The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Eased vaccine access will put Georgia to test

Sign-up technology has had rocky start; issues with distributi­on persist.

- By Ariel Hart ahart@ajc.com Eric Stirgus eric.stirgus@ajc.com and Johnny Edwards johnny.edwards@ajc.com

The state is going big with vaccinatio­ns Monday, opening up eligibilit­y to more than half of Georgia adults. It may be the most significan­t step yet to end the COVID-19 pandemic here.

The people are ready. The state isn’t always making it easy.

In recent days new vaccinatio­n appointmen­t banks opened and filled within minutes or hours. Social media groups flooded with deep relief, anxious questions and pleas for help navigating the registrati­on maze.

The state and federal government announced new resources to be deployed. But the state’s technology, often Georgia’s Achilles’ heel in the pandemic response, already is off to a slow start.

And the state also will have to smooth out distributi­on problems. In metro Atlanta, vaccines can be extremely hard to come by. In some other parts of the state, where people may not be as wary of the pandemic or are skeptical of the vaccine, some sites are struggling to find enough willing people to get vaccinated every day.

Abigail Knox of Fulton County will be eligible starting Monday

State University researcher­s.

For example, some health centers had delays in receiving the PINS they needed to order doses, forcing them to wait for their first shipment, the Georgia State team found.

The state’s vaccinatio­n rate at times also looked worse than it may have been because some facilities were slow in reporting vaccinatio­ns, the GSU researcher­s found.

“Confusion arose regarding how soon they needed to report administer­ing a COVID-19 vaccine because the reporting window is different than the one for NONCOVID-19 vaccines,” they wrote. “All of these issues have compounded to set Georgia behind other states.”

Another issue: a mismatch in supply and demand. Kemp told reporters Wednesday that while some rural communitie­s have been saturated with doses, meeting demand in metro Atlanta has been a challenge. State data shows about 33% of vaccinatio­ns have been administer­ed in metro Atlanta’s five highest populated counties (Clayton, Cobb, Dekalb, Fulton and Gwinnett), although 36.5% of all Georgians live in those counties.

Amber Schmidtke, a public health researcher and former Mercer University professor who tracks Georgia’s epidemic on her widely read blog, said vaccine appointmen­t websites that show relatively few available slots in the Atlanta area and many available in rural areas indicate an imbalance of demand.

“This might still be an issue where demand is really high in certain areas and less so in others,” she said. “Is it a factor of hesitancy or eligibilit­y?”

If it is vaccine hesitancy, one missing component to Georgia’s vaccinatio­n effort has been a broad media campaign, experts said, featuring civic leaders and well-known Georgians of all demographi­c and political stripes.

Kemp, Public Health Commission­er Dr. Kathleen Toomey and other officials hold roundtable­s with community groups and promote the vaccines at news conference­s and other appearance­s. On Wednesday, Insurance Commission­er John King, speaking in Spanish, addressed the state’s outreach efforts to encourage Latinos to get the vaccine.

Those efforts are important, but a mass media campaign would help reinforce those messages and reach more Georgians, Schmidtke said.

“There needs to be a large public awareness campaign on the safety of the shots, the effectiven­ess of the shots and how they will get us back to normal,” she said.

Doses shipped, not administer­ed

The CDC data shows only six states have a larger gap between the number of vaccines delivered and the number administer­ed, raising concerns among experts that doses aren’t being used by some facilities.

Georgia has administer­ed about 74% of the more than 3.3 million doses shipped, according to state data. Most states have rates greater than 80%, according to an AJC analysis of CDC data. Three states — New Mexico, North Dakota and Wisconsin — had vaccine administra­tion rates greater than 90%.

Georgia has had 3,870 doses that weren’t used because they appeared contaminat­ed, were damaged, were not needed after being prepared or they leaked from the syringe, according to state Department of Public Health data that The Atlanta Journal-constituti­on received Monday through an open records request.

But that accounts for only a tiny fraction of the gap.

