The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Georgia’s online vaccine data portal offline till next week

State says system, data transfer woes delay daily publicatio­n of numbers.

- By J. Scott Trubey scott.trubey@ajc.com

The Georgia Department of Public Health on Thursday temporaril­y took down its public COVID-19 vaccine dashboard, blaming ongoing system and data transfer issues that have delayed publicatio­n of the state’s daily numbers.

In a news release, DPH said it will continue to publish daily updates on its website. These updates will include cumulative vaccines administer­ed, the number of vaccines allocated and the percentage of allocated of vaccines administer­ed.

But other detailed data will be limited, the agency said. The state’s dashboard was last updated Tuesday.

DPH spokeswoma­n Nancy Nydam said the system issues do not affect the state’s ability to report vaccine data to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, which publishes national vaccine figures daily on its own portal.

The state’s vaccine dashboard is unrelated to the vaccinatio­n registrati­on tool allowing Georgians to schedule appointmen­ts. The vaccine dashboard also is separate from the state’s daily dashboard of COVID-19 case, test and death data.

DPH said it is working to fix the issues and upgrade the website, which also shows county-level data for vaccine administra­tion. The agency said the improvemen­ts are expected to include additional county-level data “to present a more complete picture of COVID vaccine administra­tion in Georgia.”

In an email, Nydam said the problem relates to vaccine data transferri­ng from one file to another that feeds the state’s dashboard.

“It is not transferri­ng correctly, and the manual process takes nearly 10 hours once we know there is a problem,” Nydam said.

Nydam said the state hopes the work to fix the data transfer issue and upgrade the dashboard will be completed by April 2. But if finished sooner, she said, “we will put it back up.”

“We won’t wait,” she said. Since the start of the pandemic, the state has had to bootstrap its data visualizat­ion and reporting apparatus, occasional­ly running into trouble amid a flood of informatio­n.

“This pandemic has caused everyone to want to see the data and see it in real time,” said Amber Schmidtke, a former CDC scientist and former Mercer University professor who tracks the state’s epidemic on her closely followed blog and newsletter. “What this highlights is DPH has needed more money for a long time.”

Schmidtke said she would like to see the updates include county-level demographi­c data on vaccine recipients as a way to track and address issues of vaccine equity.

On Thursday, Georgia officially expanded vaccine eligibilit­y to include all Georgians 16 and older.

According to the CDC, Georgia has administer­ed more than 3.3 million shots as of Wednesday afternoon. The vaccinatio­n rate of 31,670 per 100,000 people ranks 49th out of 50 states nationally.

Gov. Brian Kemp has pushed back on Georgia’s ranking, saying the state has been shorted about 250,000 doses administer­ed through a federal pharmacy program that incorrectl­y identified where shots were administer­ed.

But Georgia still ranks at the bottom nationally for the percentage of the adult population who have received at least one shot by the patients’ state of residence, according to CDC data.

 ?? BRYNN ANDERSON/AP ?? People wait in an observatio­n area after getting a vaccine at Mercedes-benz Stadium on Thursday in Atlanta. Gov. Brian Kemp made all Georgians 16 and older eligible to get a COVID-19 vaccine.
BRYNN ANDERSON/AP People wait in an observatio­n area after getting a vaccine at Mercedes-benz Stadium on Thursday in Atlanta. Gov. Brian Kemp made all Georgians 16 and older eligible to get a COVID-19 vaccine.

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