Starkville Daily News

Reeves: Mississipp­i will double number of vaccinatio­n sites

- By LEAH WILLINGHAM

JACKSON — Gov. Tate Reeves said Friday that the coronaviru­s vaccine rollout is not going fast enough in Mississipp­i. He said officials are working behind the scenes to “eliminate roadblocks” so more people can get vaccinated quickly.

The Republican governor said the state is planning to double the number of sites where people can be vaccinated in the coming days and double the appointmen­t capacity of those sites, as well as the number of days they are open.

“If you want a vaccine, you should have quick, simple access,” Reeves said.

“Government logistics should not stand in your way.”

Mississipp­i set up 18 drive-through sites for vaccinatio­ns, which opened for healthcare workers on Monday and individual­s 75 and over on Wednesday. Around 7,600 coronaviru­s vaccinatio­ns were administer­ed at drive-thru vaccinatio­n sites in the state this week, said State Health Officer Dr. Thomas Dobbs.

However, residents said the process has not been as smooth as they would like. Online appointmen­ts were filling up quickly; calls to the hotline to make appointmen­ts were backed up; some said they were not able to make appointmen­ts after waiting or they had to make appointmen­ts in counties far from where they live.

Tina Herrington, 76, of Jackson, told The Associated Press there were no appointmen­ts available in or near Mississipp­i’s capital city when she went to sign up a few days ago. The only appointmen­t she could get was more than 80 miles away — in Greenwood.

Herrington said she can’t drive an hour and 40 minutes at her age, adding her caretaker will need to give her a ride to the appointmen­t.

“I can’t make it that far on my own,” she said. “I don’t know what else to do. I don’t understand why I couldn’t get one around here in Jackson sooner. It was going to be weeks and weeks be

fore I could even get it anywhere near Jackson.”

Reeves said the goal is to increase the number of appointmen­ts available at drive-thru sites in a week from 8,000 to 30,000.

More than 170 private clinics and community health centers have also signed up to vaccinate patients. Dobbs said the names of those facilities will be posted on the Department of Health’s website.

To help ramp up its efforts, Mississipp­i will receive close to $200 million from the federal government as part of a recently passed pandemic relief package for coronaviru­s testing and vaccinatio­ns.

The state is to receive $171.3 million for testing and $26.8 million for vaccinatio­ns, Republican U.S. Sen. Cindy Hyde-smith said. The relief package was approved by Congress last month.

In a statement Friday, Hyde-smith said the cash influx will help “control this virus.”

“We all recognize ongoing stress caused by the coronaviru­s pandemic on our hospitals, health workers, and importantl­y the lives of all Mississipp­ians,” Hyde-smith said.

The state Health Department reported Friday that Mississipp­i had 2,175 new confirmed cases of the highly contagious virus as of Thursday evening. The department also reported 40 deaths Friday, with 26 of them happening between Dec. 16 and Thursday. The state has reported nearly 233,665 cases of the virus and 5,101 deaths from it since the start of the pandemic.

People eligible to receive the coronaviru­s vaccine can make an appointmen­t at Covidvacci­ne.umc.edu or by calling the COVID call center at 1-877978-6453.

 ??  ?? A member of the Mississipp­i National Guard receives a dose of the Moderna COVID-19 vaccine in his arm, by a fellow guard member, Wednesday, Dec. 23, 2020, in Flowood, Miss. One hundred doses of the vaccine were administer­ed to both Mississipp­i Air and Army National Guard service members who serve as first responders and currently assist with the administer­ing of the COVID-19 test at Mississipp­i Department of Health drive through community testing sites across the state. (Photo by Rogelio V. Solis, AP)
A member of the Mississipp­i National Guard receives a dose of the Moderna COVID-19 vaccine in his arm, by a fellow guard member, Wednesday, Dec. 23, 2020, in Flowood, Miss. One hundred doses of the vaccine were administer­ed to both Mississipp­i Air and Army National Guard service members who serve as first responders and currently assist with the administer­ing of the COVID-19 test at Mississipp­i Department of Health drive through community testing sites across the state. (Photo by Rogelio V. Solis, AP)

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