The Mendocino Beacon

Some medical conditions excluded from vaccine line

Next phase of COVID vaccinatio­n starts March 15, but leaves out some medically vulnerable

- By Lisa Krieger lkrieger@bayareanew­sgroup.com

With damaged airways, Kai Levenson-Cupp, 19, lives in fear that COVID-19 could worsen the asthma that already leaves him gasping for breath.

Brooke Vittimberg­a, 25, has a weakened immune system from complicati­ons of a bone marrow transplant, so is also very vulnerable to the virus.

But neither of these serious health problems is likely to get them to the front of the COVID-19 vaccine line, despite the state’s newly expanded eligibilit­y criteria that will pave the way for millions more California­ns to get vaccinated starting March 15. For vaccine access, they have the wrong diagnoses.

“I’m terrified,” said Levenson-Cupp of Alameda, whose lungs and trachea were badly burned in a childhood accident and now uses an inhaler to help breathe during exercise, allergies and even the most routine viral ailments.

With vaccine doses still scarce, California on Friday unveiled a list of high-risk conditions and disabiliti­es that qualify for the next phase of vaccinatio­n: Cancer, pregnancy, stage 4 kidney disease, oxygendepe­ndent lung disease, Down syndrome, sickle cell disease, heart failure, severe diabetes, Type 2 diabetes and a weakened immune system from a solid organ transplant.

The list of 10 conditions is narrow, designed to prevent a surge of demand from anyone with a minor ailment. Health care providers must verify a person’s health status. This next phase will add another 4 to 6 million people to the current list of 13 million vaccineeli­gible California­ns.

But an array of other serious medical conditions — such as cystic fibrosis, dementia, hypertensi­on, Type 1 diabetes and some rare genetic diseases — are not included, even though there is early evidence that they’re linked with worse outcomes in COVID-19 patients.

The dilemma is leaving millions of California­ns with rare conditions at risk, critics say, as the state tries to balance the needs of those most vulnerable

to the pandemic. Already, California­ns who are 65 or older, front-line health care workers and first responders and some teachers and farmworker­s qualify for the vaccine. But Friday’s announceme­nt of the next phase was sure to leave many at-risk residents waiting their turn.

Vittimberg­a is one of them. The Stanford graduate who dreams of going to medical school is a survivor of acute myeloid leukemia who developed graft vs. host disease, a rare condition when a transplant­ed immune system attacks the body after a bone marrow transplant.

If she contracts COVID-19, her odds are grim: 32% mortality, according to one recent study. But the state will prioritize for vaccinatio­n those whose immune systems are weakened by solid organ transplant­s, not — at least not yet — bone marrow transplant­s.

“My concern is that I’ll be excluded, even though I’m at very high risk,” said Vittimberg­a, who wears two masks and glasses to prevent COVID-19 during her frequent hospital visits.

The list of eligible conditions is subject to change as additional scientific and state-specific evidence is analyzed by the California Department of Public Health, according to the state.

The state drew its recommenda­tions from a U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention document created in December as a resource for people who might need to take extra precaution­s to avoid contractin­g the virus.

The CDC list is also being used as a distributi­on tool for other states, including Connecticu­t, Massachuse­tts, New Hampshire, Maine, New Jersey, North Dakota, Texas, Washington and New York.

States are free to create their own vaccine priority lists, which are stirring different controvers­ies.

In New Jersey, smokers are on the list. Washington, D.C., is offering the vaccine to anyone with a body mass index over 25, a measure of obesity; in California, the cutoff is 40. Unlike California, Tennessee will offer the vaccine to people with both Type 1 and Type 2 diabetes.

One problem is that the CDC list is based on research of large numbers of COVID-19 patients or sets of smaller studies. So to make the list, a condition has to be common enough that many people have it — and have been sickened by the virus.

This means that people with rarer conditions are not included.

The CDC guidelines were never meant to inform vaccine distributi­on, and “may not include every condition that might increase one’s risk for developing severe illness from COVID-19,” the agency said.

The lack of data does not mean a lack of risk, said Britt Dorton, 24, whose diagnoses of Ehlers-Danlos, a connective tissue disorder, and other conditions can rush her to the hospital with a dislocated joint or sudden change in heart rate.

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