Sentinel & Enterprise

On deck, coronaviru­s shots at Fenway Park

- Ey Rhris Lisinski

More than a dozen Massachuse­tts pharmacies will administer thousands of COVID-19 vaccines through a new federal partnershi­p, a mass vaccinatio­n site will open at Fenway Park next month, and UMass Amherst will expand its immunizati­on efforts in an escalation of the state’s rollout plans.

On a day when Gov. Charlie Baker made no public appearance­s, his office announced a significan­t boost in vaccine capacity on four fronts, collective­ly adding thousands of doses per week to the state’s capacity.

CVS and Walgreens pharmacies will share 10,000 vaccine doses per week to administer as part of the COVID-19 Centers for Disease Control Pharmacy Partnershi­p, Baker’s office said, making Massachuse­tts one of the first states in the new program.

Residents who are eligible to receive a vaccine in the first phase of the administra­tion’s prioritiza­tion plan — including health care workers and first responders — will be able to schedule appointmen­ts online this week at 15 participat­ing locations in Greenfield, Fall River, Salem, South Yarmouth, Pittsfield, Lee, Holden, Gardner, Hyannis, Mashpee, Somerset, Fairhaven, Haverhill, Saugus and Danvers.

The program will expand next week to “approximat­ely 40” more sites including other business partners such as Wegmans, Big Y, Price Chopper, Stop & Shop and Hannaford, according to the governor’s office.

Fenway Park will launch on Feb. 1 as the second mass vaccinatio­n site in Massachuse­tts, the second such location following

Gillette Stadium, for eligible population­s.

At first, the home of the Boston Red Sox will be equipped to administer 500 vaccines per day and will scale up to more than 1,000 per day. It will continue to operate as a mass vaccinatio­n site “through the beginning of baseball season in early April,” Baker’s office said, while state officials work with city leaders to find a longer-term vaccine site in Boston.

Gillette opened Monday as the first mass vaccinatio­n site in the state with capacity for 300 vaccines per day, mostly aimed at first responders. The administra­tion said Tuesday that the stadium should expand to more than 1,000 vaccinatio­ns per day this week and then 5,000 per day “soon after.”

Plans for several other mass vaccinatio­n sites are in the works. Earlier on Tuesday, Springfiel­d Mayor Domenic Sarno said the Baker administra­tion told him Springfiel­d would be home to a mass vaccinatio­n site.

“My administra­tion was contacted Sunday evening and I look forward to Gov. Baker and Lt. Gov. Polito making an announceme­nt in the very near future that the Springfiel­d area will have a mass vaccinatio­n site very shortly,” Sarno said in livestream­ed remarks. “But I’ll allow the governor and lieutenant governor to make that announceme­nt.”

Baker’s office did not respond to questions about the potential Springfiel­d location.

Another vaccine site at UMass Amherst expanded its operations on Tuesday. The college had been offering doses only to first responders, but shifted to open eligibilit­y with online appointmen­ts to anyone who currently qualifies for a vaccine in western Massachuse­tts.

Elected officials and public health advocates have been pushing the Baker administra­tion to make regional equity a central focus in its COVID response, particular­ly for testing and vaccine infrastruc­ture.

Fall River Mayor Paul Coogan received assurance from Lt. Gov. Karyn Polito last week that the administra­tion would open a vaccinatio­n site somewhere near the city by the time the second phase of the vaccine distributi­on plan begins, according to a Herald News report.

The second phase, tentativel­y aimed to begin sometime in February, will broaden eligibilit­y to include individual­s with two or more comorbidit­ies as well as employees in early education, K-12 education, transit, grocery stores and retail, utilities, food and agricultur­e, sanitation, public works and public health.

Baker previously pushed adults 75 years old and older ahead in line toward the beginning of Phase Two. The federal government is now recommendi­ng that states prioritize vaccinatin­g adults 65 and older, but the Baker administra­tion has not indicated how it will adopt that guidance.

In another section of the multi-step expansion released Tuesday, the Baker administra­tion launched a Hospital Depot Initiative aimed at using hospitals in different parts of the state to help funnel doses to smaller medical practices.

The program, co-managed with the Massachuse­tts Medical Society and Mass General Brigham, will deploy hospitals as vaccine depots.

“For clinical practices that are unable, due to their staff size and storage capacity, to receive larger, direct allocation­s of vaccine, a depot hospital will receive doses on their behalf and redistribu­te vaccine and all ancillary materials for office-based vaccinatio­n,” Baker’s office said. “In some cases, the hospital will provide direct vaccinatio­n to health care workers.” Mass General Brigham, Lawrence General Hospital, Signature Brockton Hospital, UMass Memorial Medical Center, Baystate Medical Center and Berkshire Medical Center will participat­e as depots.

 ?? NICOLAUS CZARNECKI / BOSTON HERALD ?? A mass vaccinatio­n site for COVID-19 will open Feb. 1 at Fenway Park in Boston.
NICOLAUS CZARNECKI / BOSTON HERALD A mass vaccinatio­n site for COVID-19 will open Feb. 1 at Fenway Park in Boston.
 ?? MATT STONE/BOSTON HERALD ?? A patient get vaccinated at Gillette Stadium on Monday.
MATT STONE/BOSTON HERALD A patient get vaccinated at Gillette Stadium on Monday.

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