The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Kemp: Vaccine demand outpacing supply

Cases in Georgia have increased by 100,000 over past two weeks.

- By Eric Stirgus eric.stirgus@ajc.com and J. Scott Trubey scott.trubey@ajc.com

The need to ramp up COVID-19 vaccinatio­ns in Georgia is taking on greater urgency amid the third wave of the virus and an increase in cases involving a more infectious strain of the disease.

But Georgia already has been shipped almost all of the vaccine doses the state was allocated. A primary challenge now is that Georgia needs more, Gov. Brian Kemp and state health officials stressed Thursday.

still have far more demand than supply,” Kemp said at a news conference at the state Capitol.

He announced one stopgap measure that should help. Starting next week, 40,000 doses that had been sent to CVS and Walgreens for nursing homes will be used by the state, increasing its weekly capacity to about 120,000 doses.

Meanwhile, Georgia on Thursday surpassed 700,000 confirmed cases of COVID-19, an increase of about 100,000 in just two weeks. The state also reported 100 net new confirmed deaths,

with another 11 deaths deemed probable.

And the state now has five confirmed cases of the highly infectious U.K. strain of the virus, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. That includes a case in Cobb County. Only a tiny fraction of COVID tests are analyzed for the strain, so experts say it is likely that it is much more prevalent than the numbers indicate.

Georgia Department of Health Commission­er Dr. Kathleen Toomey said she anticipate­s additional cases. By March, according to a CDC study, the U.K. strain could become the dominant one in the country, which would mean more cases, more hospitaliz­ations for struggling hospitals and, ultimately, more deaths, the CDC report warned.

A bit of good news: Hospitaliz­ations have been dipping slightly since a peak earlier this month. State data showed that more than 5,300 COVID-19 patients were being treated in Georgia hospitals at 4 p.m. Thursday; Kemp said that was the lowest number in two weeks.

Still, hospitals are struggling with high patient loads, and Kemp implored Georgians not to consider the decline an “all clear signal” to return to pre-pandemic practices. “Our hospitals cannot handle another surge of COVID19 patients on top of their current workload,” he said.

State officials also said at Thursday’s news conference that they are working to improve the vaccinatio­n rollout in the face of mounting criticism.

Many elderly residents have had trouble making appointmen­ts or setting up times to get a second shot, saying county websites aren’t working or no one is answering or returning telephone calls. Officials said the state is working to streamline the process for getting appointmen­ts.

Officials also said they are working on plans to expand the number of vaccine providers and noted that more people are offering to volunteer in the vaccinatio­n administra­tion process.

So far, Georgia providers have administer­ed 591,438 doses, slightly more half of the doses the state has received, state data shows. That rate is worse than nearly every other state’s, though Georgia officials again said that the federal data is often two or three days behind.

For now, Kemp said, there are no plans to expand vaccine eligibilit­y as the state waits on more informatio­n from President Joe Biden’s administra­tion about its plan to distribute more doses.

All 478,725 doses of the Pfizer-biontech vaccine allocated to Georgia have been shipped. Of the 652,700 doses of the Moderna vaccine allocated to Georgia, all but 6,000 doses have been shipped.

“The biggest impediment now is having an adequate supply,” Toomey said.

The Biden team has repeatedly said it wants to have 100 million vaccinatio­ns in its first 100 days in office. About 16.5 million vaccinatio­ns have been administer­ed since late December when the program began, an average of about 550,000 a day.

White House officials announced Thursday a plan to have 100 federally supported community vaccinatio­n centers in the next month. They also said the CDC will launch a program to make vaccines available to communitie­s in their local pharmacies beginning next month.

 ?? ALYSSA POINTER/ALYSSA.POINTER@AJC.COM ?? Gov. Brian Kemp (left) listens as Dr. Kathleen Toomey, Commission­er of Georgia Department of Public Health, addresses the media during a COVID-19 update Thursday at the Georgia State Capitol.
ALYSSA POINTER/ALYSSA.POINTER@AJC.COM Gov. Brian Kemp (left) listens as Dr. Kathleen Toomey, Commission­er of Georgia Department of Public Health, addresses the media during a COVID-19 update Thursday at the Georgia State Capitol.

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