Santa Cruz Sentinel

US going to try to speed up vaccines

- By Zeke Miller and Ricardo Alonso-Zaldivar

WASHINGTON >> Barely a month into a mass vaccinatio­n campaign to stop the COVID-19 pandemic, the Trump administra­tion unexpected­ly shifted gears Tuesday to speed the delivery of shots. The move came after widespread concern over a slow start even as coronaviru­s cases and deaths reach alarming new highs.

Health and Human Services Secretary Alex Azar announced a series of major changes to increase supply of vaccines and expand the age groups eligible as well as locations where people can get shots.

One change will have some teeth to it. Azar said going forward the federal government will base each state’s allocation of vaccines partly on how successful states have been in administer­ing those already provided.

“If you are not using vaccines that you have the right to, then we should be rebalancin­g to states that are using that vaccine,” Azar said at news conference. That won’t happen overnight, not until officials try to sort out whether lags in reporting could be the reason for what appears to be subpar performanc­e.

Azar also said the government will stop holding back the required second doses of the PfizerBioN­Tech and Moderna vaccines, practicall­y doubling supply. Both those shots require two doses to achieve optimum protection.

Additional­ly, Washington is urging states to immediatel­y start vaccinatin­g other groups lower down the priority scale, including people age 65 and older and younger people with certain health problems.

The move to increase the supply of vaccines better aligns the outgoing administra­tion with the new Biden-Harris team. On Friday, President-elect Joe Biden said he will rapidly release most available vaccine doses to protect more people. He said he supported immediatel­y releasing vaccines that health authoritie­s were holding back out of caution, to guarantee they would be available for people needing their second dose.

“This next phase reflects the urgency of the situation,” said Azar. “Every vaccine dose sitting in a warehouse rather than going into an arm could mean one more death that could have been avoided.”

Initially the government had been holding back second doses as a safety precaution against potential shortfalls in production. Now, officials say they are confident the needed supply will be there. And people needing a second dose will have priority.

“This is not a supply issue at this moment in time,” Vice President Mike Pence told governors on a White House call. A recording was provided to The Associated Press.

Azar also gave states the green light to designate more places where people can get shots. Those locations can include tens of thousands of pharmacies, federally supported community health centers that serve low-income communitie­s, and mass vaccinatio­n sites already being set up in some states.

The f lurry of changes raised questions for some local officials, still trying to get their vaccinatio­n campaigns into full swing.

As of Monday morning, the government had distribute­d about 27.7 million doses to states, U. S. territorie­s and major cities. But only about 9.3 million people had received their first shot, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention’s online tracker. That means only about 34% of the available vaccines had been administer­ed.

Initially, the shots were going to health care workers and nursing home residents. Those 75 and older were next in line. But problems arose even in vaccinatin­g that limited pool of people. Some hospital and nursing home workers have been hesitant to get the vaccine. Scheduling issues created delays in getting shots to nursing homes.

Some states, including Arizona, have or are planning to open up mass vaccinatio­n centers, aiming to inoculate thousands of people a day in a single location. In Florida, Gov. Ron DeSantis opened up vaccinatio­ns to people 65 and older. In other states, local health authoritie­s have started asking residents 65 and older to register, in anticipati­on the vaccinatio­n campaign would be expanded.

Although Azar said the shift in strategy was a natural evolution of the Trump administra­tion’s efforts, as recently as Friday he had raised questions about whether Biden’s call to accelerate supplies was prudent.

On Tuesday, he also sought to def lect blame to the states for the slow uptake of vaccines. Azar said some states are being “overly prescripti­ve and trying to micromanag­e every single dose of vaccine,” leading to bottleneck­s.

Azar also criticized what he called “the hospitaliz­ation of vaccine distributi­on,” saying “we have too much vaccine sitting in freezers in hospitals.”

State and local officials are sure to point out that it was the federal government that recommende­d putting health care workers at the front of the vaccinatio­n line.

The Trump administra­tion directed a crash effort to develop, manufactur­e and deliver vaccines, hoping to avoid a repeat of earlier debacles with coronaviru­s testing. Dubbed “Operation Warp Speed,” it has produced two highly effective vaccines, with more on the way.

Each state has its own plan for who should be vaccinated, based on CDC recommenda­tions that gave

first priority to health care workers and nursing home residents. Some critics say the administra­tion’s planning should have extended into helping states administer the shots after they were delivered. Congress ha s recently approved more than $8 billion for that.

The slow pace of the vaccine rollout has frustrated many Americans at a time when the coronaviru­s death toll has continued to rise. More than 376,000 people in the U. S. have died, according to the Johns Hopkins database.

Azar said the pace of vaccinatio­ns has picked up, on track to reach 1 million daily within a couple of weeks. But the American Hospital Associatio­n estimates 1.8 million vaccinatio­ns a day are needed, seven days a week, to achieve widespread immunity by the middle of this year. Biden has set a goal of 100 million shots administer­ed in his first 100 days.

Local public health officials were surprised by Tuesday’s announceme­nt and scrambling to figure out how to implement the changes, said Adriane Casalotti of NACCHO, the National Associatio­n of County and City Health Officials.

“All levels of the government­al public health system really need to be on the same page. Surprises don’t benefit anyone,” she said.

Letting more groups in line “all of a sudden makes a lot more people potentiall­y eligible and certainly interested and we need to have the systems in place to get them the vaccine,” Casalotti added.

But there was an urgency to the statements from administra­tion officials.

“We’re in a race against t h i s v i r us and qu it e frankly, we’re behind,” U. S. Surgeon General Jerome Adams told “Fox & Friends.”

Biden is expected to give a speech Thursday outlining his plan to speed vaccines to more people in the first part of his administra­tion. His transition team has vowed to release as many vaccine doses as possible, rather than continuing what had been the Trump administra­tion policy of holding back millions of doses to ensure there would be enough supply to allow those getting the first shot to get a second one.

Azar said they’ll brief the Biden transition team on the changes, but didn’t seek their blessing,

Biden is expected to give a speech Thursday outlining his plan to speed vaccines to more people in the first part of his administra­tion. His transition team has vowed to release as many vaccine doses as possible, rather than continuing what had been the Trump administra­tion policy of holding back millions of doses to ensure there would be enough supply to allow those getting the first shot to get a second one.

 ?? SUSAN WALSH — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? President-elect Joe Biden receives his second dose of the coronaviru­s vaccine at Christiana­Care Christiana Hospital in Newark, Del., Monday. The vaccine is being administer­ed by Chief Nurse Executive Ric Cuming.
SUSAN WALSH — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS President-elect Joe Biden receives his second dose of the coronaviru­s vaccine at Christiana­Care Christiana Hospital in Newark, Del., Monday. The vaccine is being administer­ed by Chief Nurse Executive Ric Cuming.

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