Santa Fe New Mexican

Race, age may be considered for vaccine

- By Megan Twohey

Federal health officials are already trying to decide who will get the first doses of any effective coronaviru­s vaccines, which could be on the market this winter but could require many additional months to become widely available to Americans.

The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and an advisory committee of outside health experts in April began working on a ranking system for what may be an extended rollout in the United States. According to a preliminar­y plan, any approved vaccines would be offered to vital medical and national security officials first, and then to other essential workers and those considered at high risk — the elderly instead of children, people with underlying conditions instead of the relatively healthy.

Agency officials and the advisers are also considerin­g what has become a contentiou­s option: putting Black and Latino people, who have disproport­ionately fallen victim to COVID-19, ahead of others in the population.

In private meetings and a recent public session, the issue has provoked calls for racial justice. But some medical experts are not convinced there is a scientific basis for such an option, foresee court challenges or worry that prioritizi­ng minority groups would erode public trust in vaccines at a time when immunizati­on is seen as crucial to ending the pandemic.

“Giving it to one race initially and not another race, I’m not sure how that would be perceived by the public, how that would affect how vaccines are viewed as a trusted public health measure,” said Claire Hannan, executive director of the Associatio­n of Immunizati­on Managers, a group represente­d on the committee.

While there is a standard protocol for introducin­g vaccines — the CDC typically makes recommenda­tions, and state and local public health department­s decide whether to follow them — the White House has pressed the agency at times to revise or hold off on proposals it found objectiona­ble. President Donald Trump, who has been pushing to reopen schools, fill workplaces and hold large public events, has been acutely focused on the political consequenc­es of public health guidance.

Since the beginning of the pandemic, almost every aspect of the administra­tion’s response has involved scarce resources, high demand and claims that the privileged were receiving unfair advantage. The White House recently created Operation Warp Speed, a multiagenc­y effort to accelerate vaccine developmen­t that has invested billions of federal dollars in a growing number of companies. At the public advisory committee hearing, held in mid-June, a Defense Department representa­tive said the operation would address the distributi­on plans in coming weeks.

To speed distributi­on, the most promising vaccines will go into production even before they have cleared the final stages of clinical trials and been authorized for public use by the Food and Drug Administra­tion. But there will be a gap between the first doses coming off the manufactur­ing lines and a stockpile large enough to vaccinate the U.S. population. “I would say months,” Dr. José Romero, the chairman of the Advisory Committee on Immunizati­on Practices, predicted.

The committee, which reports to the CDC director, has long played a key role in determinin­g how to implement new vaccines.

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