The Atlanta Journal-Constitution
DEKALB URGES PATIENCE WITH VACCINE ROLLOUT
County overwhelmed with seniors trying to get their first shot.
At a town hall attended by hundreds, Dekalb County’s lead health expert pleaded for patience as COVID-19 vaccinations progress more slowly than anticipated.
The county has been overwhelmed with seniors attempting to receive their first vaccination shot, which led to the Dekalb Board of Health’s website crashing last Friday. Within hours, the county stopped accepting registrations because it already had more than 20,000 — more than doubling the roughly 8,000 vaccine doses the county had been allocated at the time.
Dr. Sandra Elizabeth Ford, the Dekalb Board of Health director, spoke extensively at the virtual event to residents who wanted to know whether their registrations would be honored and when registrations would become available again.
“Our staff can do about 1,000 immunizations a day, so it made no sense to keep the site open because you would be putting in appointments through March, April or May at that point,” she said, adding that 15,000 people’s appointments still need to be scheduled.
Ford said it’s unclear when the county will receive enough vaccine supply to reopen registrations.
Ford was joined by three other doctors to preach vaccine safety to hesitant and skeptical Dekalb residents at the 90-minute town hall, which was moderated by Dekalb Commissioner Lorraine Cochran-johnson on Zoom. Though many residents want the vaccine, the doctors emphasized the lengthy road ahead before there’s a return to semi-nor- malcy.
“We need people to be patient, but we also need to remind people that we have a way to prevent COVID now. It’s call wear your mask and socially distance,” Dr. Carlos C. del Rio, interim executive associate dean for Emory School of Medi- cine and Grady Health System, said. “So please continue to do all of those things and then get your vaccine.”
Dekalb’s rocky rollout
Ford received lots of ques- tions about vaccine avail- ability in Dekalb from resi- dents fighting for the coun- ty’s limited supply of doses.
The county received its first 2,500 doses on Dec. 31, which were administered to front-line health care workers and residents and staff at long-term care facilities. Soon after, Gov. Brian Kemp announced the Georgia Department of Public Health’s plan to expand vaccine eligibility to first responders and adults 65 and older, along with their caregivers. Family members and spouses of those groups are not eligible to receive the vaccine at this time. Like most counties, Dekalb is following the state’s vaccine rollout plan.
Ford expressed her frustration about the lack of public providers who have agreed to administer vaccinations.
Though 77 private practices have agreed to provide the vaccine to their doctors and patients, only two public providers have signed on in Dekalb. That includes a pedi- atric practice, which Ford said is moot at the moment because neither vaccine has been FDA approved for children.
“We have been trying to manage this process, but the expectation when the vaccine became available was that this was going to be a communitywide effort,” she said. “It is unreasonable to expect that the entire county was going to be immunized solely by the board of health in 72 hours.”
Ford said she didn’t expect the board of health to become the primary public vaccine provider. She urged residents in the medical field to volunteer to help admin- ister vaccines. She said the high demand for nurses across the country has prevented the board of health from expanding its staff.
Georgia is am o ng the states experienc i ng a rapid increase in COVID- 19 cases, hospitalizations and deaths. As of Jan. 11, there were nearly 40,000 confirmed COVID-19 cases and more than 500 deaths in Dekalb.
“We’re asking for communitywide support, because this is a communitywide issue, Ford said. “If you want to see less hospitalizations, we need to see more people out here assisting with passing the vaccine out.”
Safety and side effects
Cochran-johnson said she’s heard many African Americans in Dekalb do not trust vaccines, which prompted her to host the town hall. She cited the Tuskegee Experiment — a 40-year medical study that unethically observed the effects of syphilis on Black men — as a reason why many don’t plan to get vaccinated for COVID-19.
Del Rio attempted to quell those fears by bringing up Kizzmekia “Kizzy” Corbett, a Black immunologist at the National Institutes of Health who has been credited with crucial COVID-19 vaccine research.
“I always tell my African American patients at Grady that this (Moderna) vaccine was developed by an Afri- can American investigator,” he said.
Dr. Marcus C. Griffith, a child, adolescent and adult psychiatrist at Kaiser Permanente, added that vaccines are primarily respon- sible for the large increase in life expectancy over the past century. In 1900, the U.S. life expectancy was less than 50 years, but it’s currently about 80.
“The difference is vaccinations,” he said, citing the near eradication of diseases such as tuberculosis and polio.
Roughly 75 questions were submitted before the town hall, and many of them focused on vaccine safety and side effects. The doctors dispelled many common myths, including whether vaccines cause infertility, alter patients’ DNA or have the potential to be lethal. They encouraged residents to speak to their primary care physician if they have any further concerns or specific worries before getting vaccinated.
The U.S. Food and Drug Administration has approved two vaccines. The Pfizer vaccine, which must be stored at low temperatures, requires two doses taken 21 days apart, while the Moderna vaccine, which is what Dekalb has received so far, requires two doses taken 28 days apart.
“It’s like the difference between Coca-c o la and Pepsi,” he said. “They’re both soft drinks. They’re almost identical, and I can tell you: I’m a Moderna investigator, but I got the Pfizer vaccine. So I tell people that although I work with Coke, I got Pepsi.”