The Arizona Republic

Experts: Don’t toss vaccine doses

- Elizabeth Weise

When the COVID-19 vaccine rollout began, there seemed no good answers for what to do with leftover doses. Vaccinator­s were punished for giving shots in violation of priority lists, while fearful clinics were condemned for throwing doses away.

“Early on, the question was: ‘Is the absolute red line that you don’t throw a dose away? Or is the red line that you don’t give it to the wrong person?’ ” said Dr. Matthew Zahn, medical director of the division of epidemiolo­gy for Orange County in California.

Federal guidelines existed but weren’t widely emphasized. The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention’s Advisory Committee on Immunizati­on Practices issued guidance urging “a flexible approach” to the vaccine, especially when it was in danger of going unused.

Former Surgeon General Jerome Adams tweeted out that if it was a case of choosing between wasting vaccine or moving down the priority groups, the correct action was to put vaccine in arms.

States however, didn’t consistent­ly embrace or communicat­e that to the vaccinator­s in their area, said Dr. Kelly Moore, deputy director of the non-profit Immunizati­on Action Coalition.

In some cases, administra­tors seemed to worry too much about optics and what might seem like inequities or favoritism when vaccine was in extremely short supply, Zahn said.

Ten weeks into the vaccine rollout, most hospitals, clinics and vaccinatio­n centers now have protocols and systems in place to make sure every last dose gets used.

“The No. 1 rule is vaccine cannot go to waste,” said Zahn, a fellow with the Infectious Diseases Society of America. “Have a reasonable plan to try in good faith to reach the most eligible people, but don’t waste vaccine.”

Some have embraced that approach from the beginning.

“We’ve always taken the stance that every dose is a life, so we’ve never thrown a dose away,” said Alan Harris, emergency manager of Seminole County in Florida.

Just because it’s the right thing to do doesn’t mean it easy. Making sure every last dose is used requires legwork, Harris said.

Every Tuesday and Friday his staff call the 100 or so nursing homes and assisted living facilities in the county to find out if they have new residents or staff who need to be vaccinated.

They compile a list, and then, if there are doses left over from a vaccinatio­n clinic, staff members start making calls.

The approach is a stark contrast to instances when vaccinator­s have been censured for giving leftover doses before they went bad to whomever they could find.

One notorious case involved Dr. Hasan Gokal in Houston. He was accused of stealing a vial of vaccine from the Harris County Public Health District on Dec. 29 because he gave unused doses that would have gone to waste to friends and family.

He filed paperwork accounting for what he had done and was promptly fired and charged with theft. The charges were later dismissed.

New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo initially threatened health care providers with a $1 million fine and loss of their licenses if they vaccinated someone who was not eligible. That was walked back after reports of clinics throwing away doses rather than giving them to people who might not fit the eligibilit­y profile.

Massachuse­tts is upfront about “vaccine wastage,” as it’s called. It makes a chart available online showing tossed COVID-19 vaccine, which in almost all cases was discarded because of storage or delivery problems that let doses get too warm for too long.

The state’s vaccine allocation guidance specifical­ly calls for all vaccine to be used, even if it means moving down the eligibilit­y list.

“In the rare instance where you have COVID-19 vaccine that will expire and you have no one in the current priority groups to be vaccinated, you can use your clinical judgment to administer the vaccine to a person in another priority group,” it says.

While the issue gets a lot of attention, overall vaccine waste appears to be very low, said Dr. Marcus Plescia, chief medical officer for the Associatio­n of State and Territoria­l Health Officials. Though there’s no actual data, anecdotall­y he has not heard much concern about it.

COVID-19 vaccine is problemati­c not only because it’s in short supply but because of its exacting storage requiremen­ts.

The Pfizer vaccine is shipped frozen in vials that contain up to six doses. To be used, the vial must first be thawed and then mixed with a saline solution. Once mixed, it can be held at room temperatur­e, but if it’s not used within six hours it must be discarded.

The Moderna vaccine also is shipped frozen, in 10dose vials. It is brought to room temperatur­e, the rubber cap is punctured and vaccine is drawn into a syringe for injection. Once the top has been punctured, the rest of the vial must be used within six hours.

At many COVID-19 vaccinatio­n sites, a pharmacist fills syringes with vaccine, which are then taken to the health care profession­als doing the vaccinatio­n.

“As we get closer to the end of the day, we do fewer syringes to decrease the possibilit­y we’ll have any left over. At the very last half-hour we only fill them as people come in,” said Harris.

The county never has more than five doses of Pfizer (sometimes it’s possible to get six doses out of a vial) or nine doses of Moderna vaccine at the end of a clinic. Generally, it’s no more than two or three.

Whatever is left is put in small battery-powered refrigerat­ors used to store insulin, about the size of two stacked boxes of spaghetti.

These are driven by health care providers to the assisted living facility where someone is waiting.

The important message for vaccinator­s is that vaccine is precious and should never go to waste, said Dr. Amesh Adalja, a senior scholar at the Johns Hopkins Center for Health Security.

That’s especially important in inclement weather when people might not make it to their vaccinatio­n appointmen­ts.

 ?? OF HEALTH
PROVIDED BY SEMINOLE COUNTY DEPARTMENT ?? A syringe filled with COVID-19 vaccine sits in a battery-powered refrigerat­ed transporta­tion container. In Seminole County, Fla., county staff use these to take any extra doses of vaccine to home-bound seniors or nearby nursing homes after vaccine clinics.
OF HEALTH PROVIDED BY SEMINOLE COUNTY DEPARTMENT A syringe filled with COVID-19 vaccine sits in a battery-powered refrigerat­ed transporta­tion container. In Seminole County, Fla., county staff use these to take any extra doses of vaccine to home-bound seniors or nearby nursing homes after vaccine clinics.

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