New York Daily News

GEARED UP TO GIVE MEDS

City can stock 1.5M doses of vaccine, sez health commish

- BY MICHAEL GARTLAND

The city will have the capacity to store at least 1.5 million doses of the much-anticipate­d COVID vaccines and expects to begin receiving the two approved vaccines before the end of the year.

“We are calibratin­g our entire public health infrastruc­ture to this project,” Health Commission­er Dr. Dave Chokshi said Thursday. “But the process of turning a vaccine into a vaccinatio­n will be a challenge, a formidable one.”

There are now two COVID vaccines for initial use: One, which was developed by Pfizer, is expected to become available in the Big Apple on Dec. 15. That vaccine requires ultracold storage at a temperatur­e of -112 degrees Fahrenheit. Chokshi projects the city has the capacity to store 320,000 doses of it at any given time. The other vaccine, by Moderna, can be stored in regular freezers, giving the city the ability to store much more of it.

The city plans to administer both vaccines. Healthcare workers and nursing home residents and staff will receive priority, but the specific details of how exactly that will work have yet to be fully hammered out.

Chokshi said the Health Department will use a registry to track whether certain neighborho­ods are lagging in vaccine distributi­on so it can ensure doses are being distribute­d equitably.

People will be able to register to receive it through making appointmen­ts, and eligibilit­y to receive the vaccine, at that time, will be assessed online, Chokshi said.

“After affirming on the day of their appointmen­t that they are symptom-free, they can show up and receive a vaccinatio­n,” he said.

How the vaccine will be distribute­d is a concern, especially among Black New Yorkers, who experience­d a higher rate of COVID infection than other groups. To address that, a group of Black leaders announced Thursday they’re forming a task force to ensure equitable distributi­on.

“We plan to make this a national model for the country,” said Rev. Al Sharpton, one of those leaders. “We want to identify, with specificit­y, those NYCHA community rooms, churches, mosques, and other places our people go, so we don’t have to drive in a car we don’t have and go to a Walgreens that

we don’t visit in the first place to get a vaccine.”

Mayor de Blasio said Thursday he shares similar concerns, which he believes are rooted in a historical distrust when it comes to the government distributi­on of vaccines.

“We have to act on it and we have to change it,” he said. “They deserve to get priority in terms of vaccine distributi­on. Folks in public housing deserve priority. These statements say something about making sure that there is fairness.”

Details about how vaccines will be distribute­d came as the city hit a COVID positivity rate of 5.19%, averaged out over 7 days, exceeding the 5% threshold it’s deemed as cause for concern. But reaching that threshold does not immediatel­y trigger restrictio­ns, which are determined by the state government and which rely on a separate set of thresholds.

As they prepare to distribute the vaccines, city officials also announced they plan to invest $20 million in a new Pandemic Response Institute with an eye to preparing the city and the rest of the country for future health emergencie­s.

De Blasio predicted it will be a “global leader in public health training, research and management”management — spur job growth.

The institute is expected to begin operating in 2021 and will be housed in the Alexandria Center, which now hosts the city’s Pandemic Response Lab.

“This is going to be crucial and will also to our future. It’s going to be crucial to our ability to protect people,” de Blasio said. “It’s so important to the recovery of New York City to bringing back and building an even stronger base of jobs.”

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 ??  ?? City Health Commission­er Dr. Dave Chokshi says plans are being finalized for storing and distributi­ng COVID vaccine from Pfizer (below) and shots could begin Dec. 15.
City Health Commission­er Dr. Dave Chokshi says plans are being finalized for storing and distributi­ng COVID vaccine from Pfizer (below) and shots could begin Dec. 15.

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