Las Vegas Review-Journal

Vaccine appointmen­ts easier to make in county

Casino workers could be part of next eligible group

- By Mary Hynes Contact Mary Hynes at mhynes@reviewjour­nal.com. Follow @Maryhynes1 on Twitter.

Appointmen­ts to receive COVID-19 vaccine, once as hard to find as a golden ticket, have become far more easy to come by in Clark County, Southern Nevada Health District officials said Wednesday, a factor in their decision this week to expand eligibilit­y for shots to many more occupation­al groups.

On Monday, the health district announced it was opening up eligibilit­y to Frontline Supply Chain and Logistical Support, a broad occupation­al category that includes everyone from agricultur­al workers to grocery store employees to journalist­s.

To fill vaccinatio­n sites, “We had to make some quick moves in the last couple of weeks to get as many people eligible as we could to get them into the seat” to get a shot, health district official Greg Cassell said at an afternoon online briefing.

It will take at least several weeks to vaccinate those in newly eligible groups, he said, opening the door to offer more groups the vaccine.

During a separate briefing Wednesday, state official Caleb

Cage said that hospitalit­y and casino workers could become eligible in the “next couple of weeks” in Southern Nevada.

Cassell said that the current plan in Clark County to accommodat­e hospitalit­y workers is to “increase capacity at our current operating sites” rather than to open additional sites.

The state’s system for vaccine distributi­on has two so-called “lanes,” one for various occupation­al groups and another for the general public. When vaccines first began to be administer­ed in mid-december, it was offered only to hospital workers.

It quickly also became available to first responders, more health care workers and public safety personnel.

A month later on Jan. 14, vaccinatio­ns for those 70 and older began in Clark County. On Jan. 18, eligibilit­y was expanded to occupation­al groups ranging from teachers to lawyers to government workers. Appointmen­ts at this time were frustratin­gly hard to come by.

A month or so later, the crunch for appointmen­ts had eased, and by Feb. 22, vaccinatio­ns were also being offered to those 65 to 69 years of age.

After those groups currently eligible, next in line in the occupation­al lane is Frontline Commerce and Service Industries, a category that includes food service and hospitalit­y, encompassi­ng tens of thousands of front-line casino workers in Southern Nevada. The next category within the general public lane is those 16 to 64 with underlying health conditions.

Health district officials have stressed that the timetable for when new groups become eligible depends in part on the size of vaccine allocation­s, which vary from week to week.

The health district has yet to receive any shipments of the new Johnson & Johnson’s vaccine manufactur­ed by its Janssen division.

It’s expecting 17,000 doses in its first week’s allocation, said Joann Rupiper, the district’s director of clinical services.

Nevada vaccine official Candice Mcdaniel said that after the state’s initial allocation of the Janssen vaccine, she expects a lull in shipments for a week or two as the company ramps up manufactur­ing, with supplies increasing in late March or early April.

 ?? K.M. Cannon Las Vegas Review-journal file @Kmcannonph­oto ?? Henderson resident Mike Lucas checks in with Nevada National Guard Senior Airman Traesha Glover at the Cashman Center COVID-19 vaccinatio­n site on Feb. 4. More people became eligible this week for vaccinatio­ns at Clark County sites.
K.M. Cannon Las Vegas Review-journal file @Kmcannonph­oto Henderson resident Mike Lucas checks in with Nevada National Guard Senior Airman Traesha Glover at the Cashman Center COVID-19 vaccinatio­n site on Feb. 4. More people became eligible this week for vaccinatio­ns at Clark County sites.

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