The Denver Post

3 sites to begin taking walk-ins

Appointmen­ts no longer necessary at locations in Denver, Pueblo and Loveland

- By Matt Sebastian and Jessica Seaman

Colorado will begin accepting walk-in patients at three of the state’s largest mass-vaccinatio­n sites Wednesday as officials tout the overwhelmi­ng effectiven­ess of COVID-19 inoculatio­ns and urge younger people to get their shots as soon as possible amid rising hospitaliz­ations.

The move, announced by Gov. Jared Polis, comes as Colorado is experienci­ng its fourth wave of COVID-19, with more-contagious variants spreading throughout the state.

At the same time, as more people are inoculated against the coronaviru­s, state health officials say their data shows the vaccines are more than 93% effective in preventing infection, and that people who do contract the virus after being vaccinated appear far less likely to see serious complicati­ons.

The number of people hospitaliz­ed with confirmed and suspected coronaviru­s cases statewide rose by 46 on Tuesday to 614, the highest figure since late January.

While the seven-day average of new COVID-19 cases is going down, 7.35% of tests came back positive over the last three days — the highest the positivity rate has been since early January.

“This is very much a race

against the clock,” Polis said at a news briefing, noting the state is seeing a rise in younger Coloradans — people in their 20s and 30s — being hospitaliz­ed with the virus.

To help make it easier to get vaccinated, the drive-up clinics at Ball Arena in Denver, the Ranch Events Complex in Loveland and the Colorado State Fairground­s in Pueblo no longer will require appointmen­ts, Polis announced.

Other state vaccinatio­n sites, as well as private health care providers and pharmacies, still will require appointmen­ts.

“We all want to experience the end of this pandemic and the sooner we can achieve the vaccinatio­n levels so that the virus has no place to go, no place to spread, the sooner we can return to absolute normal,” Polis said.

The schedules for the three walk-up/drive-up sites:

• Ball Arena in Denver, 9 a.m. to 7 p.m. Monday through Friday.

Appointmen­ts are also available at primarybio.com/r/ truecare24-cdphe

• Colorado State Fairground­s in Pueblo, 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. Friday through Monday.

Appointmen­ts are also available at centura.org/ covid-19/covid-19-vaccineinf­ormation/vaccineeve­nts

• The Ranch Events Complex in Loveland, 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. Monday through Saturday.

Appointmen­ts are also available at larimerhea­lth.secure.force.com/ Vaccine

Overall, 1.5 million Coloradans are fully vaccinated against COVID-19.

Since late January, 819 — or 0.8% — of the 106,065 people confirmed to have been infected with COVID19 were fully inoculated against the virus, said Dr. Rachel Herlihy, the state epidemiolo­gist.

These “breakthrou­gh cases” as they’re called represent a small percentage of infections in the state, with only 1 in 7,000 fully vaccinated people contractin­g the coronaviru­s, according to an analysis by the state health department that looked at data during the week of April 4 to 10. By comparison, 1 in 387 unvaccinat­ed people became infected during that same time period,

That means people who are fully immunized are 94.6% less likely to have confirmed COVID-19, according to the analysis.

A second analysis by the state Department of Public Health and Environmen­t found that COVID-19 vaccines offer about 93% protection against the virus, which is in line with national studies looking at the efficacy of the shots, Herlihy said.

State analysis of breakthrou­gh cases also found those people were far less likely to be hospitaliz­ed for COVID-19 complicati­ons, with just a handful being admitted between late January and mid-April.

It’s “a reminder about the highly effective nature of this vaccine and the importance for all Coloradans to receive this vaccine,” Herlihy said.

“Again, remember that vaccinatio­n is going to be our ticket out of this pandemic.”

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