The Norwalk Hour

State passes vaccine milestone

- By Julia Bergman

While the sidelining of the state’s supply of the Johnson & Johnson COVID-19 vaccine is slowing vaccinatio­ns this week, Connecticu­t surpassed another milestone in its vaccine rollout: more than 1 million residents fully inoculated.

The state received a record 288,000 doses last week, largely attributed to an uptick in J&J supply, compared to 179,000 doses this week. The J&J vaccine is now on pause while federal health officials investigat­e a rare blood-clotting disorder that emerged in six of the roughly 6.8 million recipients of the vaccine.

“If we had Johnson & Johnson this week, and we had more supply, we could

vaccinate more people this week,” Josh Geballe, the state’s chief operating officer, said Thursday. “There’s people who have appointmen­ts right now for next week, for the week after who could’ve been brought forward.”

Lamont criticized the decision by the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and the Food and Drug Administra­tion to call for a pause on J&J’s use. The governor said he worries the move by the fedearl goverment could impede states’ efforts to convince those who are hesitant to get vaccinated.

It’s too soon to tell whether the pause will affect people’s willingnes­s to roll up their sleeves and get a shot. But Lamont said a sign of that would be large numbers of people who signed up to get J&J not rescheduli­ng their appointmen­ts to get one of the two-dose Pfizer or Moderna vaccines.

The J&J vaccine was “very popular up until a few days ago,” the governor said, “because you were one and done and it was easy to do.”

The J&J vaccine can be stored for at least three months at 36-46 degrees Fahrenheit, but Lamont is hoping the pause will be over long before that.

“I really hope that J&J is back on the market by early next week and that we can speed things up” the governor said.

The 67-year-old Lamont gave a shoutout to his age group — those 65 and older — for “breaking all records,” reaching 87% vaccinatio­n rate.

Lamont is hoping to replicate that trend in the state’s younger residents — “a cohort that feels a little less urgency to get vaccinated.”

Two weeks after the state opened eligibilit­y to them, 34 percent of those between the ages of 16 and 44 have received at least one shot of a vaccine.

So far, the state has relied on trusted community members such as

religious leaders to help convince those who are reluctant to get vaccinated. The state is targeting hard to reach population­s with 35 mobile vaccine vans, 13 of which are on the streets today, which allow people to walk up and roll up their sleeves, no appointmen­ts needed.

In the future, Lamont is banking on restaurant­s and businesses eventually requiring proof of vaccinatio­n for entry as “one more incentive for more people to get vaccinated.”

But as the state faces more and more people who are not only reluctant, but unwilling to get vaccinated, it will need to step up its efforts.

“The work will get harder as we get into the end of April and May when we will have more supply

than demand,” Geballe said.

Lamont said the latest data from the state showing a drop in coronaviru­s hospitaliz­ations and daily positivity rate of 2.04 percent show things are stabilizin­g in the state and that the vaccines are working.

He noted two indication­s of the vaccines effectiven­ess.

The majority of those currently hospitaliz­ed due to COVID-19 have not been vaccinated, the governor said. Displaying a map showing the municipali­ties with the highest rates of new COVID-19 cases, such as Waterbury, the governor said these areas also have some of the lowest vaccinatio­n rates.

 ?? Erik Trautmann / Hearst Connecticu­t Media ?? Local residents line up at the Ultimate Regent 8 movie theater, where the Norwalk Health Department held a mass Johnson & Johnson COVID vaccinatio­n clinic in the theater lobby on April 7 in Norwalk. The Bow Tie Cinemas theater owner partnered with the health department to host the public COVID vaccinatio­n clinic.
Erik Trautmann / Hearst Connecticu­t Media Local residents line up at the Ultimate Regent 8 movie theater, where the Norwalk Health Department held a mass Johnson & Johnson COVID vaccinatio­n clinic in the theater lobby on April 7 in Norwalk. The Bow Tie Cinemas theater owner partnered with the health department to host the public COVID vaccinatio­n clinic.
 ?? Tyler Sizemore / Hearst Connecticu­t Media ?? People wait in their cars to be vaccinated at the Community Health Center drive-thru vaccinatio­n clinic in Stamford on Sunday.
Tyler Sizemore / Hearst Connecticu­t Media People wait in their cars to be vaccinated at the Community Health Center drive-thru vaccinatio­n clinic in Stamford on Sunday.

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