The Reporter (Vacaville)

J&J vaccine pause won’t affect state reopening

- By Kathleen Ronayne and Amy Taxin

SACRAMENTO >> California’s pause on using the Johnson & Johnson vaccine as federal agencies examine a possible and rare side effect is unlikely to affect vaccinatio­n efforts in the nation’s most populous state as it moves to start inoculatin­g people 16 and older this week.

State officials directed counties and other providers on Tuesday to halt use of the vaccine per federal recommenda­tion. But Gov. Gavin Newsom said he does not expect the halt to “materially impact our ability to fulfill our expectatio­ns.” Vaccinatio­ns are expected to be available for people 16 and older Thursday and California plans to lift most pandemic restrictio­ns in mid-June.

Newsom said the Johnson & Johnson vaccine accounts for only 4% of the state’s current supply and that inoculatio­ns of more than 3 million people a week will keep the state on track to reopen broadly June 15. He said officials are working to switch about 8,800 people who had made Johnson & Johnson reservatio­ns via a state online platform to Pfizer and Moderna shots.

Shot called ‘safe’

“The J&J vaccine has been extraordin­arily safe,” he said at an event in Butte County.

More than 15 million California­ns are fully or partially vaccinated. Of those, nearly 900,000 have received J&J shots, according to the state’s public health agency, including Newsom and other top health officials who publicly received the shots to demonstrat­e the vaccine’s safety.

Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and Food and Drug Administra­tion officials said Tuesday that they were investigat­ing blood clots in six women that emerged in the days after they were vaccinated, in combinatio­n with reduced platelet counts. The federal officials recommende­d pausing use of the vaccine until they know more.

More than 6.8 million doses of the J&J vaccine have been given in the U.S., the vast majority with no or mild side effects.

Dr. Kirsten Bibbins-Domingo, chair of the department of epidemiolo­gy and biostatist­ics at the University of California-San Francisco, said there is great enthusiasm for the J&J vaccine in vulnerable communitie­s because it requires only one shot and has high brand name recognitio­n.

It has also made it easier to vaccinate mobile communitie­s, such as homeless people who may be harder to locate for a second shot, people who have to drive long distances to get the shot or other hard-to-reach population­s, she said.

“We worry that it puts a big damper on efforts that have really been ramping up,” Bibbins-Domingo said of the pause.

Vaccine skepticism

The decision to pause J&J inoculatio­ns show the agencies are working hard to reassure the public, but anything that raises concerns about vaccine safety could increase vaccine skepticism, said Dr. Timothy Brewer, a professor of epidemiolo­gy at the UCLA Fielding School of Public Health and Medicine.

“Our case rates are still pretty low, our hospitaliz­ation rates and mortality rates are very low relative to what they were in January,” Brewer said. “So I think we’re still moving forward.”

Counties and health care providers reported little disruption to vaccinatio­n appointmen­ts, in part because of vastly reduced J&J shipments this week due to production problems. California received 67,000 doses of J&J this week compared with 575,000 last week.

Several counties are already vaccinatin­g people 16 and older in advance of the state expanding eligibilit­y on Thursday.

Isis Gardner, an 18-yearold senior at San Pedro High School in Los Angeles, received her first shot of the Pfizer vaccine Tuesday rather than the Johnson & Johnson vaccinatio­n she was scheduled to get.

“My mom, she’d been telling me the Pfizer is better than the J&J” because of possible blood clots, said Gardner, adding that she’s “definitely happy” about the substituti­on.

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 ?? DAMIAN DOVARGANES — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE ?? People walk in to get a COVID-19 vaccine at the Baldwin Hills Crenshaw Plaza in Los Angeles.
DAMIAN DOVARGANES — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE People walk in to get a COVID-19 vaccine at the Baldwin Hills Crenshaw Plaza in Los Angeles.

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