South Florida Sun-Sentinel Palm Beach (Sunday)

No time for a lack of transparen­cy

Review: States hold key vaccine talks in closed meetings

- Associated Press

By Ryan J. Foley

IOWA CITY, Iowa — As the nation’s COVID19 vaccinatio­n campaign accelerate­s, governors, public health directors and committees advising them are holding key discussion­s behind closed doors, including debates about who should be eligible for the shots and how best to distribute them.

A review by The Associated Press finds that advisory committees created to help determine how to prioritize limited doses have held closed meetings in at least 13 states that are home to more than 70 million people.

In at least 15 other states, the meetings have been open to the public, the AP found. But even in those states, governors and health department­s can modify or override committee recommenda­tions with little or no public explanatio­n. In several others, governors and their staffs make decisions without formal advisory bodies to guide them.

The lack of transparen­cy raises the risk that some decisions will be grounded in politics rather than public health and that well-connected industries could receive special treatment while the concerns of marginaliz­ed groups are ignored.

“You don’t want to have ‘God squads’ making these decisions about life and death without any kind of public oversight or public accountabi­lity,” said Oregon State University professor Courtney Campbell, an expert in bioethics.

In Iowa, the governor moved legislator­s and other Capitol employees ahead of inmates and correction­al officers on the vaccine priority list, despite at least 19 coronaviru­s deaths among state prisoners and staff. In Oregon, the governor prioritize­d teachers for shots before the elderly without seeking a recommenda­tion from an advisory committee that has debated other sensitive topics publicly.

Campbell praised the Oregon panel’s transparen­cy and commitment to equity but criticized the lack of public deliberati­on that went into the decision on teachers. “You want to know what groups are prioritize­d but also what evidence is used scientific­ally to determine which should go first and their reasoning process,” he said.

The federal Advisory Committee on Immunizati­on Practices has recommende­d that states “promote transparen­cy” as one of four ethical principles in vaccine allocation programs. The committee advised in November that decisions and plans “must be evidence-based, clear, understand­able and publicly available,” and that public participat­ion in their creation and review should occur to the extent possible.

Public distrust of government has been a major problem throughout the pandemic, and “you want to take those kinds of factors that contribute to public suspicion out of the equation,” Campbell said.

When Texas’ vaccine panel met last month, the subject of equity surfaced. One member said that obtaining racial and ethnic data on vaccinatio­ns would be critical to assessing whether the state’s efforts were succeeding.

But the identity of that member — and where that discussion wound up — is unknown. That the topic was mentioned at all is known only because of meeting notes that state health officials provide through open records requests but do not post publicly.

The notes also mentioned worries about elderly residents who are unable to stand in line and concern over dry-ice freezers used to store vaccines. But the three-hour panel meetings that occur most Mondays are not open to the public, leaving the state’s 30 million residents in the dark about how decisions are made.

Across the country, officials say they closed the meetings so that health experts, industry representa­tives and other panel members can have freewheeli­ng discussion­s on sensitive topics.

“It’s really to kind of foster an open exchange among the panelists and allow them to be frank,” said Chris Van Deusen, a spokesman for the Texas Department of State Health Services.

States cite various exemptions to open meetings laws as legal justificat­ion to meet in secret, and some eventually release minutes and panel recommenda­tions.

In Minnesota, the state health department says opening meetings would not “provide space for candid conversati­ons and considerat­ion of a variety of viewpoints.” In Iowa, the state public health director said its advisory committee met in secret so members could speak without fear of public criticism.

“Because these are internal, advisory working groups, their meetings are not public,” a Pennsylvan­ia spokesman said of the state’s three vaccine committees.

Several states do not have an advisory panel, including Maryland.

A spokesman for Republican Gov. Larry Hogan said state health officials make vaccine allocation decisions based on federal guidelines. Democratic lawmakers have blasted the confusion surroundin­g vaccine access, administra­tion and distributi­on in the state.

Connecticu­t’s advisory panel has been meeting in public after acknowledg­ing that it unintentio­nally held a closed meeting in December when it voted on a recommenda­tion for how the governor should distribute the first vaccine doses.

 ??  ?? Respirator­y therapist Leigha McDaniels receives a COVID-19 vaccinatio­n Dec. 14 at a St. Louis hospital.
Respirator­y therapist Leigha McDaniels receives a COVID-19 vaccinatio­n Dec. 14 at a St. Louis hospital.

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