The Norwalk Hour

Connecticu­t’s COVID vaccine advisory group in limbo

- By Jenna Carlesso

In early March, a subcommitt­ee charged with educating the public on aspects of the COVID-19 vaccine met for what would likely be its last time. The single-dose Johnson & Johnson shot had just been granted emergency authorizat­ion, and members discussed what kind of outreach health officials might be able to do with the vaccine.

At the meeting’s conclusion, the chairwoman said she was awaiting word from Gov. Ned Lamont’s administra­tion on what the committee – a subgroup of the state’s vaccine advisory panel – would become going forward.

“The decision is not quite finalized at this point as to how we will use the committee,” said Sen. Heather Somers, R-Groton. “Our committee was to provide recommenda­tions on how to communicat­e. Now the governor’s office has a communicat­ions arm, which is doing a great job. So how can we aid them?”

More than a month later, some members of the subgroup are still waiting to hear how to proceed, and many consider their work to be finished. The same is true for members of the main vaccine advisory panel and its two other subcommitt­ees – one that recommende­d who should be prioritize­d for the COVID-19 shot and another that discussed the science behind the immunizati­on.

But several members expressed disappoint­ment that they weren’t able to contribute more or weren’t involved in key decisions. Some didn’t feel valued. And the sudden change to an agebased rollout effectivel­y jettisoned hours of work that committee members put in when they thought essential workers and people with health risks would be prioritize­d for access.

“I have not heard from the Department of Public

Health or the governor instructin­g us about any future role,” said Zita Lazzarini, a co-chair of the allocation subcommitt­ee, which debated who should qualify for the vaccine and when. “We were originally told that it could be nine months, we could have nine months to a year of being available. But I haven’t heard anything about future meetings at this point.”

Lamont’s full vaccine advisory panel, formed in October to study the efficacy of the shots, to weigh who should receive them first and to help strategize public outreach, hasn’t met since Jan. 14. Two of its subgroups, focusing on allocation and science, haven’t convened since February. And the third, focused on communicat­ion, last gathered on March 4.

Some members consider themselves to be on standby, should the governor or the state’s public health department need advice on a new vaccine or booster shot.

Gov. Ned Lamont said members could be tapped to offer advice when coronaviru­s vaccines are approved for children, or when booster shots become available for already-vaccinated adults. But he gave no formal commitment on when or if the group’s expertise would be sought again.

“I think they’re definitely on standby,” Lamont said. “My instinct is that over the course of next couple months, if we find out about vaccines for younger people, if we find out about booster shots, depending on what the variants are, that group could be busy again.”

Acting Public Health Commission­er Deidre Gifford, a co-chair of the full vaccine advisory panel, did not respond to requests for comment.

As the panel sits idle, people who served on the main committee and its subgroups say the administra­tion should launch a review of what worked and what didn’t – how some members were central to the strategy and others felt sidelined, what was considered successful and what opportunit­ies were missed – should a similar panel be created for the next public health crisis.

“We could think about what to do in the next pandemic, even if it doesn’t mirror this one. It’s always good to do a post analysis of what went well and what went less well,” Lazzarini, a UConn Health professor, said. “I do think that between the health department and something like the allocation subcommitt­ee, we could look carefully at the things that really worked well and the things that didn’t and make recommenda­tions for the future.”

Shift to age-based rollout was a curveball

The first few months of the vaccine rollout were a flurry of activity for Chris DiPentima. The head of the Connecticu­t Business and Industry Associatio­n, who was a member of both the full vaccine advisory panel and its communicat­ions subcommitt­ee, helped organize webinars with companies across the state, sent around literature addressing frequently asked questions about vaccines and talked with employers about the latest updates.

At the virtual sessions, which brought together medical experts, state officials and dozens of business leaders, CBIA spent hours fielding questions about who would qualify for Phase 1B, a stage of the vaccine rollout that was supposed to include essential workers like postal staff and grocery store employees, along with elderly residents and people who have certain underlying medical conditions.

Then in late February, Lamont threw a curveball and abruptly switched to an age-based rollout.

