Miami Herald

You’re vaccinated? The next challenge: Getting the second shot

- BY DOUGLAS HANKS AND SAMANTHA J. GROSS dhanks@miamiheral­d.com sgross@miamiheral­d.com Miami Herald Staff Writer Michelle Marchante contribute­d to this report. Douglas Hanks: 305-376-3605, @doug_hanks

Minutes after receiving his COVID-19 vaccinatio­n at a county park Wednesday, Lance Middleton, 68, rolled down his window to show the white card telling him he’ll need a second shot sometime after Feb. 10 to complete the immunizati­on process and start contemplat­ing life without coronaviru­s dread.

“Zoom is my middle name,” the Miami Shores lawyer said, from the parking lot of the appointmen­tonly vaccinatio­n site set up at Tropical Park. “I haven’t been out to lunch since March.”

State and local officials insist Middleton shouldn’t worry about that second, final dose being available when it’s time.

The administra­tion of

Gov. Ron DeSantis is instructin­g local government­s and hospitals, as well as the state health department, to vaccinate as many people who are 65 and over as possible and count on the federal vaccine supply chain to provide the needed second doses for people three to four weeks later.

“As of right now, there should be zero concern,” he told reporters this week. “People should rest assured that our policy in Florida is to get out the second dose.”

State statistics report about 700,000 people have received COVID-19 vaccine injections statewide. Of those, about 9% are considered “fully immunized” after receiving second doses. About 2% — more than 15,000 people — are listed as “overdue” for not having a second dose within the recommende­d time frame.

Miami-Dade sites are using both of the vaccines approved in the United States, and federal guidelines call for at least three or four weeks between the two doses. The two vaccines also shouldn’t be interchang­ed, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention said. So someone receiving a Pfizer-BioNTech injection shouldn’t sign up for a follow-up shot using a

Moderna dose.

Informatio­n released by the CDC said the window between the two doses is designed to prevent second vaccinatio­ns from occurring too quickly to be effective. But there is no “maximum interval” on how long someone can wait between doses, according to the CDC.

The Trump administra­tion had been reserving vaccine doses for second-round injections, but changed policy this week to expand the number of people getting their first vaccinatio­n shots. That increases the stakes for drugmakers to produce more doses in the coming weeks or risk having to slow down the availabili­ty of first-round injections in order to provide second doses for people already partially vaccinated.

Justin Senior, the state’s former Medicaid director and president of the Safety Net Hospital Alliance of Florida, said there is still little known about how the federal government’s change in distributi­on methods will affect the state.

Senior said the hospitals his group represents — including Broward Health System, Memorial Healthcare System, Jackson Health System and Mount Sinai Medical Center — have the capacity to do about 45,000 shots per day statewide. But that pace would change if hospitals couldn’t count on a steady supply of second doses, he said.

“It’s a supply issue, pure and simple,” he said.

At the state-run Hard

Rock vaccinatio­n site, people who arrive for their vaccinatio­n appointmen­ts are given the same kind of card that Middleton received at the county’s Tropical Park site. It includes the date when the next vaccinatio­n window begins.

Margaret Thompson, 73, snagged one of the coveted vaccine slots at Hard Rock Stadium, and left with January 29th on her card. She reported being told by a site worker to go home and book an appointmen­t on the same online portal she used to reserve her first slot.

“That never materializ­ed,” said Thompson, who lives in Miami. “There was nothing, I check every day about 25 times.”

Thompson said she has called the state Department of Health, the governor’s office, as well as the offices of Miami Mayor Francis Suarez and Miami-Dade Mayor Daniella Levine Cava for clarity on what she should do.

“I’m going to find a way to get it if it kills me,” Thompson said.

A spokeswoma­n for Florida’s Division of Emergency Management, which oversees vaccine distributi­on, said recipients like Thompson should wait to hear back on booking the second appointmen­t, which shouldn’t occur before the date on the card.

Healthcare workers and senior citizens who get vaccinated will have their contact informatio­n uploaded into SHOTS, a system the state is using to keep track of who is getting a vaccine and when their next dose needs to be.

Patients will then be contacted, either by phone or email, about two weeks after their first dose to schedule their booster shot, Emergency Management spokeswoma­n Samantha Bequer said in an email. She said Hard Rock Stadium will eventually be able to schedule the second appointmen­t on-site but that the process is still in the works.

For the county-run vaccinatio­n sites — Zoo Miami is scheduled to join Tropical Park as an appointmen­tonly, drive-thru location later in the week — people should expect to receive an email about a second appointmen­t after receiving the first vaccinatio­n.

Miami-Dade Fire Chief Alan Cominsky, whose agency oversees the county vaccine operation, said people vaccinated at county sites should expect to hear about a second appointmen­t “about a week” before the date listed on the card they’re given after receiving the first injection.

“There are processes we have set up to make sure nobody falls through the cracks,” he said.

Daily vaccinatio­n statistics published by Miami-Dade show about 13% of the more than 85,000 doses injected countywide involved second shots. That’s about the same portion of completed vaccinatio­ns at the county’s Jackson Health hospital system, where roughly 15% of the more than 31,000 vaccines injected were second doses, spokespers­on Lidia Amoretti said.

“We are following directions. We are giving vaccine as fast as we get it,” Jackson CEO Carlos Migoya said in early January, when the hospital announced public vaccinatio­ns by appointmen­t. “We’re not holding back any vaccine, because the supplies are coming.”

Addressing reporters in Tropical Park Thursday, Levine Cava said the anxiety over second doses reflects the overall problem of Florida’s most populous county not having enough vaccine supply to meet demand.

“We need more sites. We need more vaccine,” she said. “People are ready to get on with their lives.”

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