San Francisco Chronicle

Officials dispute reports of wrong vaccine doses

- By Michael Williams, Meghan Bobrowsky and Catherine Ho Michael Williams, Meghan Bobrowsky and Catherine Ho are San Francisco Chronicle staff writers. Email: Michael.Williams@sfchronicl­e.com, meghan. bobrowsky@sfchronicl­e.com, cho@sfchronicl­e.com

State officials are pushing back against a TV report that said thousands of people vaccinated at the Oakland Coliseum this week received doses smaller than they should be.

Citing two unnamed emergency medical technician­s, KTVU reported Wednesday that about 4,300 people who were vaccinated at the Oakland Coliseum before 2 p.m. on Monday “received the wrong vaccine doses” of the Pfizer vaccine because the syringes left some vaccine in the bottom of the container instead of injecting it all.

State officials who run the clinic told The Chronicle that they recently began using a new type of syringe. But they strongly denied that anybody at the Coliseum received too little vaccine.

“We are not aware of any instance of even a single individual being undervacci­nated on the Oakland Coliseum site,” said Brian Ferguson, a spokesman with the California Office of Emergency Services, which operates the Coliseum site with the Federal Emergency Management Agency.

State officials have not warned vaccine recipients of any problem, they said, because there is no problem.

KTVU reported that the EMTs said the syringes were “designed in such a way so the plunger can’t reach all the way down,” leaving the syringes to administer less than the full dose of vaccine.

The Food and Drug Administra­tion recommends the Pfizer vaccine be administer­ed in two doses of 0.3 milliliter­s apiece.

But a study from the New England Journal of Medicine says that people who receive 0.2mL of the vaccine will have about just as much immunity to the virus as the ones who receive 0.3mL, said Dr. George Rutherford, an epidemiolo­gist at UCSF.

Other infectious disease experts reached by The Chronicle declined to say whether they thought a smaller dose would be as effective as the full amount. All said the vaccine manufactur­er would have to answer such a question.

Pfizer declined to comment.

The Coliseum opened on Feb. 16 as one of the first massvaccin­ation sites in California. Federal and state officials said the goal is to administer up to 6,000 doses of the vaccine per day at the site, but supply issues have been a problem at the Coliseum and other vaccinatio­n sites.

Vaccine for the Coliseum comes from the federal government and not from the state’s overall allocation.

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