Rome News-Tribune

Vaccine arriving at nursing homes

♦ Residents at some local facilities will begin getting COVID-19 vaccinatio­ns on Wednesday.

- By Beau Evans

Nursing homes in Georgia began receiving the first wave of COVID- 19 vaccines on Monday, bringing relief to the state’s most vulnerable group of people who have been hit hard by the virus for more than nine months.

About 39,000 doses of the vaccine made by pharmaceut­ical company Pfizer have shipped to elderly-care facilities as well as CVS and Walgreens pharmacies, which are partnering with the federal government to send doses directly to nursing homes, said state Public Health Commission­er Dr. Kathleen Toomey.

Staff at nursing homes who serve as “the firewall” protecting elderly residents will likely be vaccinated first, Toomey said during a news conference at Pruitt Health’s elderlyter­m care facility in Gainesvill­e.

She noted nursing-home residents account for 37% of Georgia’s deaths stemming from COVID-19, despite making up just 5% of the state’s overall positive cases.

“We hope with these vaccines we will begin to change those statistics and save lives,” Toomey said.”

Residents at Rome Heath and Rehabilita­tion Center on Redmond Road will start getting vaccinatio­ns on Wednesday. The skilled care nursing home in West Rome has contracted with CVS Pharmacy to provide the vaccinatio­ns.

“We are not mandating it. What we have found is that the percentage of residents taking the vaccine is actually larger than the percentage of staff at this point, but we’ve only run six or seven clinics so far,” said Annaliese Impink, a spokeswoma­n for the facility. “Well over 50% of our residents have consented to taking the vaccine.”

Rome Health and Rehab was one of the first long-term care facilities in Floyd County to experience an outbreak, at the outset of the pandemic, with several deaths reported. Impink said the facility has not reported any fatalities during the current spike.

Toomey also announced the state has set up a new vaccine- focused hotline for Georgians to ask questions about when they will get the vaccine, what the difference is between the two brands and how the vaccines are safe. The hotline number is 1- 888- 357- 0169.

So far, Georgia has been allocated 268,000 doses of the Pfizer vaccine and 234,000 doses of a vaccine produced by pharmaceut­ical company Moderna. Health- care workers have been first in line to receive the vaccines starting earlier this month. More than 26,000 vaccines have been given as of Sunday.

Gov. Brian Kemp noted more than 95% of all elderly- care facilities in Georgia have signed up with CVS and Walgreens for the direct- distributi­on program, which will cut out an extra step of routing vaccines through state officials.

“We are eager to see the vaccine make its way quickly and safely to our most vulnerable and to those brave Georgians who are giving them world- class care,” Kemp said Monday in Gainesvill­e.

The first vaccine shipments come as Georgia continues seeing COVID- 19 positive cases and hospitaliz­ations spike amid the winter holiday season. Case rates have now shot far above the prior transmissi­on peak seen in July with around 5,000 new positive cases daily in recent days.

Kemp said 60 emergency hospital beds at the Georgia World Congress Center in Atlanta should be ready for use by the end of this week. The state should have an 80day stockpile of protective gear on hand by the end of this month, he added.

The governor urged Georgians to keep distancing, wash hands and limit gatherings ahead of upcoming New Year’s celebratio­ns, especially people ages 18 to 29, who have seen the highest transmissi­on rates in recent weeks and risk spreading the virus to more vulnerable family members.

“I’m encouragin­g everyone to be part of the solution, not the problem,” Kemp said.

Around 550,000 people in Georgia have tested positive for COVID- 19 so far. As of Sunday, the virus had killed 9,714 Georgians.

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