Los Angeles Times

More problems slow immunizati­on

- By Luke Money and Alex Wiggleswor­th

Los Angeles continued to struggle with COVID-19 vaccine distributi­on due to a variety of factors Friday as officials pushed forward with efforts to get underserve­d Black and Latino communitie­s inoculated.

The city postponed more vaccinatio­n appointmen­ts scheduled for Saturday as vaccine shipments remain stuck in transit by winter weather that has hammered much of the country.

It was not immediatel­y clear how many appointmen­ts were affected, but the delays will occur at the largescale vaccinatio­n sites run by the city at Hansen Dam Recreation Area, San Fernando Park, Lincoln Park, Pierce College, Crenshaw Christian Center and Dodger Stadium.

Officials already pushed back 12,500 appointmen­ts scheduled Friday because of supply disruption­s. City-run mobile vaccinatio­n clinics will continue to operate as scheduled.

Officials said Thursday afternoon that the weather delays had yet to interrupt operations at vaccine sites run by L.A. County, which include the Pomona Fairplex, the Forum in Inglewood, Cal State Northridge, the county Office of Education, Six Flags Magic Mountain, Balboa Sports Complex and El Sereno Recreation Center.

The new postponeme­nts, which L.A. Mayor Eric Garcetti announced Friday, mark the latest fallout from the winter weather that has battered much of the country, with days of freezing rain, ice and snow that have knocked out power,

grounded flights and created hazardous travel conditions.

The inclement weather has tied up two L.A.-bound shipments of the Moderna vaccine, totaling some 63,000 doses, that were supposed to be available for appointmen­ts this week and next, according to city officials.

The main manufactur­ing facilities for the nation’s two COVID-19 vaccines — made by Moderna and PfizerBioN­Tech — are in Massachuse­tts and Michigan.

The state was anticipati­ng stepped-up vaccine deliveries in the coming weeks, but that was before the winter storms struck. And those distributi­ons still would have brought far fewer doses than what is needed to quickly work through the queue of people eligible to receive vaccines.

California — along with the rest of the country — has been contending with a scarcity of vaccine, with officials saying they have the capacity, but not the supply, to inoculate significan­tly more people.

A consistent challenge is that both available COVID-19 vaccines require two doses, administer­ed three or four weeks apart.

Lately, the need to provide second shots has spurred officials throughout the state to greatly limit access to first doses.

Meanwhile, officials are ramping up efforts to get more vaccine to underserve­d communitie­s.

“We’re seeing still disproport­ionately low vaccinatio­n rates among many of our Black and Latino population­s and communitie­s, a reflection not only of historic distrust and community trauma, but also the structural barriers that stand between too many Angelenos and their access to vaccines,” Garcetti said Thursday. “We need to tear those barriers down.”

His comments come after data showed that Black, Latino and Native American residents 65 and over were receiving COVID-19 vaccinatio­ns at a lower rate than their white, Asian American and Pacific Islander counterpar­ts.

In L.A. County, Latinos are seeing 40 COVID-19 deaths per 100,000 residents a day and Black residents are seeing 20 deaths, compared with 14 deaths per 100,000 white residents a day.

Neighborho­ods will be prioritize­d for mobile vaccinatio­n clinics using medical vulnerabil­ity indicators developed by UCLA researcher­s, including the incidence of preexistin­g health conditions, barriers to accessing service, environmen­tal risks and social vulnerabil­ity.

Mobile vaccinatio­n services this week expanded to South Park, Green Meadows and Boyle Heights; in coming days, that will widen to include Chinatown, Vermont Square and PicoUnion, the city said in a news release.

By the end of March, the city hopes to have additional sites in East L.A., South L.A., Northeast L.A. and the East San Fernando Valley.

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