The Commercial Appeal

Pandemic response:

First COVID-19 vaccine shipments are set to begin arriving in states Monday.

- Matthew Perrone and Mike Stobbe

WASHINGTON – The nation’s first COVID-19 vaccine will begin arriving in states Monday morning, U.S. officials said Saturday, after the government gave the final go-ahead to the shots needed to end an outbreak that has killed nearly 300,000 Americans.

Trucks will roll out Sunday morning as shipping companies UPS and Fedex begin delivering Pfizer’s vaccine to nearly 150 distributi­on centers across the states, said Army Gen. Gustave Perna of Operation Warp Speed, the Trump administra­tion’s vaccine developmen­t program. An additional 450 or so facilities will get the vaccine between Tuesday and Wednesday.

Initially, about 3 million shots are expected to be shipped nationwide. It was unclear exactly who would receive the first doses of the vaccine, though health workers and nursing home residents were the priority. Perna said health authoritie­s would decide.

A similar number of shots will be held back for those recipients’ second dose, which is needed for full protection from COVID-19.

The announceme­nt Saturday kicks off a massive logistical operation involving the federal and state government­s, private companies and health care workers to quickly distribute limited vaccine supplies throughout the U.S.

Perna compared the effort to D-day, the U.s.-led military offensive that turned the tide in World War II.

“D-day was the beginning of the end, and that’s where we are today,” Perna said in a news conference. But he added that it would take months of work and “diligence, courage and strength to eventually achieve victory.”

The first shipments are expected to leave Pfizer’s manufactur­ing plant in Kalamazoo, Michigan, via truck and then be flown to regional hubs around the country. Medical distributo­r Mckesson and pharmacy chains including CVS and Rite-aid also are involved in local rollout.

In a key distributi­on challenge, the vaccine, co-developed with Biontech, must be stored and shipped at ultra-low temperatur­es of about 94 degrees below zero. Pfizer has developed shipping containers that use dry ice, and GPS-ENabled sensors will allow the company to track each shipment and ensure it stays cold.

Distributi­on locations include hospitals and other sites able to meet those ultra-cold storage requiremen­ts. Within three weeks, vaccines should be delivered to all vaccinatio­n sites identified by state government­s, such as local pharmacies, Perna said. The vaccine was timed to arrive Monday morning so that health workers would be available to receive the shots and begin giving them, Perna said.

It comes after the Food and Drug Administra­tion late Friday authorized emergency use of the vaccine. The sign-off capped an unpreceden­ted global race to speed vaccines through testing and review, chopping years off the normal developmen­t process.

 ?? PAUL SANCYA/AP ?? The first vaccine shipments are expected to leave Pfizer’s plant in Kalamazoo, Mich., via truck and then be flown to regional hubs.
PAUL SANCYA/AP The first vaccine shipments are expected to leave Pfizer’s plant in Kalamazoo, Mich., via truck and then be flown to regional hubs.

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