Houston Chronicle Sunday

As cases rise, states race to use vaccines before they expire

- By Mike Catalini

Hundreds of thousands of COVID-19 vaccine doses have been saved from the trash after U.S. regulators extended their expiration date for a second time, part of a nationwide effort to salvage expiring shots to battle the nation’s summer surge in infections.

The Food and Drug Administra­tion on Wednesday sent a letter to shot maker Johnson & Johnson declaring that the doses remain safe and effective for at least six months when properly stored. The FDA’s move gives the shots an extra six weeks as public officials press more Americans to get inoculated.

Similar efforts are happening in multiple states as public health officials try to ensure that soon-to-expire shots are put into arms before they must be discarded.

The surge in infections is largely due to the highly contagious delta variant of the coronaviru­s, which has spread rapidly, particular­ly among unvaccinat­ed people. Inoculatio­n rates have climbed only slightly after a steep fall from their April peak.

“It’s a critically important time — we have children headed back to school in just a few weeks’ time,” said Juliann Van Liew, director of the public health department in Wyandotte County, Kan.

Federal health officials have shipped an additional 8 million doses of the J&J shot to states that have not yet been used, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention’s vaccine-tracking website. The company did not share specific expiration dates.

The J&J vaccine is not the only one facing expiration. States also report that many Pfizer and Moderna doses are approachin­g expiration, which is set at six months from the manufactur­ing date. In Louisiana, about 100,000 Pfizer doses are set to expire in about a week, for example.

Some states have set up marketplac­es for shot providers or dedicated staff to redistribu­ting about-to-expire vaccines to places that need them. Such efforts are underway in New Jersey, Washington and Wisconsin.

In Iowa and North Dakota, officials say they send vaccines approachin­g expiration to locations where they are most likely to be used.

“We have a lot of interest from the public in receiving J&J, so if we find doses that may go unused, we will transfer them to providers in need,” said Molly Howell, North Dakota’s immunizati­on director.

Lacy Fehrenbach, deputy director for COVID response for the Washington state Department of Health, said officials want the doses used as efficientl­y as possible.

“Otherwise, we’re working with our providers to move them around, or, of course, the federal government to get them to other places that need it,” she said.

Pfizer and Moderna have already supplied more than enough doses to vaccinate all eligible Americans. More than 150 million Americans have been fully vaccinated with the companies’ twodose shots. By comparison, just 13 million, or 9 percent, have been vaccinated with the J&J shot.

All told, nearly 164 million people have been vaccinated, according to the CDC, or just over 49 percent of the U.S. population.

 ?? Joe Raedle / Getty Images ?? With the spread of the delta variant, vaccine rates have climbed only slightly after a fall from their April peak.
Joe Raedle / Getty Images With the spread of the delta variant, vaccine rates have climbed only slightly after a fall from their April peak.

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