DiPentima said many employers were grateful they wouldn’t have to agonize over which staff members qualified for access or how to sign

them up. But frustratio­ns were aired over the weeks spent planning for a stage of the rollout that never arrived, and having to explain to workers who were next in line for the vaccine that they would now have to wait.

“I expressed the disappoint­ment of letting air out of the balloon with the pivot, because we had all kind of worked up to this day,” DiPentima said. “These businesses had all spent countless hours – hundreds of hours – trying to understand this next phase and what was going to be required of them. They invested a lot of time, and now we were changing the rules on them.”

On top of that, he said, “those workers who have to go into the office – the 40-year-old worker who is still going to have to go in the office every day, or go onto the manufactur­ing floor every day and be exposed to colleagues and circumstan­ces where maybe the virus was prevalent – they’re going to be further down the line.”

DiPentima and his colleagues devoted a lot of time to the process, too. CBIA hosted multiple webinars, some of which drew more than 300 attendees from the business community, in the weeks leading up to when essential workers would have qualified.

“I remember, just a week before we pivoted to the age-based rollout,

there was a 60-minute webinar, and we had over 70 questions we were able to answer,” he said. “We had even more questions we weren’t able to answer, because we ran out of time. … People spent so much time preparing themselves for this next phase.”

DiPentima wishes more members of the vaccine panel had been consulted about the shift to an agebased rollout. A handful of people, including some leaders of the advisory subcommitt­ees, were asked for their thoughts just a day or two before the announceme­nt was made, while many others were left in the dark.

DiPentima received a phone call shortly before the announceme­nt and expressed a mix of support and concern.

“It was certainly a challenge, because there were a lot of moving pieces,” he said. “Obviously, it would have been great if the [advisory group] was part of that conversati­on around going to agebased.”

The Rev. Robyn Anderson, a pastor at Blackwell Memorial AME Zion Church in Hartford and a member of the vaccine panel’s communicat­ions subgroup, said once the state decided it would prioritize residents by age, she focused on helping people to not feel discourage­d.

The organizati­on she co-founded, The Ministeria­l Health Fellowship, conducts regular outreach in communitie­s of color. During the pandemic, that has included everything from talking to residents about the COVID-19 vaccine to handing out educationa­l informatio­n and wellness packages with masks, thermomete­rs and other supplies.

“Because people of color were dying at a disproport­ionate rate, they really thought the [vaccine rollout] was going to be based on pre-existing health conditions, like diabetes and high blood pressure. And that wasn’t how it happened,” Anderson said. “That put somewhat of an emphasis on – here we go again, not really thinking about the fact that people of color are the ones dying in a disproport­ionate way. And here we are, changing the whole scope of the rollout.”

After priorities shifted, Anderson said she spent time urging people to still get vaccinated when it became their turn.

“As soon as it was available, that’s when we wanted to make sure they came out to get vaccinated,” she said. “Not to let [the change] discourage them, but using it to put even more of an emphasis on getting vaccinated.”

With recent news that use of the Johnson & Johnson vaccine is paused while officials investigat­e six cases of a rare clotting condition, advisory group members say they’re available should the administra­tion need advice.

Some members are also hoping to be consulted when booster shots are rolled out, possibly this fall. Leaders at Pfizer said recently that recipients of the company’s vaccine would likely need a third dose, six to 12 months after the first two.

“There may be issues that would be reasonable for us to address, either for boosters or secondary shots,” said Lazzarini, the co-chair of the allocation subcommitt­ee. “It depends on how the supply of those goes, how emergent it seems, all of those things.”

 ?? Tyler Sizemore / Hearst Connecticu­t Media ?? Nurse Carly Plymel preps a dose of the Pfizer COVID-19 vaccine at the Stamford Health vaccinatio­n site in Stamford on April 6.
Tyler Sizemore / Hearst Connecticu­t Media Nurse Carly Plymel preps a dose of the Pfizer COVID-19 vaccine at the Stamford Health vaccinatio­n site in Stamford on April 6.

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