In Georgia, the gap between vaccines shipped and administer­ed is more than 850,000 doses, according to the DPH website Thursday. The CDC, which reports a higher delivery figure, put the gap Thursday morning at more than 1.3 million doses.

“When you are talking about 1 million doses on hand, that’s 20 days of supply on hand. That’s absurd,” Schmidtke said.

Each state gets a weekly shipment of vaccine based on the percentage of its adult population. The number of doses delivered to a state is the actual number of doses it ordered from the full amount of allocated doses available, a U.S. Health and Human Services department spokesman told The Atlanta Journal-constituti­on.

Kemp has said the gap is skewed because some doses en route to Georgia are added to the shipped vaccine totals. He also said some hospitals have been holding back supplies for second doses of the Pfizer-biontech and Moderna vaccines.

Kemp’s case

The governor notes vaccinatio­ns are increasing in Georgia. More than 1 million inoculatio­ns have been done over the past 30 days.

Kemp’s team also notes Georgia ranks 12th nationally in the total number of doses administer­ed, well ahead of border states such as Alabama, South Carolina and Tennessee.

Georgia, though, has the nation’s eighth-highest population, so it has received more doses than those states. Tennessee has the 15th-largest population, South Carolina the 23rd and Alabama the 24th.

The governor also said several times that the focus of his team has been on vaccinatin­g older Georgians since they have died at higher rates. The first wave of eligible residents included those living in long-term care facilities, and on Jan. 11 Kemp expanded eligibilit­y to all residents 65 and older.

“In this category, Georgia is well ahead of the national average, vaccinatin­g nearly 1 million seniors, or 66% of the senior population. This is compared to the national average which hovers around 60% and is much lower in some other states,” Kemp spokeswoma­n Mallory Blount said via email.

Next week, the list of those eligible will expand to include all those 55 and older as well as adults with high-risk conditions. That addition means that the inoculatio­n pool will cover categories that account for 92% of Georgia’s more than 15,000 confirmed coronaviru­s deaths, Kemp said Wednesday.

Still, some of those eligible have struggled to get appointmen­ts, prompting fed-up Georgians to flock to neighborin­g states to get shots when they were stymied here. Some other states also expanded their eligibilit­y pools earlier.

For example, by mid-february, at least 28 states, the District of Columbia and Puerto Rico made some or all teachers eligible to receive the vaccine, according to a tally by the education news site Education Week. Teachers began receiving shots in Georgia on March 8.

Next week, the list of those eligible will expand to include all those 55 and older as well as adults with highrisk conditions.

What’s next

State officials believe vaccinatio­ns will rapidly increase as they receive more doses. The ongoing challenge will be to have the logistics, vaccinatio­n sites, appointmen­t systems and personnel to get shots in arms.

State officials plan to soon double vaccinatio­ns at the Delta Flight Museum to address the demand issue in metro Atlanta.

The state opened four mass vaccinatio­n sites last month, operated by the Georgia Emergency Management and Homeland Security Agency (GEMA), and five more will open next week.

Federal officials plan to send about 42,000 doses a week to Mercedes-benz Stadium in downtown Atlanta in an effort to increase vaccinatio­ns in underserve­d communitie­s. The federal government will primarily staff the mass vaccinatio­n site. Federal and state officials are working out details on how people can sign up for shots.

The site is expected to be up and running in about another week, according to the announceme­nt.

Kemp said Wednesday he hopes to expand vaccine eligibilit­y to all adults by early April.

 ?? STEVE SCHAEFER FOR THE AJC ?? Maude Lakes, 93, receives a COVID-19 vaccinatio­n Friday at Jackson Memorial Baptist Church. The state’s rate of vaccinatin­g seniors over age 65 is above the U.S. average.
STEVE SCHAEFER FOR THE AJC Maude Lakes, 93, receives a COVID-19 vaccinatio­n Friday at Jackson Memorial Baptist Church. The state’s rate of vaccinatin­g seniors over age 65 is above the U.S. average.

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