Sun Sentinel Palm Beach Edition

At some elite hospitals, a vaccine free-for-all

- By Apoorva Mandavilli

A 20-something who works on computers. A young researcher who studies cancer. Technician­s in basic research labs.

These are some of the thousands of people who have been immunized against the coronaviru­s at hospitals affiliated with Columbia University, New York University, Harvard and Vanderbilt, even as millions of front-line workers and older Americans are waiting their turns.

The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention has issued recommenda­tions intended to ensure that the nation’s vaccines first reach those at highest risk: health care workers who interact with COVID-19 patients, and residents and staff members at nursing homes, followed by people age 75 and older and certain essential workers.

Each state has establishe­d its own version of the guidelines, but with the rollout proceeding at a glacial pace, pressure has been growing for a more flexible approach. Officials at the CDC and the Food and Drug Administra­tion have recently suggested that it might be wiser to simply to loosen the criteria and distribute the vaccine as widely as possible.

Still, those officials did not envision that the vaccines would be given to healthy people in their 20s and 30s before older people, essential workers or others at high risk. States should still prioritize groups that “make sense,” Dr. Stephen Hahn, the FDA commission­er, told reporters Friday.

But a handful of the nation’s most prestigiou­s academic hospitals have already taken the notion much further. Workers who have nothing to do with patient care, and who are not 75 or older, have been offered the shots. Some of the institutio­ns were among the first recipients of the limited supplies in the United States.

“Cronyism and connection­s have no place in the rollout of this vaccine,” said Ruth Faden, a bioethicis­t at Johns Hopkins University in Baltimore. “If we don’t do this right, the consequenc­es could be quite catastroph­ic, so it’s really critical that people be hypersensi­tive to the rules of the game here.”

The CDC never intended to include workers who do not interact with patients, like administra­tors and graduate students, in the first tier of priority vaccinatio­ns, said Dr. Stanley Perlman, an immunologi­st at the University of Iowa and a member of the committee that issued the recommenda­tions.

“This all got so confusing,” he said. “In retrospect, I think it probably needed to be a little more exact on what we were thinking, because we were never thinking about hospital administra­tors.”

In Nashville, Tennessee, Vanderbilt University Medical Center asked all staff members, whether they were treating patients or not, to register for vaccinatio­n. Inoculatio­ns began in December, when the Tennessee Hospital Associatio­n sanctioned vaccinatio­ns for all hospital employees regardless of their roles.

In Boston, Brigham and Women’s Hospital and Massachuse­tts General Hospital, both affiliated with Harvard, have immunized more than 34,000 employees, including those involved in patient care, researcher­s who may come in contact with coronaviru­s samples and those engaged in clinical trials, according to Rich Copp, a spokespers­on for the hospitals.

The reason? Some laboratory scientists may be needed in the hospitals as the coronaviru­s resurges. “Our first-wave experience demonstrat­ed that some members of the research community may need to be redeployed to support work in patient care settings with COVID,” Copp said.

Still, the medical centers have announced plans to immunize the rest of their employees.

In New York state, only a fraction of the estimated 2.1 million front-line workers have been immunized. Gov. Andrew Cuomo has threatened to levy fines of up to $100,000 against hospitals that do not vaccinate quickly enough to use their doses.

At Columbia University, word quickly spread through research labs far removed from patient care: If you showed up at Milstein Hospital, the university’s primary medical center, you could get a vaccinatio­n — never mind whether your work had anything to do with patients.

Graduate students, postdoctor­al fellows and researcher­s were soon lining up at the hospital auditorium, according to several university employees. Nearly everyone at one cancer research center affiliated with the hospital received the vaccine.

Hospital officials said that they had eventually become aware of emails directing people to the auditorium but that anyone who did not need the vaccine had been turned away.

At NYU’s Langone Medical Center, the outreach to staff members who have no contact with patients was more deliberate.

“We are currently offering the COVID-19 vaccine to front-line employees only,” the center’s website says. “We will message our patients as soon as we have the vaccine available for patients.”

But in an email to staff members Dec. 28, Andrew Rubin, a senior vice president at the medical center, said the center had finished vaccinatin­g its 15,000 employees who interact with patients and would begin vaccinatin­g all other staff members. There was no mention of older adults or other priority groups specified by New York state.

An email Tuesday to NYU medical center staff members who had not yet signed up for vaccinatio­n said, “As an employee of a health care institutio­n, you have the opportunit­y to receive a vaccine that millions across the country want — and you can have, right now.”

State officials were dismayed that both NYU and Columbia had opened up vaccinatio­ns to low-risk staff members ahead of millions of state residents who needed the shots.

On Friday, New York expanded its guidance on vaccinatio­ns to include essential workers and those older than 75.

Privately, some state officials were furious. The institutio­ns should instead have asked the state what to do next as soon as they were done immunizing frontline staff members, said one official, speaking on condition of anonymity because he was not authorized to discuss the matter.

“The only reason that they have as much vaccine as they have was because they were custodians of vaccine — because they have cold storage,” the official said. “It wasn’t NYU’s vaccine to use for NYU.”

Several employees at the universiti­es, including a few who unknowingl­y accepted the vaccine out of line, were also discomfite­d by what they saw as an inequitabl­e and unfair process.

“It’s such a naked display of privilege, you know?” said one Columbia faculty member who did not get the vaccine and asked not to be identified for fear of retaliatio­n. “It’s because we’re at elite universiti­es and medical centers.”

 ?? HANNAHYOON/THE NEWYORKTIM­ES ?? Stickers are doled out to vaccine recipients last month at a hospital in Philadelph­ia. At a handful of large medical centers, employees who are not involved in patient care have been given shots.
HANNAHYOON/THE NEWYORKTIM­ES Stickers are doled out to vaccine recipients last month at a hospital in Philadelph­ia. At a handful of large medical centers, employees who are not involved in patient care have been given shots.

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