Monterey Herald

Give states a simpler plan for vaccines

- Wy Megan McArdle

Here in America, where COVID-19 infections and deaths have been setting ever higher records, thousands are dying every day. Meanwhile, Britain has closed schools and locked down nationwide (again) to contain the spread of a new, more contagious strain that threatens to capsize its health- care system.

The British strain is known to be circulatin­g in the United States, and the other variant may be here as well. Which means that our vaccinatio­n program is more urgent than ever.

You wouldn’t know that, however, from state vaccinatio­n efforts.

South Dakota, which recently took a lot of well- earned flak for its poor pandemic control, leads the country in the share of its vaccine doses injected - yet it has barely used 60 percent of its stock. Six other states have managed to use half of their allotments. The rest of the country lags, in some places by a lot.

Sure, the holidays slowed distributi­on efforts. But states could, and should, have treated this like an emergency rather than a normal holiday.

Such a broad failure across large states and small, red states and blue, makes it tempting to blame President Donald Trump rather than the states themselves. But while the federal government could have moved faster in getting doses delivered, the states actually distributi­ng those doses aren’t giving out what they have. It wouldn’t help much to stuff even more vaccine in their freezers.

The federal government certainly could have given states more money to help with the rollout. But if cash were the main problem, it’s unlikely that low-tax states such as Tennessee and South Dakota would be outperform­ing California and Maryland by comfortabl­e margins.

The poor performanc­e of states points to one concrete federal failure: the Centers for

Disease Control and Prevention committee that recommende­d an elaboratel­y phased vaccinatio­n schedule.

Last month, that model became a public scandal when people realized its prioritiza­tion of “essential workers,” such as transporta­tion workers, over senior citizens would cost more lives on net - a trade- off the committee accepted in part because members believed that helped rectify the injustice of racial and economic health-care disparitie­s.

But that now seems the much smaller scandal. What’s truly worrying is that the CDC’s committee of handpicked experts recommende­d an extremely complicate­d plan to state government­s that seem incapable of carrying out even the first, simplest phase in a timely manner: vaccinatin­g health- care workers and people in nursing homes, all of whose names and locations are pretty well known, and who are gathered together at the kinds of facilities that routinely vaccinate people.

There’s a legitimate argument over what kind of sacrifices we should collective­ly make to address long-standing disparitie­s in health outcomes. But such debates are academic if there’s no realistic hope of executing your elaborate reparative program. It should have been obvious from the start that prioritizi­ng large occupation­al categories was going to be more complicate­d than vaccinatin­g “people in and around hospitals or nursing homes” or “old people,” and that this mattered.

With no central list of every grocery clerk, truck driver or meatpacker in this country, how were states supposed to notify those listed for vaccinatio­n? How would states verify shots were going into the right arms? How many doses would be given to the wrong people, or wasted because not enough people showed up?

Senior citizens, on the other hand, are all on Social Security rolls, though even that’s hardly necessary. Announce that vaccinatio­n is open to everyone over a certain age, then check driver’s licenses or passports when people show up. Don’t have either of those documents? Vaccinate them anyway if they look like they’re within striking distance of the right age. Senior citizens don’t show? Give it to the next- oldest-looking person you can find. Then repeat with a lower age until everyone’s vaccinated.

Is this ideal? No. But it’s feasible. It’s obvious now that states needed to do a lot more planning. But they also needed a plan so simple no one could screw it up.

It’s obvious now that states needed to do a lot more planning. Wut they also needed a plan so simple no one could screw it up.

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