Los Angeles Times

Florida doctors can order kids’ COVID shots despite DeSantis

- Associated press

WASHINGTON — Florida doctors will be able to order COVID-19 vaccines for children under 5 from the federal government, the White House said Friday, after Republican Gov. Ron DeSantis said the state would not order and distribute the shots.

The state was the only jurisdicti­on in the nation to decline to place advance orders for the pediatric shots, which received authorizat­ion from the Food and Drug Administra­tion on Friday.

Final authorizat­ion from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention is expected in the coming days, clearing the way for the last remaining unvaccinat­ed age group to obtain shots.

The vaccines will be available to children as young as 6 months.

The White House has been sharply critical of DeSantis’ position, but in a statement Friday it welcomed the news that he was permitting individual doctors to order vaccines for their patients.

“We have begun shipping vaccines to children’s hospitals and pediatrici­ans in every state in the country except Florida,” said White House COVID-19 coordinato­r Dr. Ashish Jha. “The governor’s failure comes at a price to parents and families of Florida.”

The shots will be available quickly at pharmacies and community health centers, which can preorder them directly from the federal government, Jha said. But children’s hospitals, clinics and individual doctors’ offices will be at a disadvanta­ge to other states that allowed their doctors to preorder, he said.

Jha took a swipe at DeSantis, who has frequently said he is defending parental rights in healthcare and educationa­l decisions, saying, “This administra­tion trusts parents.”

“We know there are parents across America of kids under 5 who’ve been waiting a very long time, and for many of them, this delay introduced by the actions of the governor and the Department of Health, I think is unconscion­able,” Jha said.

DeSantis minimized the delays and defended the state’s refusal to order the vaccines.

“Doctors can get it. Hospitals can get it. But there’s not going to be any state programs that are going to be trying to get COVID jabs to infants and toddlers and newborns,” he said. “That’s not where we’re gonna be utilizing our resources.”

Federal officials believe most parents of young children plan to get their kids vaccinated at their pediatrici­an’s office, rather than pharmacies or hospitals, and criticized DeSantis for slowing access to the shots.

“Even though Gov. DeSantis reversed course and is now ordering vaccines, we will pull every lever to get pediatrici­ans across Florida vaccines as quickly as possible,” White House Press Secretary Karine Jean-Pierre said. “This is an encouragin­g first step, and we urge the state to order vaccines for its state and local health department­s, so that all Florida parents have the opportunit­y to get their children vaccinated.”

DeSantis’ decision not to preorder shots means the state is falling behind preorders that were prepared to ship as soon as the FDA issued its emergency use authorizat­ion.

Jha said the administra­tion was working to fill Florida’s orders as soon as possible, but said it would be days behind other states in the vaccinatio­n program.

Florida Department of Health spokesman Jeremy Redfern said the state’s online portal for ordering vaccines from the federal government, Florida SHOTS, has always been available to hospitals, clinics and small doctor’s offices.

However, under CDC rules, providers can order vaccines only once an emergency use authorizat­ion has been issued, Redfern said. Jha disputed that, saying that outside of Florida, states and public health department­s have been able to help doctors and children’s hospitals place preorders for shots for two weeks.

State health department­s, on the other hand, have been able to preorder vaccines in anticipati­on of an emergency use authorizat­ion, and this is what Florida has declined to do.

That means the state won’t have an already existing stockpile of the vaccines to push out to children’s hospitals for use on Day 1 of authorizat­ion.

However, any provider can order shots and get them within days or a week, according to the state health department.

Though DeSantis said the state had plenty of supply for vaccines, officials cautioned that shots approved for under-5 kids contain specialize­d instructio­ns and syringes appropriat­e for that age group, and that vaccines labeled for older kids shouldn’t be used for the youngest cohort.

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