The Denver Post

Coors Field clinic. UCHealth is planning to vaccinate 10,000 with appointmen­ts in their cars next weekend.

- By Matt Sebastian and Jessica Seaman Matt Sebastian: msebastian@denverpost.com or @mattsebast­ian

UCHealth is planning to stage a drive-thru massvaccin­ation event in Coors Field’s parking lots at the end of January that would see a projected 10,000 people 70 or older inoculated against COVID-19 over two days, officials with the health system said Friday.

Before finalizing the Jan. 30-31 event in Denver — which would be held in conjunctio­n with city and state officials and the Colorado Rockies — UCHealth will conduct a dry run at the same site on Sunday, with plans to vaccinate 1,000 older Coloradans who have appointmen­ts.

“No walk-ins will be vaccinated on these days,” said Dan Weaver, vice president of communicat­ions for UCHealth. “In fact, if a car pulls in with multiple people inside, we’ll only be able to vaccinate the one person with an appointmen­t.”

Coloradans seeking COVID-19 vaccines from UCHealth can sign up for appointmen­ts via the provider’s website or by calling 720-462-2255; those who qualify under the state’s current vaccinatio­n stage — such as people 70 and older — will be notified when appointmen­ts are available, whether at the drive-thru site or elsewhere.

The Sunday pilot event will begin slowly, with a small number of cars brought through Coors Field’s parking lots between 8 and 9 a.m., before crews take a break to “figure out what works, what needs to be adjusted,” Weaver said. Then at 10 a.m., a larger number of cars — all people with appointmen­ts — will be let through, with an anticipate­d 1,000 people 70 and older being vaccinated by noon.

After people are vaccinated, there’s a required 15minute observatio­n period to watch for any negative reactions to the injections, so vehicles will be directed to another parking lot, Weaver said. There, observers and EMS crews will be walking around monitoring those who’ve just received their shots.

“We’re certainly optimistic that if this weekend’s pilot goes well, we’ll be able to hold the two-day vaccinatio­n drive-thru clinic next weekend,” Weaver said.

Staff from other health care providers will be on hand, too, to observe, with the notion that UCHealth’s two-day event can be used as a blueprint to stage other drive-thru vaccinatio­n clinics around the state, Weaver said. The state will provide UCHealth with additional doses of COVID-19 vaccines so the health system can inoculate up to 10,000 people next weekend, he noted.

UCHealth’s plans come as the Biden administra­tion — looking to speed up vaccine distributi­on — released a plan that would have the Federal Emergency Management Agency run up to 100 mass vaccinatio­n clinics across the nation, The Washington Post reported Friday.

Gov. Jared Polis previously has shied away from the sort of large-scale vaccinatio­n clinics being staged in other states, saying he believes smaller sites are just as efficient. However, on Friday he said he has “not ruled out sites of any size.”

“Every site has a role,” Polis said during a news briefing. “Whether it’s a Coors Field site administer­ed by UCHealth, whether it’s a FEMA site. We’re happy to work with all partners on these kinds of sites.”

But, he said, one problem with mass-vaccinatio­n sites is that there is still very limited supply of COVID-19 vaccines.

“If you only have so much vaccine, I do think it’s very important to get it out into the community across our entire state rather than all at one site,” Polis said. “That being said, in the population centers, if you have critical mass, you can certainly have a mediumscal­e site or even a largerscal­e site as part of that overall model.”

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