Baltimore Sun

Vaccine site offers only 2nd doses due to lack of supply

- By Colin Campbell Baltimore Sun reporters Emily Opilo and Hallie Miller contribute­d to this article.

As others got their second doses of the COVID-19 vaccine at Baltimore City Community College’s Liberty Heights campus Wednesday, Juan Morales was denied his first.

The 43-year-old cook at Accents Grill in the Greensprin­g Shopping Center in Pikesville learned that, due to a lack of supply, Baltimore City’s sole vaccinatio­n site would offer vaccines only to those who already received their first dose. He missed the email announcing the change, effective all month.

“We’re going to wait,” said his wife, Virginia Morales, 40, a houseclean­er in Owings Mills, who accompanie­d him. “We understand.”

They didn’t have much choice. The city’s site inoculated just 250 people with second doses Wednesday. While more vaccines are expected to become available in the coming weeks and months as supply increases, getting a shot has been a challenge for many, especially older adults, who are most at risk, and those without computers or digital fluency.

The intense demand for the 10,000 doses Maryland receives each day has prompted some people who are eligible to share appointmen­t-scheduling links with friends, family and colleagues who are not, said Dr. Letitia Dzirasa, Baltimore’s health commission­er. That has caused appointmen­ts to be overbooked. As many as 25% of the city’s appointmen­ts scheduled for this month were mistakenly filled by people attempting to get a first dose, Dzirasa said.

Those who are eligible “would get an individual­ized link,” she said. “But we never broadly shared links on our website for signing up.”

Maryland’s vaccine appointmen­t software, PrepMod, has added to the confusion by sending an automated email reminder to those who schedule appointmen­ts — even after the city health department informed them they were not eligible yet, Dzirasa said.

“Even though we send out an email communicat­ion, PrepMod will still send a reminder to individual­s that they have an upcoming appointmen­t unless they cancel it,” the city health commission­er said. “We believe people also got that follow-up email.”

Baltimore Mayor Brandon Scott, a Democrat, called on the state Tuesday to expand access to COVID-19 vaccinatio­ns for people who live and work in the city, while the Democratic members of Maryland’s congressio­nal delegation asked Republican Gov. Larry Hogan to improve vaccine rollout statewide.

The state is urging providers to conserve second doses to ensure people get fully vaccinated, said Dennis R. Schrader, Maryland’s acting health secretary, during a virtual state House of Delegates committee hearing Tuesday.

“We are very adamant that we should not be burning through second doses as first doses, unless the federal government suddenly opens up the floodgates and we have doses coming from everywhere,” Schrader said.

An attendant at the vaccinatio­n site referred Morales and others seeking a first dose to a preregistr­ation site for the mass vaccinatio­n clinic the state plans to open Friday at the Baltimore Convention Center.

Firefighte­rs, police, a pharmacist and medical technician­s were among those who received vaccinatio­ns Wednesday during the city health department’s clinic in the BCCC gymnasium.

They pulled into the community college’s Druid Park Drive entrance in their vehicles, passed the guard shack, had their names checked against a list by staffers, then drove around to the rear of the buildings to park in Lot E. From there, they followed the signs up

the path to the gym.

Alicia White, a 59-year-old dialysis technician at DaVita Greensprin­g Dialysis Center, got her second shot at BCCC Wednesday after getting her first dose Jan. 6 at the former site in Port Covington.

White, who lives in Woodlawn, has been looking forward to traveling, visiting her mother and the rest of the activities she’s been sorely missing during the pandemic. She wants to go to Hawaii.

“I’m happy this is over with,” she said. Steve Wienner felt less emotional during his second shot than his first.

“Anyone who gets the first shot, your eyes tear up because you have a sense that life will get back to normal,” the 52-year-old pharmacist said. “The second shot is not quite that emotional feeling. It’s still a feeling of relief, but not like the first.”

Wienner, who lives in Reistersto­wn and owns the Mt. Vernon Pharmacy and Mt. Vernon Pharmacy at Fallsway, said nearly all of his employees have been vaccinated, which will allow them to welcome customers

back inside after months of operating as curbside-only.

“This is going to allow us to open our doors,” he said. “It’s not something you can do remotely.”

Debbi Hooper, a 35-year-old emergency medical technician with Hart to Heart Nursing Services, said she was a little apprehensi­ve about getting the vaccine. But she thought of her patients and her children, 8-year-old Rylan and 5-year-old Lucy.

“I felt guilty getting it, and I felt guilty not getting it,” she said. “We put worse things in our bodies.”

Kenneth Daughtry, who lives in Northeast Baltimore, is one of about half of the firefighte­rs at Engine 42 on Harford Road in Lauraville who have been vaccinated so far, he said. For those who were eligible, the stick was as easy as the process — in and out.

“The needle didn’t hurt,” the 56-year-old pump operator said. “I don’t feel sore.”

 ?? KARL MERTON FERRON/ BALTIMORE SUN ?? Virginia Morales and her husband, Juan Morales, wait to speak with an official at a vaccinatio­n clinic at the Baltimore City Community College Liberty Heights campus Wednesday. He wasn’t able to be inoculated.
KARL MERTON FERRON/ BALTIMORE SUN Virginia Morales and her husband, Juan Morales, wait to speak with an official at a vaccinatio­n clinic at the Baltimore City Community College Liberty Heights campus Wednesday. He wasn’t able to be inoculated.

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