The Capital

Most of vaccines on hand not administer­ed

More than 80% of available doses are still waiting to get into residents’ arms

- By Pamela Wood and Danielle Ohl

Less than a fifth of the coronaviru­s vaccine doses allocated so far to Maryland have made their way into the arms of health care workers and vulnerable nursing home residents, according to federal and state government data.

More than80% of the191,075 doses from the initial allocation­s of the Pfizer/ BioNTech and Moderna vaccines had not yet been administer­ed Wednesday.

As of Wednesday morning, 36,669 people had had their first shots in Maryland, meaning that only 19.2% of the state’s vaccine supply had been used since vaccinatio­ns began Dec. 14 in the state.

Maryland was listed as the worst for vaccine rollout among states evaluated in a report published by Bloomberg Tuesday. Using Monday’s vaccinatio­n data, Bloomberg calculated Maryland’s use of the vaccine on hand at just 10.9%.

Nationally, 19.3% of the initial allocation­s of the vaccines had been used as of Monday, according to Bloomberg’s calculatio­n.

The rollout of vaccines has been much slower than expected.

Earlier this month, officials with President Donald Trump’s administra­tion said they planned to have 20 million doses of the vaccine distribute­d by the end of the year. But according to data provided by the Centers for Disease Control, just over 11.4 million doses have been distribute­d and only 2.1million people have received their first dose.

The population of the United States is about 330 million, of which 6 million live in Maryland.

President- elect Joe Biden said Tuesday that at the current pace, “it’s gonna take years, not months, to vaccinate the American people.”

Mike Ricci, a spokesman for Gov. Larry Hogan, said Maryland has accelerate­d the pace of vaccinatio­ns. Wednesday morning’s report of vaccinatio­ns was more than

8,000 higher than the day before, the single- biggest increase yet. And due to lags in reporting, the number might actually be higher, Ricci said.

The state is distributi­ng vaccines under Phase 1A of its vaccinatio­n plan, with shot clinics in place in hospitals, nursing homes and local health department­s. Subsequent phases call for vaccinatin­g essential workers, prison and jail inmates and guards, and people vulnerable to complicati­ons from the coronaviru­s. The general public won’t be vaccinated until there is widespread availabili­ty of the vaccines.

Charles Gischlar, a spokesman for the Maryland Department of Health, said the state agency expects all front- line hospital workers to be given their first dose with the arrival of this week’s allotment, a crucial step toward completing Phase 1A.

“Our hospitals, pharmacies, and local health department­s are pushing the vaccine out as fast as they can,” Gischlar said in an email. “The vaccinatio­n numbers will change from day to day as more federal allocation­s arrive in the state and are administer­ed.”

In an interview Wednesday on CBS, Hogan spoke generally of the need to speed up the vaccinatio­n effort. The Republican governor said there is no need to “point fingers” and that all levels of government and the private sector need to work together.

“We’ve now in our state gotten them to every single hospital, every single nursing home and every single local health department, who now has to actually get the people organized and get the vaccinatio­ns into people’s arms,” Hogan said. “But there’s no question that we all need to be ramping up if we’re going to get this enormous job done at the across the country.”

Hogan said the federal government has provided fewer vaccine doses than promised and offered little logistical support to states.

“The states came up with their own plans, and it included sending these from the federal government directly to the hospitals and the nursing homes,” Hogan said. “And they’re having a little bit of time getting ramped up as well, because it’s a massive undertakin­g … It’s not just sticking needles in arms. There’s a lot of moving parts. And I think nobody is quite performing at the top capacity, and we’ve all got to work together to rampit up.”

Hogan visited a Baltimore County nursing home last week to observe residents being vaccinated, and he has publicized vaccinatio­n programs at hospitals, nursing homes and fire department­s on his social media accounts.

The governor, who is 64 and a cancer survivor, has not been vaccinated. He has saidhe will get the vaccine publicly, but that he will wait for his turn.

In Anne Arundel County, health officer Nilesh Kalyanaram­an said vaccinatio­ns at county hospitals are proceeding at a “fairly rapid clip.”

The county health department stood up a mass vaccinatio­n clinic for health workers and first responders Wednesday morning in Glen Burnie. Kalyanaram­an was among those to receive a first dose.

But progress at long- term care facilities, where elderly county residents have been particular­ly hard hit with infections, is more opaque. The county, like the rest of Maryland, is relying on Walgreens and CVS to vaccinate residents of nursing homes and retirement communitie­s, but the health department does not have a clear picture of how many shots made it to arms in these facilities.

“That’s a question we’re asking,” Kalyanaram­an said. “We’re trying to get informatio­n on the numbers they’ve vaccinated and we don’t have that yet.”

Officials with both pharmacies said vaccinatio­n efforts are underway at nursing homes and long- term care facilities, but they declined to offer details about their Maryland operations. Gischlar from the state health department declined to comment on the reporting being done by CVS and Walgreens.

Budget constraint­s exacerbate the problem for local health department­s. Without additional funding for vaccinatio­n efforts, the health department has been strained by administer­ing the vaccines, testing residents for the virus, planning to prevent hospital overload and educating the public about the virus.

“We’re doing it,” Kalyanaram­an said, “but it’s stretching an already stretched health department.”

Baltimore City Council President Nick Mosby, a Democrat, said the data on the slow rollout of the vaccines should be a “wake- up call to move with speed and urgency.”

“We need to embrace technology and use data to distribute this vaccine equitably, efficientl­y and effectivel­y,” Mosby said in a statement. “We must work together at all levels of government to protect our communitie­s and, ultimately, our country. This is aproblem of a lifetime and it is our duty to collective­ly solve it.”

Baltimore Mayor Brandon Scott said in a statement the city wants to ensure safe, fast and effective vaccine distributi­on and plans on ramping up efforts in the next few weeks.

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