San Francisco Chronicle

Contra Costa: County offers to inoculate anyone over 50 as rules loosen

- By Catherine Ho

Contra Costa County on Monday announced it is expanding coronaviru­s vaccine eligibilit­y to people 50 and older who live or work in the county, becoming the second Bay Area county after Solano to do so.

California has not expanded eligibilit­y to people 50 and older, but does plan to open up vaccinatio­ns to people 16 and older by the last week of April, Gov. Gavin Newsom said Friday.

The California Department of Public Health on Monday declined to say whether it will first expand eligibilit­y to those 50 and older before opening it up to everyone else.

If California goes the same route as New York and a number of other states, it could take the incrementa­l step of adding those 50 and older to the priority list soon. California is currently giving vaccine priority to people 65 and older, essential workers in certain sectors, homeless and incarcerat­ed residents, and people between 16 and 64 with disabiliti­es or underlying health conditions.

It’s been about two months since the state opened eligibilit­y to people 65 and over. Older adults are at greater risk of becoming severely ill or dying from COVID19, so basing eligibilit­y on age was an effort by policymake­rs to lessen the burden on hospitals.

Contra Costa’s announceme­nt allows people 50 to 64 who do not have a disability or underlying medical condition, or work in a qualifying sector, to get vaccinated. The move comes as many states are loosening their age or other requiremen­ts for vaccinatio­ns. New York on Tuesday will make residents 50 and older eligible for vaccines, and Arizona on Wednesday will open eligibilit­y for residents 16 and older at staterun vaccinatio­n sites in three counties, state officials said Monday.

Alaska, Mississipp­i and West Virginia have opened up vaccinatio­ns for everyone 16 and older. And at least 20 states have announced plans to do so in March or April, according to the New York Times.

In Contra Costa County, about 235,000 residents 50 to 64 are now eligible, according to officials. The expansion comes as the county has begun receiving additional vaccine from the U.S. government for its federally qualified health centers.

“We look forward to the coming months when we can do away with vaccine eligibilit­y, when anyone and everyone is eligible,” Contra Costa County Board of Supervisor­s Chair Diane Burgis said in a statement. “More and more doses of vaccine are coming into the county each week and we expect that trend to continue.”

Other Bay Area counties said Monday they are not yet expanding eligibilit­y to those 50 and older, and are monitoring the state’s next steps for guidance. They would like to make vaccines available to more people, they said, but supply constraint­s make it difficult to predict exactly when that will happen.

“At this point, we are sticking with the state’s current eligibilit­y groups,” said Marin County spokespers­on Laine Hendricks. “We estimate about 160,000 Marin residents are eligible under those definition­s and still have a number of people to reach until we deem those groups as saturated. That being said, if the state were to signal a change and open that group, we would align with the state and begin vaccinatin­g those individual­s.”

Expanding eligibilit­y does not necessary mean everyone who is eligible will be able to get their shots immediatel­y because vaccine supply remains unpredicta­ble. Last week, as the state opened up eligibilit­y to people 16 and older with disabiliti­es and underlying medical conditions, some were not able to book appointmen­ts right away.

Solano County last week expanded eligibilit­y to people 50 and older. On Monday, county officials said they have seen a steep 60% drop in vaccine supply in the past two weeks, and must put off scheduling many firstdose appointmen­ts at mass vaccinatio­n clinics.

Vaccine supply coming to California, which is currently around 1.6 million to 1.7 million doses a week, is expected to double by the end of April if projection­s from the Biden administra­tion and vaccine manufactur­ers hold true, said Blue Shield of California, which manages vaccine distributi­on for the state. That increase will mostly be driven by the expected influx of more Johnson & Johnson vaccine starting in early April, Blue Shield chief executive Paul Markovich said in an interview Friday.

The addition of the vaccine made by AstraZenec­a, which on Monday released promising results from a large U.S. trial showing a 79% efficacy rate at preventing COVID19 symptoms, could also bode well for speeding up vaccinatio­ns. AstraZenec­a plans to apply for emergency use authorizat­ion in the United States “in the coming weeks” and has already been approved in dozens of other countries, including much of Europe. Concerns over a small number of blood clots in people who were recently vaccinated temporaril­y halted the administra­tion of the vaccine in some countries earlier this month, but many have resumed the shots after European regulators deemed it safe.

It’s unlikely the AstraZenec­a vaccine would gain FDA authorizat­ion before May, and by then the U.S. may not need it because there will be more Pfizer, Moderna and Johnson & Johnson vaccines available.

As of Monday, nearly 10 million California­ns, about 30% of the state’s 16andolder population, are at least partially vaccinated. Of that group, 5.2 million, or 16%, are fully vaccinated, according to state data.

 ?? Brittany Hosea-Small / Special to The Chronicle ?? Health care worker Jacqueline Ellington gets her first dose of the Moderna vaccine at a clinic at Diablo Valley College in January.
Brittany Hosea-Small / Special to The Chronicle Health care worker Jacqueline Ellington gets her first dose of the Moderna vaccine at a clinic at Diablo Valley College in January.

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