San Diego Union-Tribune

SHORTAGE SHUTS PETCO VACCINATIO­N SITE AGAIN

Supply continues to be problem as new group of San Diegans becomes eligible for doses

- BY JONATHAN WOSEN

The COVID-19 vaccine superstati­on near Petco Park will close yet again today due to a severe shortage of doses from Massachuse­tts biotech company Moderna.

UC San Diego Health operates the site, and CEO Patty Maysent told The San Diego Union-Tribune that the closure will last through the weekend and into Tuesday, meaning the location will reopen on Wednesday at the earliest.

Anyone with an appointmen­t during that time will get a message through MyChart, the health system’s electronic notificati­on portal, and will be automatica­lly reschedule­d as soon as UCSD knows more vaccine is on the way. For now, Maysent says, the plan is to shift all appointmen­ts back by four days, but the actual delay could be longer (or a bit shorter), depending on supply.

“It’s really tough,” she said. “Giving vaccine is the antidote to the worst burnout you can imagine. It’s been hard on everybody. In particular, it’s hard on patients.”

The health system has been in contact with state and county officials,

searching for any doses it can get — including doses in other counties that aren’t quickly going into arms. Maysent added that on Friday, UCSD moved more than 6,000 doses from its own supply to the Petco Park site and has used more than 10,000 of its own doses to run the superstati­on over the past few weeks.

But the university is still moving forward with plans to use its supply, which it receives separate from the county as part of the University of California system, to immunize staff.

“In accordance with State of California guidelines for vaccine eligibilit­y, UC San Diego’s RIMAC Vaccine Super Station is vaccinatin­g all UC San Diego employees,” reads an internal email sent Friday afternoon shortly before news of the Petco Park site closure. “UC San Diego Health has allocated 10,000 appointmen­t spaces for employees to vaccinate at RIMAC over the next

10 days.”

That doesn’t sit well with some within the university — like Alex, a UCSD graduate student who requested that the U-T only use his first name. When he first received a MyChart notificati­on that he was eligible to get vaccinated, he couldn’t quite believe it.

“I was completely dumbfounde­d. I did not understand that at all. A lot of us thought it was a glitch at first, so we weren’t signing up,” he said.

He’s still having a hard time understand­ing why he was able to get his shot, as he’s healthy, in his 20s and does all of his graduate research from his off-campus residence. Alex says the only reason he got the vaccine was because he assumed the dose offered to him would otherwise have been wasted.

“There has been no sort of communicat­ion. It’s just, ‘Do this, do this.’ And when it appears to contradict county guidelines, we’re not explained to that it doesn’t,” he said. “I got my first vaccine before any teachers did. And I feel like that’s not right.”

A UCSD spokespers­on confirmed the internal email regarding vaccinatio­n at RIMAC Arena, adding that the university was “directed by the state to vaccinate this group.” She also pointed out that the appointmen­ts referenced in the memo are all for Pfizer vaccine; the Petco Park site runs exclusivel­y on Moderna vaccine. Alex confirmed that he received the Pfizer vaccine.

This will be the third closure

for the downtown superstati­on, which has immunized more than 119,000 San Diegans — about 2 out of every 9 people who’ve been vaccinated in the county.

Other superstati­ons and smaller sites scattered throughout the region will continue to operate, according to county spokespers­on Mike Workman. And locations that use the Pfizer vaccine are continuing to offer first dose appointmen­ts, as the drug company’s supply flow has been smoother than Moderna’s lately.

The closure marks an abrupt reversal from the optimism county officials projected during the weekly coronaviru­s briefing. COVID-19 cases and hospitaliz­ations have continued to fall, with the county drawing closer to the return of outdoor high school sports — and, soon after, limited indoor dining and gym use.

“This is one of the first times I feel like we’re coming to you with a series of things that are generally good news,” said Supervisor Fletcher at the start of the Wednesday briefing.

That good news included an announceme­nt that San Diegans working in emergency services; child care and education; and food and agricultur­e would be eligible for a coronaviru­s vaccine starting today. About 500,000 people fall into these groups, from farm workers to security staff to day care providers.

