Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Wisconsin’s daily shots per capita lead nation

Health leader: Faster speed result of better communicat­ion

- Molly Beck and Alison Dirr

MADISON – Wisconsin is now leading the nation in the average number of COVID-19 vaccine shots being administer­ed daily — a massive increase that comes as the Evers administra­tion is expanding its rollout to include free vaccinatio­n clinics across the state.

The state’s vaccine rollout has improved among national rankings significantly in recent days, now 10th in administer­ing a first dose to residents, and 16th in the total number of doses administer­ed — up from nearly last fewer than two weeks ago.

On a seven-day rolling average basis, Wisconsin is now administer­ing roughly 6,170 shots per million residents per day. The next fastest state, Hawaii, is administer­ing roughly 5,830 shots per million residents on average, according to data from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

The effort to get the state vaccinated began slow, lagging its Midwestern counterpar­ts, but is now third in the region in getting at least one dose of the vaccine into residents’ arms.

Health Services Secretary Karen Timberlake said in an interview Monday that the increased speed is, in part, a result of better communicat­ion from the federal government about how many doses the state will receive every two weeks — allowing for better planning.

“One of the things that the Biden administra­tion has recognized right away is that states need as much predictabi­lity and as much clarity as we can have,” Timberlake said. “So this week for the first time since we began administer­ing vaccine, we were able to allow our vaccinator partners to request supply for two weeks at a time instead of one week at a time. So that we’ll have a cascading effect.”

Timberlake also attributed the speed to changes in how the state handles the federal pharmacy partnershi­p program, which she said initially slowed down Wisconsin’s ability to distribute vaccine because it required the state to set aside tens of thousands of doses.

Local officials express frustratio­ns

But while the overall rollout is improving in the number of doses being administer­ed, some local officials in Milwaukee County say they are frustrated over what they call a lack of transparen­cy from the state regarding how the vaccine is being distribute­d.

Franklin Mayor Steve Olson called Monday for the elected leaders of Milwaukee County’s 19 municipali­ties to write a letter to the state about the issues.

“This is ridiculous,” Olson said during a meeting of the county’s Intergover­nmental Cooperatio­n Council. “Our health department’s phones are ringing off the hook, and they can’t tell people when we’re going to have vaccines or where they can go to get even on another list. It’s the lack of informatio­n from the state that is just handcuffing everybody, and it’s making this whole thing a joke.”

Ann Christians­en, director of the North Shore Health Department, said health leaders are frustrated by a lack of clarity on the state’s formula to allocate vaccine doses.

Health officials requested a meeting with state leaders later this week to get more informatio­n, she said.

As of Monday, Wisconsin was seventh in the Midwest in the percentage of residents who are fully vaccinated against COVID-19 and third in the percentage of residents who have received at least one dose of the vaccine — 10%.

State begins rollout of community clinics

The state Department of Health Services is expanding the rollout further by creating a community clinic in Rock County through a partnershi­p with Virginia-based AMI Expedition­ary Healthcare, a health care company that has administer­ed COVID-19 testing sites and vaccinatio­n clinics in other states.

It will open Feb. 16 and have enough doses to provide shots to 250 people daily at no cost. Once Wisconsin receives more vaccine doses, it plans to open six to 10 more clinics with the capacity to administer up to 1,000 shots per day.

“Wisconsini­tes are working together to stop the spread of COVID-19 and put this pandemic behind us. This partnershi­p with AMI is going to help us take another step in the right direction,” Gov. Tony Evers said in a statement.

A spokeswoma­n for the state Department of Health Services said agency officials would release the location of the clinic in the coming days.

The community clinic will be run primarily by AMI with help from state health officials and the Wisconsin National Guard, which has provided COVID-19 testing across the state since the pandemic first hit the state in March.

Christians­en said there’s also an effort to create a new community vaccinatio­n site in Milwaukee County, similar to the clinic at the Wisconsin Center set up by the City of Milwaukee Health Department. The second community site would serve the larger county population, she said. Health officials have requested support from the federal and state government­s for such a site, she said.

The community vaccinatio­n sites would fit into a network that also includes health care systems, pharmacies, local health department­s, and other independen­t vaccine providers, Christians­en said.

“The future capacity will certainly be there, and we’ll just wait and continue to hope that availabili­ty of that vaccine catches up to the growing capacity that we have,” she said.

The state is in the midst of its second phase of the vaccine rollout. Wisconsin residents in public-facing jobs, like providing health care and public safety, and anyone age 65 and older are eligible to receive vaccine shots.

A new phase begins March 1, which will include teachers, grocers, and anyone living in shared housing like prisons, among other groups.

 ?? ANGELA PETERSON/MILWAUKEE JOURNAL SENTINEL ?? TOP: Robert Kempka, 73, receives a COVID-19 vaccine at Infinity Pharmacy in Milwaukee.
ANGELA PETERSON/MILWAUKEE JOURNAL SENTINEL TOP: Robert Kempka, 73, receives a COVID-19 vaccine at Infinity Pharmacy in Milwaukee.
 ?? MIKE DE SISTI/MILWAUKEE JOURNAL SENTINEL ?? People wait to get the COVID-19 vaccinatio­n at the Wisconsin Center in Milwaukee. The city has set aside Mondays at the center to provide the vaccine to those 65 and older.
MIKE DE SISTI/MILWAUKEE JOURNAL SENTINEL People wait to get the COVID-19 vaccinatio­n at the Wisconsin Center in Milwaukee. The city has set aside Mondays at the center to provide the vaccine to those 65 and older.

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