Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Vaccine rollout widens, lifting health workers’ hopes

- Matthew Perrone, Lauran Neergaard and David Porter

WASHINGTON – Hundreds more hospitals around the country began dispensing COVID-19 shots to their workers in a rapid expansion of the U.S. vaccinatio­n drive Tuesday, while a second vaccine moved to the cusp of government authorizat­ion.

A day after the rollout of PfizerBioNTec­h’s coronaviru­s shots, the Food and Drug Administra­tion said its preliminar­y analysis confirmed the effectiven­ess and safety of the vaccine developed by Moderna and the National Institutes of Health. A panel of outside experts is expected to vote to recommend the formula on Thursday, with the FDA’s green light coming soon thereafter.

The Moderna vaccine uses the same technology as Pfizer-BioNTech’s and showed similarly strong protection against COVID-19 but is easier to handle because it does not need to be kept in a deep freeze at minus 94 degrees Fahrenheit.

Another weapon against the outbreak can’t come soon enough: The number of dead in the U.S. passed a staggering 300,000 on Monday, according to Johns Hopkins University, with about 2,400 deaths and over 210,000 new cases per day on average.

Packed in dry ice, shipments of the Pfizer-BioNTech vaccine began arriving Tuesday at more than 400 additional hospitals and distributi­on sites.

The first 3 million shots are being strictly rationed to front-line health workers and nursing home patients, with hundreds of millions more shots needed over the coming months to protect most Americans.

The rollout provided a measure of encouragem­ent to exhausted doctors, nurses and other hospital staffers around the country.

Maritza Beniquez has had a frontrow seat to the devastatio­n the COVID-19 pandemic has wrought on communitie­s of color in New Jersey, so she jumped at the chance to take the vaccine that is being hailed as a turning point in the long and grueling battle against the virus.

The 56-year-old emergency room nurse at Newark’s University Hospital became the first person in New Jersey to receive the vaccine on Tuesday. All recipients will get a second shot a few weeks later.

“I’m happy that in another month and a half I won’t have to be afraid to go into a room anymore. I won’t have to be afraid to perform chest compressio­ns or be present when they’re intubating a patient,” Beniquez said. “I don’t want to be afraid anymore, and I don’t want to have that risk of taking it home to my own family and my own friends.”

Widespread acceptance of the vaccine is critical to eventually protecting enough of the U.S. population to defeat the outbreak. But just half of Americans say they want to get vaccinated, while about a quarter don’t and the rest are unsure, according to a recent poll by The Associated Press-NORC Center for Public Health Research.

In Manchester, New Hampshire, intensive care unit nurse Heidi Kukla said she volunteere­d to get the shot first to help dispel fears about the vaccine’s long-term effects and the speed with which it was developed.

“I know a lot of people have reservatio­ns about getting the vaccine,” she said after getting vaccinated at Elliot Hospital. “But I can assure you that there is absolutely nothing worse than being a patient on a ventilator in an ICU anywhere in this country right now with COVID.”

Shots for nursing home residents won’t start in most states until next week, when some 1,100 facilities are set to begin vaccinatio­ns. Government officials project that 20 million Americans will be able to get their first shots by the end of December, and 30 million more in January.

That projection assumes swift authorizat­ion of the Moderna vaccine, which also requires two shots for full protection. The U.S. government has purchased 100 million doses of the Pfizer-BioNTech vaccine and ordered 200 million doses of the Moderna serum. Assuming no delays, that would be enough to vaccinate 150 million Americans by mid-2021.

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