The Norwalk Hour

Hospital vaccinatio­n coming next week

- By Ed Stannard edward.stannard@hearst mediact.com; 203-680-9382

Yale New Haven Health expects to begin vaccinatin­g 29,000 members of its staff against the coronaviru­s by next week, according to Dr. Thomas Balcezak, chief clinical officer.

“We are anticipati­ng receiving doses as soon as either end of this week or beginning of next, and we are already in the process to begin the scheduling for mass vaccinatio­n of our health care workers, and we’re including all individual­s within our health system and our medical staffs and students that come in contact with patients as part of their responsibi­lities,” Balcezak said Monday during an online press conference.

He said later Monday the state has cut the health system’s allocation to 1,900 doses per week.

The Food and Drug Administra­tion’s vaccine advisory committee will be meeting Thursday to consider emergency use authorizat­ion for the Pfizer-BioNTech vaccine. Clinical trials for the vaccine have been conducted at the Yale Center for Clinical Investigat­ion.

Balcezak said it appears the Pfizer vaccine will be approved and that the Moderna vaccine likely will be approved shortly thereafter. Both are based on the coronaviru­s’ RNA, and both must be stored at extremely cold temperatur­es. Both also have shown better than 90 percent effectiven­ess in clinical trials.

“That 29,000 is our estimate of how many individual­s we have that come in contact with patients,” Balcezak said. “It’s a massive undertakin­g,”

He said the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention’s advisory committee, which met last week, recommende­d “the first two priority groups are elderly, frail in congregate living environmen­ts, so nursing homes, long-term care, and health care workers.”

“If you work within our health system and you are healthy and you are not old and you don’t work with patients, you are going to be waiting probably until the spring before you’re given access to vaccine,” Balcezak said, unless Pfizer, Moderna and AstraZenic­a, the third company with a vaccine close to being ready to roll out, are able to provide more doses than they have anticipate­d.

He said the health system would not mandate employees be vaccinated. Given how quickly the vaccine has been developed — just a year after the first reports of the coronaviru­s came out of Wuhan, China, Balcezak said, “I think by pushing too hard and mandating right now it’s a potential that we would have a backlash and resistance.” He said once the vaccine is shown to be safe and effective, the health system may require employees to be immunized.

Balcezak said it hasn’t been determined what role the health system will play in getting the vaccine out to the public.

“We don’t have that answer yet. We’re going to get through those two first priorities, patient-facing health care workers and frail in congregate living environmen­ts, and in later stages, as described by the CDC’s advisory panel, we’ll be allowing other individual­s to get

the vaccine and we’ll be doing so through our physicians’ offices and clinics.”

The number of cases of COVID-19 has been rising quickly this fall and Yale New Haven Health CEO Marna Borgstrom said there were 457 inpatients in the system’s five hospitals as of Monday, 47 more than a week earlier.

Dr. Richard Martinello, medical director for infection prevention, said a spike after Thanksgivi­ng is just beginning to occur. “Over the last week we’ve really seen kind of a plateau in the number of hospitaliz­ed patients that we’ve had,” he said, adding that Yale’s wastewater tracking data, a leading indicator of increased cases, “have shown a leveling in how much of the genetic material they’re able to identify from the sewage sludge.”

“But just over the last two days we’ve started to see an increase in how many patients we have in our hospital, and we are very concerned, because of all the travel that had occurred during the Thanksgivi­ng holiday, that now we may be, this week and next week, starting to see that surge,” Martinello said.

Balcezak said he is not concerned about having enough personal protective equipment, such as masks, gloves and gowns. And Martinello said the staff will continue to use PPE even after vaccinatio­ns begin.

“While we’re very enthusiast­ic about the vaccine coming out and we expect that this is going to be found to be a highly effective vaccine, our use of PPE is going to continue to be the same,” he said.

Borgstrom said the health system hopes not to significan­tly cut back on non-emergency procedures, as it did in the spring, when Yale New Haven suffered as much as $1.5 million a day in losses and people stopped coming to the hospital with serious medical issues. She said the hospital has the capacity to handle both COVID and other patients.

“We operate seven hospital campuses, and so capacity is different at each,” she said. Yale New Haven Hospital has more than 1,500 beds and 239 COVID patients as of Monday. Bridgeport Hospital has 132 COVID patients and almost 500 beds, she said. Each of those hospitals has two campuses.

The number of COVID patients at the other hospitals Monday were 41 at Greenwich, 32 at Lawrence and Memorial in New London and 13 at Westerly in Rhode Island.

The health system officials stressed that people maintain the health guidelines of wearing masks, keeping a safe distance and avoiding large gatherings. Balcezak said he was concerned that people don’t realize how serious the second wave is.

“One oif the byproducts of COVID-19 is visitor restrictio­ns,” he said. “I don’t think the general public has a sense of what it looks like inside the hospital right now. This is real. This is causing significan­t morbidity and mortality and it’s stressing our health care system and the health care system across the United States.”

 ?? Peter Hvizdak / Hearst Connecticu­t Media ?? Yale New Haven Hospital.
Peter Hvizdak / Hearst Connecticu­t Media Yale New Haven Hospital.

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