Los Angeles Times

Quarter of state fully vaccinated

CDC says California ranks 32nd among states in proportion of citizens who are inoculated.

- By Luke Money

One in 4 California­ns are now fully vaccinated for COVID-19 as the state continues its dash to widely inoculate residents and ward off any potential resurgence of the pandemic.

Despite the sheer numbers involved in reaching that threshold — roughly 10 million residents have gotten either both required doses of Pfizer-BioNTech or Moderna or a single shot of the currently paused Johnson

& Johnson vaccine — federal data show that the state is continuing to lag behind others in terms of completely vaccinatin­g its populace.

California ranks 32nd among all states in the proportion of its population that’s considered fully vaccinated, according to figures from the federal Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. The highest rates of vaccinatio­n coverage have been logged in Maine and New Mexico, 32.3%; Alaska, 32.1%; and Connecticu­t and Rhode Island, 31.6%.

Among larger states, those same rates are 26.1% in Pennsylvan­ia, 24.3% in Florida and 22.3% in Texas.

Roughly 25.4% of all

Americans are now fully vaccinated, CDC data show.

However, while people may be considered fully vaccinated for accounting purposes as soon as they receive their final shot, health officials stress that they won’t reach the maximum level of protection until two weeks after their last dose.

California stacks up far better when looking at the proportion of its overall population that has received at least one vaccine dose. Its figure, 43.2%, is tied for ninth among all states.

The raw number of doses administer­ed in California — nearly 26.1 million to date — is 9.5 million higher than that of any other state, and “more than all but five countries in the world,” Gov. Gavin Newsom noted Sunday.

Though the Golden State remains significan­tly short of the level of vaccinatio­n coverage experts think will be necessary to quell the pandemic, each shot is another step forward in the long-running battle against COVID-19.

Officials have long noted that the available vaccines are overwhelmi­ngly successful at staving off the worst health effects of COVID-19, and there’s a growing body of evidence they also can put a significan­t dent in transmissi­on of the coronaviru­s.

The CDC recently released data pertaining to “breakthrou­gh infections,” a not unexpected situation in which a person tests positive for the virus at least 14 days after receiving a final vaccine dose.

As of April 13, the agency had received 5,814 reports of such cases. By comparison, more than 84 million Americans have been fully vaccinated.

Although breakthrou­gh cases have been reported in 43 states and territorie­s and the number is “likely an underestim­ate, it still makes a really important point: These vaccines are working,” CDC Director Dr. Rochelle Walensky said Monday.

Nationwide, nearly 400 people with breakthrou­gh infections had to be hospitaliz­ed and 74 died — though the CDC noted that “hospitaliz­ations and deaths that are not a direct result of COVID-19 are still considered vaccine breakthrou­gh cases if the person was fully vaccinated and subsequent­ly tested positive for COVID-19.”

On the other hand, 29% of the breakthrou­gh infections were asymptomat­ic.

“Here’s the bottom line: Getting a vaccine will help protect you,” Walensky said.

“It will help protect others. And it will help us end this pandemic. The more people get vaccinated, the fewer infections there will be, which means fewer variants will emerge and fewer breakthrou­gh infections will occur.”

With California having now opened vaccinatio­n eligibilit­y to everyone 16 and older, providers are pushing to get as many shots into arms as supplies allow.

Vaccinatio­n sites in the city of Los Angeles are expected to administer more than 100,000 doses this week, officials said.

“With vaccine eligibilit­y expanding and more people signing up to get their shots every day, our city remains excited and prepared to meet the new demand,” Mayor Eric Garcetti said in a statement. “Getting the vaccine is free, easy and safe. We will keep doing our part to vaccinate Angelenos and encourage everyone 16 and older to make an appointmen­t, so that we can end the pandemic.”

L.A. County as a whole is set to receive 361,750 doses this week, officials said, but allocation­s sent directly from the federal government to locations such as qualified health centers and pharmacies are expected to swell the total supply to more than 600,000.

From April 4 through 11, the county reported an average of nearly 100,000 doses administer­ed per day, said Dr. Paul Simon, chief science officer for the county Department of Public Health.

“At this pace, we’re on track to fully vaccinate 80% of the county population 16 and older by the end of June,” he said during a briefing last week.

As the vaccine rollout continues, L.A. — along with providers throughout the state — is continuing to tweak its efforts as needs and circumstan­ces dictate.

The county’s large-scale vaccinatio­n site at Six Flags Magic Mountain officially closed Sunday and has been replaced by two new locations at College of the Canyons in Santa Clarita and the Palmdale Oasis Park Recreation Center.

Achieving wide inoculatio­n is key both in helping eventually end the pandemic and, in the nearer term, fully reopening California’s long-battered economy — which state officials hope to do June 15.

Over the weeks to come, however, officials emphasize the importance of wearing masks in public, observing physical distancing and avoiding crowded situations, particular­ly indoors.

 ?? Francine Orr Los Angeles Times ?? REGISTERED NURSE Justine Bertulano, right, gives Yolanda Estrada-Saporito of Garden Grove her second dose of the Moderna vaccine in Gardena.
Francine Orr Los Angeles Times REGISTERED NURSE Justine Bertulano, right, gives Yolanda Estrada-Saporito of Garden Grove her second dose of the Moderna vaccine in Gardena.

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