Monterey Herald

Plan to get shots to nursing homes

- By Ricardo Alonso-Zaldivar and Carla K. Johnson

WASHINGTON >> Federal health officials on Friday unveiled a plan to get yet-to-be-approved coronaviru­s vaccines to nursing home residents free of charge, enlisting two national pharmacy chains to help.

Such a vaccine is not yet available, and that led to skepticism from some long-term care experts. The distributi­on program is contingent on the Food and Drug Administra­tion authorizin­g a vaccine, which does not appear to be imminent.

Under the voluntary program, trained staff from CVS and Walgreens would deliver the vaccines to each nursing home and administer shots. Assisted-living facilities and residentia­l group homes can also participat­e. Nursing home staffers can be vaccinated, too, if they have not already received their shots. Needles, syringes and other necessary equipment will be included.

The idea is to give hard-pressed states an allinclusi­ve system for vaccinatin­g their most vulnerable residents, said Paul Mango, a senior policy adviser at the Department of Health and Human Services. “We are trying to eliminate all potential barriers to getting folks safe and effective vaccines,” Mango said.

Counting nursing homes and other kinds of group residences, the nation has more than 22,000 such facilities.

People in nursing homes and other long-term care settings account for less than 1% of the U.S. population, but they represent about 40% of the deaths from COVID-19, with more than 83,600 fatalities logged by the COVID Tracking Project.

The Trump administra­tion’s initial attempts to promote coronaviru­s testing in nursing homes and to ensure sufficient supplies of protective gear were hampered by missteps and led to widespread complaints from nursing home operators and advocates for older people. The vaccine pro

gram seems designed to prevent more problems at a time when President Donald Trump is battling to hang on to support from older voters.

Earlier this month, the National Academies of Sciences, Engineerin­g and Medicine recommende­d that the initial, limited doses of vaccine should go to first responders and high-risk health care workers. Those next in line should include older residents of nursing homes, the National Academies said, noting that who gets the shots will depend on age guidelines determined by the data on vaccine safety and efficacy.

There are many unanswered questions about the vaccines now undergoing clinical trials, including how well they will work to prevent infection. It’s also not known whether they will be equally protective for older adults, as pharmaceut­ical companies generally test their products on younger people.

Dr. Christian Bergman, medical director of a nursing home in Richmond, Vir

ginia, said he is pleased the government has a plan for rapid deployment of vaccines, but he needs to see clinical data before any of his patients get shots.

“I await public release of all data concerning safety and efficacy,” Bergman said. “Without this data, I will not be able to ethically endorse this vaccine and promote it within my nursing home.”

The vaccinatio­n plan for nursing homes has been set up under the auspices of Operation Warp Speed, a White House-backed campaign to quickly produce and distribute hundreds of millions of doses of approved vaccines, enough

for every American. The goal is to shrink the production timetable from years to months. The effort involves HHS and the Defense Department, as well as drugmakers and other private companies.

Mango said he anticipate­s that if a vaccine is approved this year, initial supplies will be limited. Availabili­ty will improve markedly in the first three months of 2021, he said.

HHS is fielding an online survey for nursing homes to assess their interest in the vaccine distributi­on program, but the allocation of vaccines will be done through state and territoria­l government­s.

 ?? WILFREDO LEE — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? A senior citizen holds the hand of a care coordinato­r at a Health facility in Miami.
WILFREDO LEE — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS A senior citizen holds the hand of a care coordinato­r at a Health facility in Miami.

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