San Diego Union-Tribune

County opening ‘vaccinatio­n super station.’

Officials worked with UC San Diego and Padres to open it

- BY LAURYN SCHROEDER lauryn.schroeder@sduniontri­bune.com

A 280,000-square-foot COVID-19 vaccinatio­n site that aims to inoculate 5,000 health care workers each day will open in downtown San Diego today, county and health officials announced Sunday.

In a collaborat­ion with the University of California San Diego and the San Diego Padres, county and city officials establishe­d what they call the “vaccinatio­n super station” at 13th Avenue and K Street in less than five days.

“This kind of collaborat­ion is going to be the new normal,” said San Diego Mayor Todd Gloria, who attended a media event Sunday to unveil the new site. “This will be the new business as usual when it comes to how our government­s at the local level will collabo

rate.”

The San Diego Padres provided the location — a tailgate parking lot near Petco Park — as well as wireless Internet and event staffers to help handle parking and direct traffic through the vaccine process. UC San Diego staff members and volunteers will be administer­ing vaccine and overseeing operations.

The unveiling of the testing site came on a day when the county reported 3,288 new cases and 33 deaths from COVID-19, bringing the region’s death toll to 1,857. There were 32 additional patients hospitaliz­ed and four being treated in intensive care units as of Saturday, county officials said.

The outdoor site includes at least two dozen tents for registrati­on and vaccine administra­tion, and several temporary structures to house the vaccines and provide work spaces for the support staff. At least 300 people will be administer­ing the vaccines, directing traffic, registerin­g those with appointmen­ts, and overseeing the logistics.

Patty Maysent, CEO of UC San Diego Health, said those with appointmen­ts must drive into the lot, register and receive the vaccine in their vehicle. They will then be monitored for negative reactions to the vaccine for 15 minutes before being allowed to leave. Once registered, each vaccine recipient will automatica­lly be registered for his or her second and final vaccine dose. The vaccine has been about 95 percent effective in protecting against COVID-19, which has so far sickened 191,888 people in the county.

According to San Diego County spokesman Mike Workman, the county is funding the operation. Officials are currently negotiatin­g a contract to determine the final cost and are hoping additional aid from the state and federal government­s will help offset the county’s total bill.

Gloria appealed directly to state and federal officials to provide more local funding for vaccinatio­n efforts.

“None of this is free,” Gloria said. “The message is simple, Washington. We need additional economic relief.”

There are approximat­ely 500,000 people in San Diego County who are currently eligible to receive the vaccine. For now, the super station will be available only to health care workers.

San Diego County Supervisor Nathan Fletcher said he hopes to open up the site to others who are eligible, but that will depend on the availabili­ty of vaccines in the coming weeks.

“We’re operating under the assumption that if we move faster and we use everything we have in our county, that we ought to be first in line to get more,” Fletcher said. “So that requires us to take a leap of faith. ... There is a possibilit­y that we could stand up all of this infrastruc­ture and run out of vaccines while we push for more, but we would rather have that problem than the opposite, where we’re not getting (more vaccines) because we’re not prepared.”

Health care workers, who are among the first to receive the vaccine in California, are encouraged to contact their health care providers for the vaccine first, but if no doses are available, they can make an appointmen­t for the county’s vaccine super station at vaccinatio­nsuperstat­ionSD.com, county officials said.

In addition to the super station, the county has four smaller vaccine locations in San Diego, El Cajon, Escondido and Chula Vista. The coronaviru­s vaccine is also available through pharmacies, primary care facilities and locations overseen by the Veterans Health Administra­tion.

 ?? K.C. ALFRED U-T ?? UC San Diego informatio­n technology workers wave at Patty Maysent, CEO of UC San Diego Health, at the new “vaccinatio­n super station” near Petco Park.
K.C. ALFRED U-T UC San Diego informatio­n technology workers wave at Patty Maysent, CEO of UC San Diego Health, at the new “vaccinatio­n super station” near Petco Park.

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