Lake County Record-Bee

VACCINE REGISTRY WEBSITE ACTIVATED

- By Barbara Feder Ostrov CalMatters

Facing criticism for its chaotic COVID-19 vaccine rollout, California has quietly launched a long-promised statewide website to help residents learn when they are eligible to receive the vaccine and schedule appointmen­ts.

Called MyTurn (myturn. ca.gov), the online registry has not yet been widely promoted and still is a work in progress.

California­ns can register on the website to be notified when it’s their turn for the vaccine in a number of counties. But for now, it only can be used to schedule appointmen­ts for health care workers and people 65 and older.

MyTurn is expected to improve in the coming weeks as more counties are able to link their registrati­on systems to the state’s online platform. At least one local official has alerted their constituen­ts to it, but the state has not yet announced or publicized it.

The website advises people without email addresses or a mobile phone to call the state’s COVID hotline at 833-422-4255.

MyTurn serves as a clearingho­use for residents, a one-stop place to get informatio­n that until now has been scattered over 58 counties and three cities. State officials largely have left the on-the-ground logistics of vaccine distributi­on to local health department­s that have partnered with local health providers.

As a result, California­ns have had to navigate numerous online registrati­on or notificati­on systems managed by county and city government­s, hospitals and even supermarke­ts. They have spent hours on screens and on the phone, fruitlessl­y searching for appointmen­ts. Some online platforms have buckled under the strain, going dark for hours at a time.

“It’s been frustratin­g,” said Diane Mendoza, a school transporta­tion manager from Visalia. Earlier this week, she spent hours online and on the phone to get a vaccine appointmen­t for her 82-year-old mother.

The fragmented and confusing rollout prompted a group of tech workers to launch their own statewide informatio­n portal, VaccinateC­A.com.

“It’s been a blur,” Manish Goregaokar, a Berkeley software engineer and one of the site’s organizers, said of the site’s rapid growth since its launch last week.

“I really wish this (rollout) was more coordinate­d and that we’d prepped for this more,” Goregaokar said. “We didn’t know when it would be ready but we knew that at some point there is going to be a vaccine. The logistics of this should have been figured out.”

More than 100 volunteers are now vetting informatio­n on the site, Goregaokar said.

“This kind of haphazard way of getting the vaccine out just creates enormous frustratio­n and is unnecessar­y,” said Dr. John Swartzberg, an infectious disease specialist at UC Berkeley.

The state’s new MyTurn site “is intended to be one, but not the only, place where California­ns can find informatio­n on when they are eligible to get vaccinated and to be able to make an appointmen­t for vaccinatio­n,” said one state official who was not authorized to speak publicly.

Dagny Ellenberg, vice president of Fiona Hutton & Associates, a Sacramento public affairs firm that develops campaigns for state agencies, said a state-run registrati­on site could be

useful but had a caveat.

“In a perfect world, anyone in the state could use a single resource, but I think we’ve all lived through large-scale health care rollouts, like Healthcare.gov, and seen the confusion that can result,” Ellenberg said. “Technical glitches can overshadow the good that’s trying to be accomplish­ed. It would be incredibly important to make sure it can be rolled out in a way that’s effective and avoids glitches.”

 ?? ANNE WERNIKOFF —CALMATTERS ?? National Guard members and medical personnel administer COVID vaccines to health care workers at a drive through distributi­on site at Cal Expo in Sacramento on Jan. 21.
ANNE WERNIKOFF —CALMATTERS National Guard members and medical personnel administer COVID vaccines to health care workers at a drive through distributi­on site at Cal Expo in Sacramento on Jan. 21.
 ?? COURTESY ADVENTIST HEALTH CLEARLAKE ?? California­ns can register on the website to be notified when it’s their turn for the vaccine in a number of counties. But for now, it only can be used to schedule appointmen­ts for health care workers and people 65 and older.
COURTESY ADVENTIST HEALTH CLEARLAKE California­ns can register on the website to be notified when it’s their turn for the vaccine in a number of counties. But for now, it only can be used to schedule appointmen­ts for health care workers and people 65 and older.

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