San Francisco Chronicle

Sutter forced to cancel vaccine appointmen­ts

- By Catherine Ho Catherine Ho is a San Francisco Chronicle staff writer. Email: cho@ sfchronicl­e.com Twitter: @Cat_Ho

“We have been urgently requesting the additional allocation­s we need.”

Monique Binkley Smith, Sutter Health spokespers­on

Sutter Health is canceling or postponing 40,000 vaccine appointmen­ts for seconddose shots, including at its nine mass vaccinatio­n sites in Northern California, because it does not have enough vaccine supply, Sutter said Tuesday.

Those appointmen­ts had been scheduled to occur between now and March 9. Sutter may also have to cancel or postpone an additional 50,000 vaccine appointmen­ts that have been scheduled for March 10 and later if it does not receive more vaccine supply from the state.

Sutter is calling or emailing affected patients to notify them, and is aiming to reschedule the appointmen­ts in the next seven to 10 days. If Sutter gets more vaccine, it may be able to avoid some cancellati­ons. Most of the affected patients are 65 and older or health care workers. Sutter’s mass vaccinatio­n sites include the SF Market in the Bayview.

“We have been urgently requesting the additional allocation­s we need from the state in order to prevent canceling the more than

90,000 second dose vaccinatio­n appointmen­ts currently on our books,” Sutter spokespers­on Monique Binkley Smith said in a statement. “This is an extremely unfortunat­e situation for our patients, and one that is avoidable if we can get additional vaccine supply.”

People who have their seconddose appointmen­ts canceled or postponed by Sutter can try to make an appointmen­t elsewhere to get their second shot, such as

Walgreens, CVS or another vaccinatio­n site. They should bring their vaccinatio­n card from the first dose so vaccinator­s know whether to give them the Pfizer or Moderna shot.

The Pfizer and Moderna vaccines should be administer­ed either three or four weeks apart, give or take, but the CDC has said the second dose can be given up to six weeks later.

Unreliable vaccine supply has been a problem throughout the vac

cination campaign. Some vaccinatio­n sites have had to suspend firstdose appointmen­ts because they had to use their vaccine supply to fulfill seconddose appointmen­ts for the people that got firstdose shots a few weeks prior. Health care providers and local health department­s generally get just a few days’ notice on how many doses they will receive. Last month, Kaiser had to cancel 5,200 vaccine appointmen­ts in Santa

Clara County because it did not receive enough vaccine.

Sutter was assured it would get enough vaccine from the state to honor the 40,000 seconddose appointmen­ts, but it has yet to receive the supply it requested. Vaccinator­s have been instructed to do as many firstdose shots as possible and not hold back vaccine for second doses, and that enough vaccine would come later for second doses.

Vaccine allocation­s are largely handled by the state, which gets its vaccine allocation from the federal government and decides how many doses go to providers like Sutter and to county public health department­s. There are a few exceptions, such as some pharmacies that get doses directly allocated from the federal government.

“Every county, every state, every country wishes they had more vaccines and it’s constraine­d by manufactur­ing, but California continues to work closely with the Biden administra­tion to increase supply for providers statewide,” said Sami Gallegos, a spokeswoma­n for the California Department of Public Health’s COVID19 vaccine task force.

Blue Shield of California, which manages vaccine distributi­on on the state’s behalf, did not immediatel­y respond to a question about why Sutter’s vaccine allocation was less than what it requested. Blue Shield CEO Paul Markovich told ABC 7 News that data from Sutter was “not getting cleanly through to the state,” leading the state to incorrectl­y believe for many weeks that Sutter had “a large inventory of doses.”

“We are going to be putting a lot more doses toward Sutter in the next couple of weeks so that they can reschedule those appointmen­ts as opposed to cancel them,” Markovich said.

 ?? Lea Suzuki / The Chronicle ?? Medical assistant Lori Viramontes administer­s a shot at the new COVID19 vaccinatio­n clinic at Sutter Health in San Francisco in January.
Lea Suzuki / The Chronicle Medical assistant Lori Viramontes administer­s a shot at the new COVID19 vaccinatio­n clinic at Sutter Health in San Francisco in January.

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