Santa Cruz Sentinel

1.1 million J&J doses expected to arrive soon

Many more of the single-dose shots will arrive in state within next three weeks

- By Don Thompson

California expects to start administer­ing the new Johnson & Johnson vaccine next week and to receive more than 1.1 million of the single-dose shots in the next three weeks, Gov. Gavin Newsom said Friday.

The vaccine, still in the final federal approval process, has fewer handling restrictio­ns than the Pfizer and Moderna vaccines now being used. Those vaccines require two doses to be fully effective and must be stored at extremely low temperatur­es.

The Biden administra­tion has told California it can expect to receive 380,000 Johnson & Johnson vaccines next week and Newsom said he expects the same amount each week for three weeks, but it’s just a preview.

“It’s consistent based on that three-week window,” he said at a Fresno news conference. “We will figure out where to land in terms of the distributi­on.”

He said the new, more easily handled one-dose vaccine will be particular­ly helpful for those in agricultur­al areas of the Central Valley, including farmworker­s.

“Now we’ll have three (different vaccines) and we’ll see that manufactur­ed supply go north of 380,000, very confidentl­y — end of March we’ll see those begin to significan­tly increase,” Newsom said.

Distributi­on of the J&J vaccine still is contingent upon federal Food and Drug Administra­tion and Centers for Disease Control and Prevention action, though Newsom said he is confident of the quick approval and availabili­ty.

If the J&J vaccine is authorized, U.S. officials expect to have only a few million doses to divide between states in initial shipments. But by the end of March, J&J has said it can supply enough to vaccinate 20 million people — a much-needed boost to stretched supplies.

Addition of the J&J vaccine would come as California is seeing dramatic drops in virus cases and hospitaliz­ations after record highs in early January. The 5,590 people hospitaliz­ed now are only about a quarter of the peak total, while the rate of people testing positive in the last week fell to 2.7%.

“There’s bright light at the end of the tunnel,” Newsom said during what have become near-daily appearance­s at vaccinatio­n centers around the state.

Newsom, a Democrat, faces the possibilit­y of a recall election later this year over his handling of the pandemic, and regardless must run for reelection next year. And despite the positive trends there remains continued uncertaint­y over unequal, sometimes chaotic, vaccine distributi­on and testing.

Six weeks ago the state was seeking extra body bags from other states as deaths spiraled, he said. Now the state has 130 deaths per 100,000 people, compared to the 261 deaths per 100,000 in New York, he said.

That’s a function of people taking safety precaution­s, Newsom said, but in addition “we are transition­ing” to a time of more vaccines available to a wider proportion of the population.

“We are protecting more and we’re providing more support,” he said.

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 ?? DAMIAN DOVARGANES — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE ?? Gov. Gavin Newsom takes questions from the media during a visit to a mobile vaccinatio­n site at Ramona Gardens Recreation Center in Los Angeles.
DAMIAN DOVARGANES — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE Gov. Gavin Newsom takes questions from the media during a visit to a mobile vaccinatio­n site at Ramona Gardens Recreation Center in Los Angeles.

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