Las Vegas Review-Journal (Sunday)

Have coronaviru­s vaccine questions? We have answers.

- Mary Hynes Las Vegas Review-Journal Submit your questions to vaccineque­stions@reviewjour­nal.com and the Las Vegas Review-Journal will take them to health experts. We’ll keep updating as we learn more.

QI’m 79 years old and have been a resident of Las Vegas since 1963. I’m appalled knowing that a child molester or anyone else in prison will get the vaccine before someone like myself. Haven’t enough senior citizens died a miserable death from this terrible virus?

— Lawrence P. of Las Vegas

AThere’s good news for Nevada seniors eager to get the COVID- 19 vaccine. State officials said Wednesday that those 75 and older will be moved up in terms of priority for the vaccine — from the thirdprior­ity tier to the second — based on new guidance from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

What’s unclear is when vaccinatio­ns of Tier 2 recipients will begin, and how the vaccine will be administer­ed to this group.

“Vaccinatio­n for Tier 2 will begin when vaccine allocation allows,” said Shannon Litz, a spokeswoma­n for the Nevada Department of Health and Human Services.

In Washoe County, Northern Nevada’s most populous county, public health officials say they expect the vaccinatio­ns of the 75- plus population to start in late January.

A spokeswoma­n for the Southern Nevada Health District said to stay tuned for more informatio­n about logistics in Clark County.

“We will be updating our informatio­n as soon as we can,” spokeswoma­n Jennifer Sizemore said.

State public health officials have said that Nevada’s playbook for vaccine distributi­on is undergoing revision.

The updated version should be publicly available in the next week or two. In the current version, prison inmates are in the second tier.

Litz did not answer a reporter’s question about why prisoners initially were given higher priority than older seniors.

However, public health officials have noted that prisoners, because they are in a communal setting, are at elevated risk from the virus and that prisons in the state have experience­d outbreaks.

Where to get tested

■ Beginning Jan. 11, the Texas Station COVID- 19 testing site in the hotel’s parking garage will operate three days a week as what is being described as a “neighborho­od strike team site.” It had been operating as a test site five days a week.

The days of operation will be announced at a later date. The site will open at 8 a. m. and offer about 600 tests on a first- come, first- served basis as supplies permit. Clark County and Nevada National Guard staff will continue supporting the operation, while the health district will oversee onsite registrati­on, lab processing of samples, and the notificati­ons of test results. The site will not take appointmen­ts or require insurance.

■ A COVID- 19 test site at UNLV, located at 801 E. Flamingo Road, operates 8 a. m. to 4 p. m. Sunday through Thursday. It is closed Fridays and Saturdays.

Cashman Center provides testing in Exhibit Hall A at 850 N. Las Vegas Blvd., from 8 a. m. to 4 p. m. Tuesdays through Saturdays.

Appointmen­ts at both sites are highly recommende­d to reduce wait times and maintain operationa­l efficiency and can be self- scheduled through UMC’s website at www. umcsn. com.

Those with no online access may call UMC at 702-383- 2619 to schedule appointmen­ts.

Both sites accept some walk- ins each day on a first- come, firstserve­d basis as staffing allows, but priority is given to those with appointmen­ts.

Also starting Jan. 11, the UNLV and Cashman Center sites will begin requesting insurance informatio­n during the registrati­on process. There will continue to be no- out- ofpocket costs to patients, including the uninsured.

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