Los Angeles Times

More doses promised after 40,000 shots canceled

- By Maura Dolan

SAN FRANCISCO — A major Northern California health provider that had to cancel 40,000 appointmen­ts for second shots of the COVID-19 vaccine will receive another batch of doses from the state next week to reduce the shortage, a spokespers­on said Thursday.

The announceme­nt came a day after tens of thousands of Sutter Health patients were crushed to learn their final shot would have to wait.

Angeline Sheets, director of media relations for Sutter Health, said the state has committed to send the provider 30,000 doses next week and promised another 30,000 doses the following week. In the meantime, some counties and public health providers have shared their doses with Sutter to enable patients to receive their second shots.

Though Sutter still needs more doses for 90,000 scheduled second-dose appointmen­ts, “it’s a step in the right direction,” Sheets said in a

telephone interview.

Sutter patients who went online to check the status of their scheduled appointmen­ts said they discovered the cancellati­ons on Wednesday. Some tried furiously and futilely to find another provider.

The patients affected live in 22 counties, including the Bay Area. Sutter Health, a not-for-profit health system headquarte­red in Sacramento, operates about 24 acute care hospitals and more than 200 clinics in Northern California. The provider serves more than 3 million California­ns.

Sutter said Wednesday it might have to scrap another 50,000 appointmen­ts for patients scheduled to receive second shots.

“The state was very clear in directing us that we must NOT hold any doses back for second doses, and we followed those instructio­ns as we quickly stood up mass vaccinatio­n sites and got first dose shots in arms,” Sutter spokeswoma­n Amy Thoma Tan said in an email.

“We had been reassured for weeks that if we administer­ed the first dose, the state would guarantee that we would receive the second dose allocation, and we haven’t so far.”

Sheets said that all appointmen­ts for first doses through March 9 also had to be canceled.

“As a result of continued allocation issues, we are in the process of notifying patients with second dose appointmen­ts scheduled through March 9 to let them know that their current appointmen­t needs to be canceled due to insufficie­nt supply,” she said.

Patients will be called in seven to 10 days to reschedule,” Sheets said.

Patricia Henle, 66, a lawyer who lives in Marin County, said she learned after going online Wednesday that appointmen­ts for the second shot of the Pfizer vaccine had been canceled for her and her husband, who is 74 and suffers from cancer and diabetes. They were scheduled to receive their second doses in Sacramento on Saturday.

She said the couple received no email from Sutter, and she called the Sutter vaccine site in Sacramento to confirm that their appointmen­ts were canceled. She said she was told that it could take several weeks to get the second shot from Sutter and that she should check with other providers.

She then spent six hours calling pharmacies and medical groups to no avail. One only had the Moderna vaccine. Two providers told her she could schedule only appointmen­ts for first doses of the Pfizer vaccine, she said.

“If I had told them it was going to be my first shot, they would have taken me, but I didn’t want to lie,” she said. “I am an attorney.” She said both the first and second doses of Pfizer are the same, and she could have received the second dose if she had not told the truth.

“It is mind boggling that I have to do this,” Henle said. “I am trying my very, very best to do it honorably and honestly, and I feel like a fool for doing that if you want to know the truth.”

Sutter said it has received more than 350,000 doses of both the Moderna

‘If I had told them it was going to be my first shot, they would have taken me, but I didn’t want to lie.’ — Patricia Henle, who along with her husband had her second shot canceled

and Pfizer vaccines from state and county allocation­s. During the last three to four weeks, the doses from the state were either insufficie­nt or didn’t arrive at all, according to Sutter.

“We have been urgently requesting from the state additional allocation­s, and we have been doing that by email and phone,” Sheets said. “We have been incredibly clear about our need.”

She said Alameda, Santa Cruz, San Francisco and Sacramento county providers were among those that agreed to provide Sutter with doses. “I want to say how grateful we are for their willingnes­s to share their supply,” Sheets said.

She said the shortage evolved before Blue Shield of California assumed control of the state’s vaccine distributi­on. The giant insurer has a contract with the state to create an algorithm for vaccine distributi­on, focusing both on speed of delivery and equity.

President Biden has said the U.S. will have enough vaccines for every adult by the end of May.

 ?? Al Seib Los Angeles Times ?? DRIVERS remain in their vehicles while being monitored to ensure they suffer no adverse reaction to the COVID-19 vaccine at the Forum in Inglewood in January.
Al Seib Los Angeles Times DRIVERS remain in their vehicles while being monitored to ensure they suffer no adverse reaction to the COVID-19 vaccine at the Forum in Inglewood in January.

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