Los Angeles Times

Counties are left in dark on supplies

- By Laura J. Nelson and Maya Lau

California is failing to provide crucial informatio­n about COVID-19 vaccine supply levels to local officials, complicati­ng efforts to schedule appointmen­ts and contributi­ng to temporary closures of vaccinatio­n sites.

Officials running local vaccinatio­n programs in multiple counties say they are not being told how many doses they will receive over the next three weeks, which is key data they need to keep vaccine sites open and running smoothly.

President Biden promised last month that his administra­tion would provide a “reliable three-week supply look-ahead” to improve the transparen­cy and efficiency of the country’s rocky vaccine rollout.

Gov. Gavin Newsom said he learns every Tuesday morning how many doses the Golden State will receive over the next three weeks. But state officials have yet to share those numbers with many local, city and county leaders, making it difficult to create appointmen­ts and plan for the administra­tion of second doses.

“Every vaccine planner right now, we all have nerves in our stomach. We’re nervous about it,” said Joe Prado, community health division manager for the Fresno County Department of Public Health. “We would all like to have a three-week window, but until then we will just continue to do it week to week.”

A California Department of Public Health spokesman did not answer questions about why the state has not shared three-week previews with local health officials. Instead, he said the question is “no longer relevant” because the state is transition­ing to a new vaccine distributi­on model led by Blue Shield of California, under a contract that started Feb. 15.

Newsom, speaking Sunday at a mobile vaccinatio­n clinic in Inglewood, said counties will start getting a three-week look-ahead this week as part of the Blue Shield partnershi­p, but he did not elaborate.

A spokeswoma­n for Blue Shield directed questions to state health officials, who did not respond.

As of Monday, local officials said they still were not getting the advance informatio­n.

The communicat­ion problems come as winter storms have hammered much of the U.S., delaying shipments of already scarce vaccine doses to California and other states. Lack of predictabi­lity, coupled with ongoing dose shortages, has forced temporary closures at several mass vaccinatio­n sites, including Dodger Stadium, the Moscone Center in San Francisco and Petco Park in San Diego.

The production picture for doses is murky at best. Vaccine makers Pfizer and Moderna have been accelerati­ng their weekly production levels, with 13.5 million doses scheduled to be delivered in the U.S. this week, but are not on track to meet their first target of 100 million doses each by March 31 if they continue at their current weekly rates.

The companies have said that they are constantly working to ramp up capacity and that their weekly rates will increase.

California is scheduled this week to receive a total of 1.5 million doses, almost evenly split between the two companies.

The number of doses, already scarce, will be stretched even thinner starting next month, when as many as 6 million more California­ns will become eligible for the shot. As more people get their first dose, even more of the incoming supply will have to be set aside for second doses.

This month, Los Angeles was forced to close Dodger Stadium and four other vaccinatio­n sites for two days because the city had not received enough doses to keep them open. The stadium and another site, Hansen Dam, closed early at 6 p.m. last week because of a shortage.

All of the city’s sites were closed for vaccinatio­ns again Friday and Saturday because shipments of at least 63,000 doses were tied up at UPS and FedEx shipment facilities in Kentucky and Tennessee because of severe weather.

Los Angeles County, which allocates vaccine doses to hundreds of local sites, including Dodger Stadium, is not receiving details on shipments three weeks in advance, Public Health Director Barbara Ferrer said Wednesday.

“We still have a fair amount of variabilit­y in what we get, week to week,” Ferrer said. “I don’t have any projection­s about what we’re getting for the next two to three weeks out.”

Ferrer said health officials are still receiving informatio­n on dose shipments a week at a time, and that last week, the figures were delayed.

Health officials have said for weeks that the lack of transparen­cy makes running an efficient vaccine site more difficult, because appointmen­ts, vaccinator shifts and other logistics can’t be planned in advance.

Ferrer said she was confident that the county would begin receiving a better picture of future dose shipments, “but it hasn’t happened yet.”

Orange County is also receiving informatio­n about vaccine dose allocation­s one week at a time, said Dr. Clayton Chau, health officer.

Fresno County Supervisor Ernest “Buddy” Mendes said it’s often a surprise how many doses will be granted to his county each week, and officials there can organize only as much as a week in advance.

“You can’t make any plans,” Mendes said. “You can plan out the logistics, but then you don’t have the vaccinatio­ns to do it. So a lot of times, you can’t do it.”

Two mass vaccinatio­n sites in Fresno stopped giving first doses for 14 days last month due to a lack of supply.

In San Francisco this week, the Moscone Center had to pause vaccinatio­ns because of supply shortages a little over a week after it opened as a mass vaccinatio­n site.

A spokespers­on for the San Francisco Department of Public Health said Thursday that officials still don’t know when first-dose appointmen­ts will resume at the Moscone Center.

The vaccine supply, they said, “remains limited, inconsiste­nt and unpredicta­ble.”

“As of now, we never know the following week’s allocation­s, which makes it challengin­g to plan ahead,” the department said in a statement.

Late last month, Newsom authorized a deal with Blue Shield of California to run the state’s vaccine program under an emergency contract that did not require legislativ­e approval. Several local health authoritie­s say they haven’t received concrete informatio­n about how vaccinatio­ns will be handled under Blue Shield.

Blue Shield will create an algorithm to distribute the vaccine, according to the contract for the far-reaching agreement. The company will also have wide latitude to select which healthcare providers and counties will receive and administer doses.

The company will create a statewide vaccine network in three waves, starting with Central Valley counties such as Fresno, Kern, San Joaquin and Stanislaus next week, the state has previously confirmed to The Times. Los Angeles, Orange, San Bernardino, San Diego and Ventura are among the counties in a second wave in early March. The final wave, a week later, would include San Francisco, Contra Costa and Alameda counties.

Vaccine supply to California has increased in recent weeks, but so has the number of vaccinatio­n sites across Los Angeles County. That means mega-sites such as Dodger Stadium are competing against a growing number of vaccine sites for a still-limited number of doses.

Because supply has been so limited, it’s unclear whether Dodger Stadium will reach its promised capacity of 12,000 daily vaccine doses, said Jeff Gorell, Los Angeles deputy mayor for public safety. With more supply, the site could provide three or four times as many shots per day, he said.

Los Angeles hasn’t received a guarantee of how many of the 200 million combined doses that Pfizer and Moderna have promised by March 31 will be sent to the city, Chief Innovation Officer Amanda Daflos said.

A new federal vaccinatio­n site that opened last week at Cal State L.A. will be receiving its vaccine doses directly from the federal government, rather than through the county. That means the site won’t compete with other L.A. County sites for a limited pool of doses.

 ?? IRFAN KHAN Los Angeles Times ?? FIREFIGHTE­R Anthony MacDougall gives a COVID-19 vaccine to Lawrence Taylor in Los Angeles on Feb. 9.
IRFAN KHAN Los Angeles Times FIREFIGHTE­R Anthony MacDougall gives a COVID-19 vaccine to Lawrence Taylor in Los Angeles on Feb. 9.

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