Los Angeles Times

Did Newsom hit COVID shot goal? It’s a mystery

- By Melody Gutierrez

SACRAMENTO — Gov. Gavin Newsom urged California­ns to “hold me accountabl­e” to a goal of administer­ing 1 million doses of COVID-19 vaccine in 10 days, but nearly two weeks later a series of data collection problems have left state officials unable to offer clear evidence of success or failure. A spokespers­on for the California Department of Public Health said Wednesday that it’s likely Newsom reached the 1-million mark over 12 days, not 10 days as promised, but noted that coding errors and data lags have hampered the state’s efforts to accurately count and publicly report how many doses are administer­ed each day.

Newsom’s self-prescribed litmus test was announced as pressures mounted for him to address the state’s slow vaccinatio­n rollout, which has left hundreds of thousands of doses sitting on shelves despite the public’s desperate need for the potentiall­y lifesaving shots.

“We’ve learned a lot about how significan­t the

delay is in data,” Dr. Mark Ghaly, California health and human services secretary, said Tuesday when asked about the status of the 10day goal set by the governor.

In the last week, the state identified a yet-to-be-resolved coding error with data from a major provider of COVID-19 vaccines, and the extent of the underrepor­ting from that source was still unclear as of Wednesday, according to the Public Health Department. The state also found reporting delays with data from other providers of up to 96 hours between when a dose was given and when it showed up in the California immunizati­on system, Ghaly said.

“This vaccine distributi­on is being jerry-rigged on a famously fragmented health system and underfunde­d public health infrastruc­ture, which produces inconsiste­ncies county by county and provider by provider but also problems with getting timely data to see how California as a whole is doing,” said Anthony Wright, executive director of Health Access California and a member of the state’s vaccine advisory committee. “This data is critical to know not just how efficient but equitable and effective California’s efforts have been, and where we need to close gaps.”

Data reporting issues prompted groups representi­ng counties and county health officials to warn Newsom in a letter Monday of “significan­t data lags and reporting challenges that result in an underrepor­ting of California’s progress” on how many doses have been administer­ed. The delay is partially the result of problems with the state’s immunizati­on registry, which has required some jurisdicti­ons to reenter data multiple times because the “system is kicking them out,” according to a letter sent by the groups.

“State and local health officials need to see how much vaccine a healthcare provider or a local health department has on hand in order to know if they need more,” said Kat DeBurgh, executive director of the Health Officers Assn. of California, which was among the groups that signed the letter to the governor. “In short, without seeing how many doses have been given, we do not know how many more doses we need.”

California has drasticall­y ramped up distributi­on efforts, with the state reporting 47,213 doses administer­ed Jan. 5, the day before Newsom publicly pledged that the state would administer 1 million doses in 10 days. Ghaly said California administer­ed a record 110,505 doses Friday. A Public Health Department spokespers­on said Wednesday the tally from Friday could be higher when data issues are corrected, making it possible Newsom met his 10-day goal.

A tally of vaccines administer­ed is updated and made public daily by the department, but those figures do not account for the day each dose is given. On Tuesday, The Times requested a dayby-day accounting of doses administer­ed during the 10day period ending Friday for Newsom’s 1 million dose goal, but the Public Health Department said it could not yet provide that informatio­n as of Wednesday evening.

The total number of infections in California surpassed 3 million Tuesday. Administer­ing first and second doses of the vaccine that the state has on hand is a top priority for Newsom, who has been facing increasing criticism about the rollout and mixed messaging to California­ns wanting informatio­n on when they will be able to be vaccinated.

To help speed up the rate at which local health department­s and providers administer doses, Newsom called on counties to ease restrictio­ns on who qualifies for vaccinatio­ns — an effort that sowed confusion in some areas that are lacking enough vaccines for the elderly. On Wednesday, the state’s vaccine advisory committee considered whether additional changes are needed to how California prioritize­s who receives the limited vaccine supply.

The latest figures released Wednesday by the state Public Health Department show the state has used just 37% of the doses it has received.

Questions about the glacial pace of the state’s vaccine distributi­on efforts prompted Newsom to make the 1 million dose promise Jan. 8.

“Here’s your next thing to hold me accountabl­e to: 1 million doses within the next — not 10 days, it was 10 days yesterday when I announced it to the team — nine days,” Newsom said.

However, when the 10 days were up, it became clear that measuring Newsom’s progress — using the data his administra­tion tallies and releases — would be as complicate­d as the goal itself.

When Newsom made the pledge at the Jan. 8 news conference, he said the 10day period began Jan. 7. However, the California Department of Public Health said the 10-day period Newsom was referring to actually started Jan. 6, a more difficult goal because vaccinatio­n efforts ramped up even more over last weekend.

“Our resolve is to get all of the existing doses that are in the state administer­ed as quickly as possible and we still have a lot of work to do in that space,” Newsom said Friday.

 ?? Luis Sinco Los Angeles Times ?? GOV. GAVIN NEWSOM said Jan. 8 the state would administer 1 million doses of COVID-19 vaccine in 10 days, but officials can’t say whether the goal was achieved.
Luis Sinco Los Angeles Times GOV. GAVIN NEWSOM said Jan. 8 the state would administer 1 million doses of COVID-19 vaccine in 10 days, but officials can’t say whether the goal was achieved.

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