The Borneo Post (Sabah)

US student in charge of distributi­ng vaccines injected friends

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NEW YORK: The student CEO of a company tasked with distributi­ng coronaviru­s vaccines in Philadelph­ia admitted Thursday that he had given some doses to friends, sparking anger in the US where the rollout of shots has been sluggish.

Philadelph­ia’s local government employed Philly Fighting Covid, a group founded by 22-year-old Andrei Doroshin last year, to distribute thousands of Covid-19 vaccines across the eastern US city.

The group was a major player in Philadelph­ia’s coronaviru­s fight, first by participat­ing in testing and then in early January by organising the city’s first major vaccinatio­n center.

Philly Fighting Covid vaccinated nearly 7,000 people, mostly frontline health workers, who were given priority under the vaccinatio­n drive.

But Doroshin admitted that he had taken doses home and injected four of his friends, despite not being a registered nurse.

He defended his actions by saying that the doses were about to expire and his group could not find anyone in high-risk groups who were eligible for a shot.

“I stand by that decision. I understand that I made that mistake. That is my mistake to carry for the rest of my life, but it is not the mistake of the organizati­on,” he told NBC.

The city severed ties with the group after it became a for-profit organisati­on.

Several officials have called for an investigat­ion into why city hall awarded the contract to someone so young.

Most states are prioritizi­ng vaccines for workers most exposed to the virus and people over 65.

The lifespan of the vaccines made by Pfizer-BioNTech and Moderna is very limited once the vials have been opened.

There have been other reports of doses administer­ed to nonpriorit­y people.

 ?? Photo — AFP ?? File photo show Pfizer’s Covid-19 vaccine are stored in a refrigerat­or at Thomas Jefferson University Hospital in Philadelph­ia, Pennsylvan­ia.
Photo — AFP File photo show Pfizer’s Covid-19 vaccine are stored in a refrigerat­or at Thomas Jefferson University Hospital in Philadelph­ia, Pennsylvan­ia.

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