Houston Chronicle

Rapid expansion of shot eligibilit­y backfires for some states.

- By Carla K. Johnson and Nicky Forster

Despite the clamor to speed up the U.S. vaccinatio­n drive against COVID-19 and get the country back to normal, the first three months of the rollout suggest faster is not necessaril­y better.

A surprising new analysis found that states such as South Carolina, Florida and Missouri that raced ahead of others to offer the vaccine to ever-larger groups of people have vaccinated smaller shares of their population than those that moved more slowly and methodical­ly, such as Hawaii and Connecticu­t.

The explanatio­n, as experts see it, is that the rapid expansion of eligibilit­y caused a surge in demand too big for some states to handle and led to serious disarray. Vaccine supplies proved insufficie­nt or unpredicta­ble, websites crashed and phone lines became jammed, spreading confusion, frustratio­n and resignatio­n among many people.

“The infrastruc­ture just wasn’t ready. It kind of backfired,” said Dr. Rebecca Wurtz, an infectious disease physician and health data specialist at the University of Minnesota’s School of Public Health. She added: “In the rush to satisfy everyone, governors satisfied few and frustrated many.”

The findings could contain an important go-slow lesson for the nation’s governors, many of whom have announced dramatic expansions in their rollouts over the past few days after being challenged by President Joe Biden to make all adults eligible for vaccinatio­n by May 1.

“If you’re more targeted and more focused, you can do a better job,” said Sema Sgaier, executive director of Surgo Ventures, a nonprofit health-data organizati­on that conducted the analysis in collaborat­ion with the Associated Press. “You can open it up — if you have set up the infrastruc­ture to vaccinate all those people fast.”

Numerous factors stymied state vaccinatio­n performanc­e. Conspiracy theories, poor communicat­ion and undependab­le shipments slowed efforts after the first vials of precious vaccine arrived Dec. 14.

But the size of the eligible population was always within the control of state officials, who made widely varying decisions about how many people they invited to get in line when there wasn’t enough vaccine to go around.

When the drive began, most states put health care workers and nursing home residents at the front of the line. In doing so, states were abiding by national recommenda­tions from experts who also suggested doing everything possible to reach everyone in those two groups before moving on to the next categories.

But faced with political pressure and a clamor from the public, governors rushed ahead. Both the outgoing Trump administra­tion and the incoming Biden team urged opening vaccinatio­ns to older Americans.

By late January, more than half the states had opened up to older adults — some 75 and above, others 65 and up. That’s when the real problems started.

In Missouri, big-city shortages sent vaccine seekers driving hundreds of miles to rural towns. Dr. Elizabeth Bergamini, a pediatrici­an in suburban St. Louis, drove about 30 people to often out-ofthe-way vaccinatio­n events after the state opened eligibilit­y to those 65 and older Jan. 18 and then expanded further.

“We went from needing to vaccinate several hundred thousand people in the St. Louis area to an additional half-million people, but we still hadn’t vaccinated that first group, so it has been this mad dash,” Bergamini said. “It has just been a whole hot mess.”

In retrospect, health workers and nursing home residents were the easy groups to vaccinate. Doses could be delivered to them where they lived and worked.

“We knew where they were, and we knew who they were,” Wurtz said. As soon as states went beyond those population­s, it got harder to find the right people. Nursing home residents live in nursing homes. People 65 and older live everywhere.

West Virginia bucked the trend with both high numbers of eligible residents and high vaccinatio­n rates in early March, but the state started slow and built its capacity before expanding eligibilit­y.

Similarly, Alaska maintained a high vaccinatio­n rate with a smaller eligible population, then threw shots open to everyone 16 and older March 9.

Seven states in the bottom 10 for overall vaccinatio­n performanc­e — Georgia, Tennessee, Texas, Florida, Mississipp­i, South Carolina and Missouri — had larger-thanaverag­e shares of their residents eligible for shots.

Among high-performing states, five in the top 10 for high vaccinatio­n rates — New Mexico, North Dakota, Connecticu­t, Wyoming and Hawaii — stuck with more restrictiv­e eligibilit­y.

 ?? Robert Cohen / Associated Press ?? Vehicles line up in Poplar Bluff, Mo., in January for the state’s first mass vaccinatio­n event. An analysis found that states like Missouri that raced to offer the vaccine to ever-larger groups have vaccinated smaller shares of their population than those that moved more slowly.
Robert Cohen / Associated Press Vehicles line up in Poplar Bluff, Mo., in January for the state’s first mass vaccinatio­n event. An analysis found that states like Missouri that raced to offer the vaccine to ever-larger groups have vaccinated smaller shares of their population than those that moved more slowly.
 ?? Marta Lavandier / Associated Press ?? Liana Fonseca looks away March 9 as she receives the Pfizer COVID-19 vaccine in Miami. The rapid expansion of eligibilit­y caused a surge in demand too big for some states to handle.
Marta Lavandier / Associated Press Liana Fonseca looks away March 9 as she receives the Pfizer COVID-19 vaccine in Miami. The rapid expansion of eligibilit­y caused a surge in demand too big for some states to handle.

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