Daily Southtown (Sunday)

Pritzker confident Illinois can meet May 1 deadline for vaccines

- By Dan Petrella and Jenny Whidden dpetrella@chicagotri­bune.com jwhidden@chicagotri­bune.com

Gov. J.B. Pritzker on Friday said Illinois shouldn’t have a problem meeting President Joe Biden’s May 1 deadline for opening up vaccine eligibilit­y to all adults.

“I am confident that not just by May 1 but maybe even a little bit earlier we could open up to everyone in the state, everyone that’s eligible,” Pritzker said during an event at Loretto Hospital on Chicago’s West Side.

Current state guidelines limit eligibilit­y for vaccinatio­ns to health care workers, people 65 and older, front-line workers in places such as schools and grocery stores, and people under 65 with certain preexistin­g health conditions that put them at greater risk for severe COVID-19 symptoms.

The city of Chicago and some other local health department­s haven’t followed the state’s lead in opening up vaccinatio­ns to people younger than 65, though Chicago officials have said they hope to expand eligibilit­y later this month.

Pritzker said he thinks the state can make the vaccine accessible to a wider range of people because the Biden administra­tion so far has lived up to its promises to increase shipments of doses to the states.

“I feel very confident moving forward that supplies are increasing, that the president is doing everything he can to get us there,” the governor said.

As of Thursday, the state had received more than 4.9 million vaccine doses, up from nearly 4.3 million doses a week earlier.

Illinois public health officials said Friday that another 110,570 coronaviru­s vaccine doses were administer­ed on Thursday, bringing the statewide total to 3,791,273.

The number of Illinois residents who have been fully vaccinated — receiving both of the required shots — reached 1,369,534, or 10.75% of the total population. Over the past seven days, the state averaged 95,121 vaccines administer­ed daily.

Also Friday, officials reported 1,763 new confirmed and probable cases of COVID-19 and 39 additional fatalities. The total number of known infections in Illinois since the start of the pandemic is 1,206,172, and the statewide death toll is 20,901.

The seven-day statewide positivity rate for cases as a share of total tests was 2.3% as of Thursday. Friday’s new cases resulted from a batch of 93,913 tests.

As of Thursday night, 1,178 people in Illinois were hospitaliz­ed with COVID19, with 240 patients in intensive care units and 108 patients on ventilator­s.

Also Friday, U.S. Sens. Tammy Duckworth and Dick Durbin announced 26 Illinois community health centers will join a federal vaccine program.

Thirteen Chicago centers and 13 others in Springfiel­d, Rockford and elsewhere will receive vaccines directly from the federal government through the third round of the Federally Qualified Health Center Program.

FQHCs are designated medical providers that serve disadvanta­ged population­s.

The 26 health centers will be eligible to receive doses “over the coming weeks,” joining nine Illinois centers that became eligible last month through the second round of the program.

Equity in health care during the pandemic has been a major theme for Pritzker, who was joined at Loretto Hospital on Friday by a bipartisan group of lawmakers for the signing of a bill creating a new $150 million-per-year program to fund local collaborat­ions aimed at reducing disparitie­s in health care.

The hospital transforma­tion program, which will be funded through state and federal Medicaid money, is designed to give local providers a role in crafting new approaches to address gaps in health care, supporters said.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States