The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Cobb virus

County struggles to vaccinate as number of virus cases skyrockets.

- By Kristal Dixon kristal.dixon@ajc.com

The new, more contagious strain of COVID-19 originatin­g from the United Kingdom has surfaced in Cobb County.

As cases of the virus have surged, officials with the Cobb & Douglas Public Health Department held a virtual town hall meeting Tuesday to update the community on its efforts to vaccinate qualified individual­s against COVID-19.

Dr. Janet Memark, district health director of Cobb & Douglas Public Health Department, said including antigen and PCR tests, Cobb County’s two-week case number is about 1,000 per 100,000 people. That’s a rate 10 times higher than what’s considered high community spread.

Cobb also has one of the highest number of hospitaliz­ations in the state and very few critical care beds at its hospitals, the doctor said. Georgia Department of Public Health numbers show, as of Wednesday, Cobb has reported 637 deaths and 2,519 hospitaliz­ations. It ranks fourth in hospitaliz­ations behind Gwinnett, Fulton and Dekalb, and is second to Fulton in deaths, the state’s website indicates.

Memark said the department has also been told by health care officials that the new strain first reported in the U.K. has been discovered in Cobb County. While the variant doesn’t appear to be more deadly, it is more contagious, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention has said.

Referring to the recent surge of the variant strain in California’s Los Angeles County, Memark said, “If this takes over our county like L.A. County, we are going to be in just really the most dire of situations.”

A little more than 7,700 doses of the vaccines have been given throughout Cobb and Douglas counties since it began vaccinatin­g front-line health care workers,

public safety employees, residents and staff of longterm care facilities and people age 65 and older earlier this month, Memark said. That number includes doses of the vaccine it has given from its inventory to partners to help vaccinate people such as health care workers and educators who are 65 and older, department spokeswoma­n Valerie Crow told The Atlanta Journalcon­stitution.

The health department on an average day provides about 700 vaccines at Jim Miller Park in Marietta and between 200 and 300 at the Douglas County Public Health Center. However,

there are not enough doses of the vaccine to go around to vaccinate everyone who qualifies under the current rollout plan, Memark said.

A little more than 1 million vaccine doses have been shipped to Georgia and about 535,920 have been administer­ed, according to the Georgia

Department of Public Health. There are 1,761 providers throughout the state who are authorized to administer the vaccine to the public, but Memark said some have not received the doses. She said the federal government has been slow to release vaccines to the states, but hopes that will soon change.

“It’s simply a supply versus demand issue,” she said.

The increased demand also led to the health department’s website crashing during the early days of the vaccinatio­n rollout. Memark said the website was put together “at the last minute” since they were expecting the state to have a registrati­on system in place. To help manage the load, the department each Friday at 5 p.m. will open the registrati­on website for appointmen­ts for just the following week due to the uncertaint­y of the vaccine supply.

Memark said the department hopes to transfer its registrati­on website to a new server that can handle the increased web traffic. She also said they are looking to staff a call center to help with the number of inquiries coming to health department offices related to the vaccine. Another outreach effort would be to use mobile vaccinatio­n units.

Nancy Nydam, spokeswoma­n with Georgia Department of Public Health, told the AJC that the department hopes to launch a statewide scheduling website in the next few weeks. It hasn’t done so already because similar sites in other states had problems handling the heavy traffic.

Other providers offering the vaccine, such as CVS, Publix, Kroger and Walgreens, can help ease the burden on the health department. Lisa Crossman, deputy director of the department, said residents can check with their local health care providers and pharmacies to see if they offer the vaccines. Residents can visit the state Department of Public Health’s website to find vaccine providers.

“We want to get these shots in arms,” she said. “It’s kind of our mission in life right now to get these shots in arms.”

 ?? MICHAEL HOLAHAN/THE AUGUSTA CHRONICLE VIA AP ?? Registered Nurse Lisa Strickland administer­s a COVID-19 vaccine shot Tuesday to Tracy Atkinson during a driveup inoculatio­n at Craig Houghton Elementary School in Augusta.
MICHAEL HOLAHAN/THE AUGUSTA CHRONICLE VIA AP Registered Nurse Lisa Strickland administer­s a COVID-19 vaccine shot Tuesday to Tracy Atkinson during a driveup inoculatio­n at Craig Houghton Elementary School in Augusta.

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