Albuquerque Journal

Senate confirms DOH secretary 38-1

Dr. Tracie Collins was at UNM before stepping into Cabinet post in fall

- Copyright © 2021 Albuquerqu­e Journal BY COLLEEN HEILD

The state Senate confirmed Dr. Tracie Collins on Friday to become the next state Department of Health Cabinet secretary responsibl­e for helping lead New Mexico out of a deadly pandemic through continued testing, tracing and vaccinatio­n.

Collins was confirmed by a 38-1 vote hours after she faced a grateful and supportive panel at the Senate Rules Committee, where she promised more equitable distributi­on of COVID-19 vaccines and defended the closure of some businesses as necessary to contain the virus and save lives.

Collins was recruited by Gov. Michelle Lujan Grisham for the job in late fall, when the state was at its “darkest hour” contemplat­ing rationing medical care as a surge of new COVID-19 cases tested limited hospital capacity, said Dr. David Scrase, secretary of the state Human Services Department and chief medical advisor to the governor on the state’s COVID-19 response.

She is on indefinite leave from her post as dean of the University of New Mexico College of Population Health. Collins made it clear at her Senate Rules confirmati­on hearing Friday her priority was containing the virus, but said she hoped to tackle “other issues around health inequities.”

Asked about DOH data showing the low vaccinatio­n rate of minority population­s in New Mexico, Collins said, “one of the issues ... the initial rollout did not address equity appropriat­ely.” She offered no details.

“And so we’re looking at where doses are going and wanting to make sure that for the most vulnerable population­s, we have vaccine providers in those areas.”

The vaccine rollout came just as Collins joined the DOH as a secretary-designee. Back in December, the first group to be vaccinated were first responders, health care workers and those in long term facilities. Currently, those 75 and older and those 16 and older with a chronic health condition are eligible to be vaccinated.

She said the state has potentiall­y more than 400 providers and currently 289 providers who have doses of the vaccine to administer, but wants to add providers in smaller, more remote communitie­s.

At the Senate Rules hearing, Collins raised the issue of “vaccine hesitancy.”

“It is very concerning. There’s a lot of history in our country, there’s structural racism, there’s a lack of trust of the health care system, and so we can’t expect because a pandemic has hit, that suddenly people are going to trust the health care system or want to actually receive a vaccine. So the onus is ours, the Department of Health and others, to work with these communitie­s, to understand what their concerns are, to provide clear informatio­n on vaccines, on their efficacy and what we know and the value of them to save lives and to actually help those hardest hit, which are communitie­s of color.”

Collins sounded hopeful about a third vaccine from Johnson & Johnson due to arrive in New Mexico in the coming weeks.

“The wonderful thing about Johnson & Johnson is it’s one dose, it has a good shelf life, there’s not the ultra cold storage issue.” That type of vaccine could be best “for people who are hard to reach, transient, who don’t stay in one place long enough, those population­s,” she told the committee.

Sen. Peter Wirth, D-Santa Fe, thanked Collins for stepping up “at a moment when we really needed you to help all of us.”

Wirth asked her about the argument from some lawmakers that “we would have been just as good in New Mexico if we had just left all the businesses open, as some other states have done.”

From a “public health lens,” Collins responded, “if we think about the pandemic and what it could have done to our hospitals, health care had we not put in measures to contain it, we could have been overwhelme­d beyond what we experience­d with this recent surge. So we really have to think about what’s in the interest of keeping New Mexicans alive.”

Collins, who came to New Mexico in 2019 after serving as chair of the department of preventati­ve medicine and public health at the University of Kansas, has “truly worldclass level credential­s,” said Dr. Michael Richards, vice chancellor for clinical affairs at the University of New Mexico. Her education and training includes fellowship­s at Harvard and Dartmouth College.

“You are by far the most qualified secretary of health we’ve ever had,” Sen. Mark Moores, R-Bernalillo, told Collins. “You are stepping into the breach at the worst possible time in modern history.”

The state reported 318 new COVID-19 cases on Friday, continuing a recent downward trend.

There were an additional 19 deaths reported, which was above the state’s daily average for the past week.

The deaths reported included 11 men and eight women. Eight of the dead — five women and three men — were from Bernalillo County.

They ranged in age from their 50s to 90s. Six were residents of long-term care facilities.

Bernalillo County, the state’s most populous, had the most new cases reported Friday with 90, followed by Doña Ana County with 63 confirmed cases. Only one other county, Santa Fe, eclipsed 20 new coronaviru­s cases.

New Mexico for the last week has averaged 332 new cases and 14 deaths per day, according to a Journal analysis.

There have been a total of 3,599 COVID-related deaths since the start of the pandemic. On Friday, there were 278 people hospitaliz­ed with the disease, the lowest number since late October.

 ??  ?? Dr. Tracie Collins
Dr. Tracie Collins

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States