Los Angeles Times

FLAWS IN STATE’S VACCINE SYSTEM

L.A. County officials say My Turn makes it hard to target rollout to vulnerable groups.

- By Rong-Gong Lin II, Luke Money and Colleen Shalby

SAN FRANCISCO — California’s My Turn COVID-19 vaccinatio­n appointmen­t system is riddled with flaws that are making it difficult for counties to reserve vaccine appointmen­ts for targeted population­s, according to local officials.

These f laws have been exploited by wealthy, privileged people to use redistribu­ted access codes to secure appointmen­ts for vaccines that had been intended for people living in underserve­d communitie­s, as The Times has previously reported.

Though California is insisting that counties prioritize vaccinatin­g people living in the hardest-hit areas or those who work in specific front-line essential

jobs, My Turn does not offer the flexibilit­y to account for a county’s vaccinatio­n strategy or eligibilit­y requiremen­ts, L.A. County Public Health Director Barbara Ferrer said Wednesday. It is also web-based, making it inaccessib­le for many people unable to use an online interface, Ferrer added.

“My Turn is wide open and you can’t restrict access to appointmen­ts … to people who are in eligible categories,” Ferrer said. For instance, L.A. County sought to hold clinics at its so-called mega-POD (point of distributi­on) sites on Tuesdays and Thursdays just for food and agricultur­al workers, “but we really had no way to restrict people in making appointmen­ts in the system if they were eligible.”

The My Turn system also makes it impossible for the county to reserve appointmen­ts just for South L.A. residents for a vaccine clinic in South L.A.

At last week’s L.A. County Board of Supervisor­s meeting, Ferrer said some vaccine sites, lacking any good option, were forced to set up an alternativ­e private registrati­on system and then later enter the informatio­n into My Turn. On Wednesday, Ferrer said other solutions have involved enabling people to call the county’s call center to make appointmen­ts, while community vaccinatio­n sites have started to eliminate the need for online registrati­on and mobile vaccine teams are helping to register people on-site.

“If we aren’t able to reserve vaccinatio­n options for our patients, we are very concerned that they’ll be pushed out by those with more free time, more resources, the ability to sit in front of their computer all day and the ability to drive anywhere in the county for a vaccine,” said Dr. Christina Ghaly, the county’s director of health services.

The state is working on improvemen­ts to the appointmen­t system, Ferrer said, and she expressed hope that by the end of March people could easily make appointmen­ts by telephone if they don’t have access to a computer and the internet.

“But when it gets fixed, it’s going to have to allow for the variation that’s needed county by county,” Ferrer said. “I’ve talked with some counties, for example, where what they’d like to [do is] vaccinate farmworker­s who are 50 and older before they vaccinate farmworker­s who are younger, or because they have very limited supply. So you need a system that actually allows you to make your appointmen­ts that way, particular­ly since the state would like everybody to start using My Turn.”

Despite what the system allows, Ferrer asked that ineligible people not sign up for vaccinatio­n slots and said they will be turned away.

A breakdown in verificati­on processes has been an ongoing issue in the state as vaccine eligibilit­y has expanded. In February, some eligible caregivers to highrisk individual­s were turned away at vaccine sites in L.A. County over fears that their legitimate paperwork was fake. The skepticism emerged after several ineligible people used forged documentat­ion to try to jump ahead in the vaccine line.

Disability rights advocates hope that the state will hash out a simple verificati­on process for the 4 million to 6 million disabled and sick residents ages 18 to 64 who become eligible for the vaccine March 15. Advocates hope that past issues will not prompt an overly cumbersome process for those who are less mobile or debilitate­d as state officials continue to formulate plans.

As vaccinatio­ns continue, L.A. County is still seeing new daily coronaviru­s cases drop, although the rate of decline has softened. The county is averaging about 1,600 new daily coronaviru­s cases a day, a decline of about 22% from last week. But in mid-February, the week-over-week decline was 37%.

The county has administer­ed more than 1.9 million vaccine doses, including more than 600,000 second doses. That means roughly 6% of the county’s population has been fully vaccinated.

State and local officials are continuing to implore people to wear masks and refrain from travel. On Wednesday, Ferrer said that of 679 specimens sent for genomic sequencing in L.A. County, 239 have been identified as being of the California variant, known as B.1.427/ B.1.429; 27 of the U.K. variant, known as B.1.1.7; and one of the Brazil variant known as P.2. The county has not detected the other Brazil variant, P.1, or the South Africa variant, B.1.351.

Gov. Gavin Newsom also disclosed Wednesday that the first known case of the coronaviru­s tied to the New York variant, B.1.526, has been identified in the state — in Southern California.

“Our biggest worry is, of course, that people will relax too much, decide not to wear their face masks, decide not to keep their distance, decide to go back to having big parties,” Ferrer said.

With officials hopeful L.A. County in two weeks can exit the state’s most restrictiv­e reopening tier, which would allow the reopening of indoor restaurant dining, indoor gyms and middle and high schools with occupancy limits, Ferrer said recent data continue to show schools are not a major source for large outbreaks.

In February, only one new outbreak was detected at a school in L.A. County, Ferrer said. And of the 86 outbreaks affiliated with K-12 schools since September, only two involved more than 12 cases, and neither involved classrooms.

Ferrer said it was imperative to continue driving down coronaviru­s case rates to allow more schools to open.

Ferrer read some comments by students on the effect of the pandemic. “I have become distant with some friends since it is harder to see each other,” one read. “My mental health took a big toll on me and in January, my grandfathe­r passed away, and because of the situation, we can’t hold a memorial for a couple of months,” said another.

“This pandemic has been extraordin­arily difficult for so many,” Ferrer said. “This is why we really do need to recommit ourselves to use every single tool we have to reduce transmissi­on, to vaccinate everybody who’s eligible, and to get to a place where all of our children can go back to school with the safety that’s required in the school community.”

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