Many of these people won’t have to hunt for their own appointmen­ts and will be inoculated through targeted outreach programs unaffected by the closure of the Petco Park site. For instance, Scripps Health is helping immunize law enforcemen­t personnel and still plans to run a vaccinatio­n clinic at Scripps Memorial Hospital on Monday.

And this weekend, Sharp HealthCare will partner with California Schools Voluntary Employees Benefits Associatio­n (VEBA) to immunize 1,500 K-12 teachers and staff at the health system’s superstati­ons in La Mesa and Chula Vista. VEBA and the county’s Office of Education are gradually rolling out vaccine to school staff in districts that are open or plan to reopen, and prioritizi­ng doses to schools in ZIP codes hardest hit by the pandemic.

The county said on Thursday that soon-to-be eligible San Diegans who aren’t in targeted outreach programs can schedule appointmen­ts at the more than 20 vaccine sites scattered throughout the county.

Alyssa Sepinwall’s experience tells her otherwise. Because the Cal State San Marcos professor does not teach at the K-12 level, she falls into the category of educators who need to schedule appointmen­ts at countyrun sites or local pharmacies.

“The county system (not to mention all the pharmacies) won’t let me make an appointmen­t today for any

time after tomorrow since I’m not eligible to use the databases yet,” she said in an email on Friday.

County spokespers­on Workman said the state’s online signup system, MyTurn (myturn.ca.gov), didn’t “keep up” with the change in eligibilit­y, and that Sepinwall and others should be able to sign up starting today.

Finding an appointmen­t won’t be easy, as the closure of the Petco Park superstati­on underscore­s a frustratin­g fact: Vaccine demand continues to outpace supply.

The county’s current supply is prioritize­d for San Diegans who need their second doses, as it takes two shots of the Moderna and Pfizer vaccines to maximize immunity against the coronaviru­s.

According to the county’s vaccine dashboard, as of midday Friday, around 321,000 San Diegans have gotten their first shot but still need their second dose. Until they’ve gotten both shots, many of those in the newly eligible groups will have a tough time booking appointmen­ts. The timeline for completing second doses, of course, depends on vaccine supply. It’s unclear when the county’s next batch of Moderna vaccine will arrive. On Wednesday, Fletcher said the county is lucky to know how much vaccine is coming in three days — let alone the threeweek projection­s that President Joe Biden promised states and territorie­s.

There’s been considerab­le confusion around precisely how many doses the county has on hand. On Friday, Times of San Diego reported

that the county has nearly 100,000 doses available to administer and had recently received a sizable shipment of new doses. But Workman told The San Diego Union-Tribune that the county received no such shipment, and that there are already appointmen­ts for all the “available” doses noted on the county’s dashboard.

In other words, that supply is spoken for.

Other local health systems are struggling, too. Scripps Health operates vaccine clinics for its own patients and operates the Del Mar Fairground­s superstati­on. But it’s hard to sustain those efforts without a steady flow of vaccine, says Dr. Ghazala Sharieff, the health system’s chief medical officer for clinical excellence and experience.

“How do you plan for something when you’re not allowed to have any leftover (doses) but then you don’t know what you’re going to get the next week?” Sharieff said. “I don’t care what you’re going to give me — just give it to me ahead of time, then I can plan every day and be a little more logical.” On Friday, the county reported 662 new coronaviru­s infections, 12 hospitaliz­ations and 11 COVID-19 deaths. Those numbers are consistent with a gradual slowing of the pandemic’s spread, but public health officials warn that recent gains won’t be secure until the vast majority of the public has been vaccinated.

 ?? JARROD VALLIERE U-T ?? Rochelle Kern receives her first dose of the coronaviru­s vaccine from registered nurse Dominic Camarda at the Gary and Mary West Senior Wellness Center in downtown San Diego on Friday.
JARROD VALLIERE U-T Rochelle Kern receives her first dose of the coronaviru­s vaccine from registered nurse Dominic Camarda at the Gary and Mary West Senior Wellness Center in downtown San Diego on Friday.
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