The Reporter (Vacaville)

State allows vaccine for all age 16 and up

- By Amy Taxin and Don Thompson

As California began offering vaccinatio­ns to everyone age 16 and over Thursday, Gov. Gavin Newsom urged more residents to sign up for appointmen­ts and not let apprehensi­on over inoculatio­ns get in the way of protecting themselves against the illness.

Nearly half of California­ns eligible for vaccinatio­n have received at least one shot against the coronaviru­s, Newsom said as the country’s most populous state began vaccinatin­g everyone, regardless of occupation or health condition.

It comes as California and other states have seen vaccine supplies rise in recent weeks, despite the recent pause of the use of the Johnson & Johnson singledose vaccine as U.S. government health advisers evaluate whether a handful of unusual blood clots were linked to the shot.

“I don’t care where you get it. I just want you to get it,” Newsom said of the vaccine at a news conference in Union City, California.

California has seen coronaviru­s cases plummet from a deadly fall and winter surge. About 2,300 people are hospitaliz­ed with the virus, compared with nearly 10 times as many earlier in the year, Newsom said. The state’s seven-day positivity rate for new coronaviru­s cases is 1.7%.

California has administer­ed 24 million doses of vaccine and is pushing residents to get the shot through community outreach, mobile clinics and public service announceme­nts, including what Newsom said is a new $40 million Spanish-language campaign emphasizin­g that vaccines are safe and effective.

“We’re in the fourth quarter unquestion­ably. But this game’s not done yet,” Newsom said.

As vaccine supplies have risen, many residents have had an easier time getting the shot. Several counties previously opened up eligibilit­y to people 16 years and older after seeing appointmen­ts go unfilled, and the rest of the state followed suit on Thursday.

Before opening up vaccinatio­ns to younger people, University of California, Davis Health had as many as 1,500 unfilled appointmen­ts a day. It is now booked for the week and continues to see strong demand for the shot, said Marianne Russ Sharp, a UC Davis Health spokeswoma­n. Sonoma County officials reported overwhelmi­ng demand swamped supply.

In San Bernardino County, which expanded eligibilit­y last week, vaccine slots that used to be snapped up in minutes now might take days to fill, but they don’t go unused.

“The county has seen that it takes longer to fill appointmen­ts than in the past,” said David Wert, a county spokesman. “But they all get filled.”

That isn’t the case in nearby Riverside County, where county health officials said as many as 900 vaccine appointmen­ts go unfilled each day. The county of 2.5 million people has seen a jump in vaccinatio­ns of younger people since expanding eligibilit­y, but it still has more doses than demand, said Michael Osur, assistant director of Riverside County Public Health. He added that about 39 percent of eligible residents have received at least one shot.

“The people who wanted to get vaccinated, the people who were clamoring to get vaccinated, got vaccinated,” Osur said. “Every week we have thousands of appointmen­ts that are going unfilled.” The county has launched a survey to try to find out why, he said.

In Fresno, where only about half of available vaccinatio­n slots are being filled, Fresno County Division Health Manager Joe Prado said “the demand isn’t there and so supply is no longer an issue really.”

Fresno County health officer Dr. Rais Vohra said Thursday they are considerin­g using some incentives that other counties have implemente­d to get people vaccinated, including free lunches or coupons.

“This would be just an extra incentive, just to convince them to spend a little bit of time with us to get their vaccine,” he said.

Public health officials have been working to overcome barriers to accessing the vaccine in underserve­d communitie­s and addressing vaccine hesitancy.

Newsom said the pause in the Johnson & Johnson vaccine affects only 4% of California’s vaccine supplies, with most residents receiving two-dose vaccine regimens from Pfizer and Moderna. But some community members have raised concerns about the effect it could have on the public’s overall willingnes­s to get the shot.

Debra Schade, director of the California School Boards Associatio­n, said the rare but serious blood clot problems being investigat­ed are spurring questions from parents concerned whether the shots bring the potential of longterm reproducti­ve health issues for their daughters, now that those age 16 and up are eligible.

“I think there’s a level of hesitancy that you’re not aware of,” she told top state health officials Wednesday during a meeting of the Community Vaccine Advisory Committee.

Newsom echoed health officials in noting the rarity of the problems being investigat­ed and the relative benefits of being vaccinated compared with the dangers of the deadly infection. But he acknowledg­ed hesitancy cuts across all demographi­c boundaries and can be spurred by residents’ political leanings.

“We still have hesitancy in all communitie­s,” he said. “We have to work across all that spectrum.”

Kiran Savage-Sangwan, executive director of the California Pan-Ethnic Health Network, told health officials Wednesday that residents have also raised concerns about costs, though the vaccine is free.

“People are used to not thinking health care is free, right, so I think it’s taking a lot to make sure people understand, even if you don’t have insurance, even if you’re undocument­ed, the vaccine is free,” she said.

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 ?? DAMIAN DOVARGANES — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Parent Maria Hernandez, with her sons, Edwin Gomez, 10, and Jesus Gomez, 9, arrive to get tested at a COVID-19 testing and vaccinatio­n site at the Roybal Learning Center in Los Angeles on Thursday.
DAMIAN DOVARGANES — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Parent Maria Hernandez, with her sons, Edwin Gomez, 10, and Jesus Gomez, 9, arrive to get tested at a COVID-19 testing and vaccinatio­n site at the Roybal Learning Center in Los Angeles on Thursday.

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