Santa Cruz Sentinel

Committees eye who’s next for scarce vaccines

- By Don Thompson

SACRAMENTO >> A pair of advisory committees is making potential life-and-death decisions starting Wednesday over who’s next in line for scarce coronaviru­s vaccines that aren’t expected to be universall­y available to California’s nearly 40 million residents until sometime deep into next year.

Shou ld t ea chers be among the chosen few? Farmworker­s? Grocer y workers? Ride-hailing drivers? How about newspaper reporters?

Each has its constituen­cy lobbying to be included among about 8 million California residents who will be selected for the second round of vaccines early next year.

The discussion comes as the virus surges across California, straining the state’s health care system. State health officials on Wednesday reported 53,711 new coronaviru­s cases and 293 additional deaths, setting new records. The public meeting is happening as other states are holding closed discussion­s about vaccine allocation and receiving criticism.

The first batch of vaccinatio­ns in California began this week in a rare bit of good news, but those will roll out over the next month or so to about 3 million healthcare workers and vulnerable residents like those in skilled nursing facilities and nursing homes. That is Phase 1a.

The rules for who receives those first vaccines were recommende­d previously by the same committees that are meeting into

the evening Wednesday to decide who will get the inoculatio­ns under what’s known as Phase 1b.

The recommenda­tions come from a 16-member Drafting Guidelines Workgroup made up of health profession­als and led by the immediate past president of the National Medical Associatio­n and the head of the California Department of Public Health’s Immunizati­ons Branch.

They’ll be vetted by a 60- member Community Vaccine Advisory Commit

tee led by California Surgeon General Dr. Nadine Burke Harris. That committee includes representa­tives from numerous organizati­ons and associatio­ns representi­ng retirees, business and labor, racial and sexual minorities, people with disabiliti­es, school administra­tors and teachers, nursing homes, medical providers, religious groups and legal advocates.

Their job is to make recommenda­tions “based upon ... the values that we’ve set forth of inclusion and equity,” Gov. Gavin Newsom said Tuesday.

He listed teachers, farmworker­s and grocery workers among those deserving of considerat­ion for a slice of the limited pie.

The committee itself earlier listed for considerat­ion broad categories including emergency services providers, those working in the fields of energy, water and wastewater, transporta­tion, communicat­ion, technology, government operations, critical manufactur­ing, financial services, and defense.

Agricultur­e, educators, first responders, critical infrastruc­ture workers and various health providers together tally nearly 10.8 million California­ns, the committee said.

In picking which groups go first, a majority supported prioritizi­ng the societal impact of the job; equity — making sure lowincome workers and those working in vulnerable communitie­s are included; the jobs’ impact on the economy; and the risk of each occupation­s’ exposure to the coronaviru­s, including workers’ risk of death and risk of spreading the virus in the community.

 ?? HECTOR AMEZCUA — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? UC Davis Medical Center nurses, from left, Analyn Corpuz, Raenne Takara and Heather Donaldson review the process of inoculatin­g with the Pfizer-BioNTech COVID-19 vaccine in Sacramento on Tuesday.
HECTOR AMEZCUA — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS UC Davis Medical Center nurses, from left, Analyn Corpuz, Raenne Takara and Heather Donaldson review the process of inoculatin­g with the Pfizer-BioNTech COVID-19 vaccine in Sacramento on Tuesday.

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