida’s assisted-living facilities

Assisted-living facilities were left behind in Florida’s first batch of vaccines for long-term care sites. This week, ALF residents are getting their first shots.

- BY SAMANTHA J. GROSS sgross@miamiheral­d.com

When the first shots of a COVID-19 vaccine went into arms of Florida’s long-term care residents and staff, Gov. Ron DeSantis promised that the state’s most vulnerable — the 4.5 million residents over 65 — would be prioritize­d in the inoculatio­n process.

That was in mid-December, during a news conference at a Pompano Beach nursing home where 90 residents became among the nation’s first to be vaccinated. The state health department also deployed a “strike team” of profession­als at the time to help with nursing-home vaccinatio­ns.

A few days later, on Dec. 23 — with nursing-home vaccinatio­ns still ramping up and assisted-living vaccinatio­ns still not begun —

DeSantis issued an executive order that made anyone 65 and older eligible for the vaccine.

From there, demand soared. Phone lines to hospitals crashed across the state, websites glitched and thousands of appointmen­ts were snatched up minutes after online portals opened. Many assisted-living facilities were left waiting for word from the state — which had contracted with CVS and Walgreens — about when they would get their shots.

“Once the governor opened the floodgates for anyone 65 and older, that changed the pace of everything,” said Rick Oppenheim, a spokesman for the Florida Assisted Living Associatio­n. “We are still uncertain of why ALFs haven’t been more of a priority.”

On Friday, Division of Emergency Management spokesman Jason Mahon wrote in an email that the state is expecting to vaccinate all long-term care residents by the end of the month. He wouldn’t answer questions about how many that is.

But the state’s Division of Emergency Management has tapped a private company from Miami that has operated COVID test sites, CDR Maguire, to vaccinate assisted-living residents by Jan. 23, if they are not already scheduled for a shot with CVS or Walgreens.

In a memo sent to providers Jan. 7, the Agency for Healthcare Administra­tion wrote that “in accordance with Governor DeSantis’ efforts to expedite vaccinatio­ns for assisted living facility residents and staff,” the private company would contact assisted-living facilities to make arrangemen­ts for vaccinatio­ns.

CDR has started vaccinatin­g residents of assisted-living facilities in Broward, Hillsborou­gh, Miami-Dade and Palm Beach counties, according to a memo sent to providers Thursday. Additional counties will begin the week of Jan. 18.

The company has been directed to assist with vaccinatin­g all assistedli­ving facilities in the state, moving from one county to the next until all have been vaccinated, the memo said. Facilities should “immediatel­y prepare and be ready,” as notice could be given as soon as 24 hours in advance, including on weekends.

The company would not comment for this story, referring all questions to the state.

Assisted-living resident Lorraine Spann, 94, was one of those whose Feb. 23 appointmen­t with Walgreens at her Wilton Manors facility was changed to Jan. 20 with CDR Maguire.

Her son, Ronald Spann, 71, of Lauderdale-by-theSea, said he felt the first date was “outrageous,” and was happy to hear the Miami company had been brought on.

“It will be great, if it actually happens,” Spann said.

ASSISTED-LIVING FACILITIES ‘SECONDARY’

Assisted-living facilities faced some of the state’s first coronaviru­s outbreaks and deaths in March, after which the state vowed to send “strike teams” for contact tracing and prioritize for personal protective equipment.

And while the state’s approximat­ely 3,100 assisted-living facilities were included in the state’s draft vaccinatio­n blueprint, they were not included in the initial rollout of the federal pharmacy partnershi­p plan with CVS and Walgreens, which vaccinated the bulk of the state’s nursing-home residents and staff.

“While nursing homes do provide a higher level of care and their residents tend to be more at risk, ALFs were sort of put in a secondary position when it came to the priority order for vaccines,” Oppenheim said.

CVS and Walgreens only began inoculatin­g assistedli­ving residents and staff Jan. 11, a date that CVS spokesman Joseph Goode said was chosen by the state of Florida.

Geoffrey Aaronson, 69, of Miami Beach, said he was disappoint­ed to see his partner get a vaccine appointmen­t before his 94year-old mother, Lily Aaronson, who lives at a Miami Jewish Health assistedli­ving facility in Little Haiti.

He believed assistedli­ving residents were the first priority under the governor’s orders, he said.

“That just hasn’t been the case,” said Aaronson, whose mother will be getting her shot on Tuesday, two days after he gets his vaccine at Mount Sinai Medical Center. “I think there’s been an inordinate delay. My problem has been the misreprese­ntation with regard to the priority.”

SOME ALFS ARE STILL WAITING

Veronica Catoe, CEO of the Florida Assisted Living Associatio­n, said while the situation has improved since CDR Maguire was brought on, there are still facilities that have yet to be given vaccinatio­n dates.

“While the effort appears to be on a positive trajectory, frustratio­n and confusion remains over the initial rollout of vaccinatio­ns in ALFs and why these communitie­s appear to have been prioritize­d behind nursing homes and many in the general, 65and-older population,” she said in a statement.

Further complicati­ng the vaccine rollout was news Friday that federal vaccine allocation­s to the states, which have already been limited, will not increase as planned. According to The Washington Post, there are no vaccine “reserves” to be released, as promised by the federal government.

Neither the state Division of Emergency Management nor the Agency for Health Care Administra­tion, which oversees long-term care facilities, responded to requests for comment on how this will affect the vaccine distributi­on program in assisted-living facilities.

Brian Lee, a former Florida long-term care ombudsman who now leads an organizati­on called Families for Better Care, said he’s noticed assistedli­ving facilities have had to “play catch up” to nursing homes throughout the pandemic, and called the delayed vaccinatio­n “a travesty on so many levels.”

More than 8,671 residents of long-term care facilities have died of COVID-19, according to state data.

“Nursing homes were prioritize­d for testing, PPE, and the ALFs were left to fend for themselves,” he said. “The ALFs are no stranger to deaths. They need the vaccine as soon as possible.”

Kathryn Moore, the assistant administra­tor at Miami’s Bay Oaks Historic Retirement Residence, said she feels like assistedli­ving facilities are often left behind, and was disappoint­ed when she learned through media reports that they were not included in the December vaccinatio­n effort.

She felt relieved, however, when Walgreens came to the facility Wednesday to vaccinate the 44 residents and staff.

“I feel like I was waiting for Jan. 13 since March 13,” she said. “I’m exhausted.”

 ?? MATIAS J. OCNER mocner@miamiheral­d.com ?? Antonio Castro receives the Pfizer-BioNTech COVID-19 vaccine from Erika Blanco at an assisted-living facility in Kendall on Wednesday.
MATIAS J. OCNER mocner@miamiheral­d.com Antonio Castro receives the Pfizer-BioNTech COVID-19 vaccine from Erika Blanco at an assisted-living facility in Kendall on Wednesday.

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