Miami Herald

Some need state form to get vaccinated at MDC

- BY DOUGLAS HANKS dhanks@miamiheral­d.com Douglas Hanks: 305-376-3605, @doug_hanks

The federal vaccinatio­n site at Miami Dade College’s North Campus is open to people with certain medical conditions, but a state form is required.

A spokespers­on for the operation said staff will begin on Friday to fully enforce a requiremen­t that patients submit a state form to receive a vaccinatio­n for people deemed to be facing “extreme vulnerabil­ity” to COVID-19. The form must be signed by a doctor. Notes from physicians and other medical documents will not be accepted, said spokesman Mike Jachles.

“The last thing we want is for someone to waste a trip and not be able to be serviced,” he said during a news conference outside the tent compound where U.S. Army soldiers were administer­ing hundreds of doses an hour. “It’s important to abide by this.”

Jachles said people using the medically vulnerable category should not visit state-run sites at Hard

Rock Stadium or Marlins Park. Instead, they should go to the federally run MDC site, or two satellite federal sites set up this week in Florida City (650 NW Fifth Ave.) and Sweetwater (250 SW 114th Ave.).

Pharmacies also can accept the forms. Jachles said administer­ing a vaccine for someone deemed medically vulnerable requires a pharmacist or other specialize­d medical profession­al who might not be available at the state sites.

The MDC center at

11380 NW 27th Ave. is open 7 a.m. to 7 p.m. every day, and walk-ups are encouraged. Reservatio­ns can also be made at myvaccine.fl.gov. The satellite sites operate from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m.

The medical exemption proved to be the MDC site’s main complicati­on during its first day of operation on Wednesday as the first location in

South Florida establishe­d by the Federal Emergency Management Agency. About 1,500 people received doses at the site, which continued to see short lines on Thursday and quick trips through a center where injections are administer­ed by U.S. Army personnel.

The Day One injection of 1,500 doses meant the MDC center hit only 50% of its daily potential, which Jachles said is 3,000 doses. More than 1,000 had been administer­ed before noon Thursday, FEMA spokesman Marty Bahamonde said, and he called the pace “much more steady” than on Wednesday.

“It was very easy,” Mario Ortiz, 66, said after

what he described as a 25-minute trip through the tent compound, including a required, 15-minute wait for potential adverse reactions after receiving his Johnson & Johnson vaccine. “I’m done worrying.”

The Johnson & Johnson vaccine proved popular in its debut at the MDC site, which also offers the Pfizer vaccine. The Pfizer dose requires a booster shot but is considered more effective than the Johnson & Johnson vaccine, which only needs one injection. The MDC site started each day with about 500 Johnson & Johnson doses, and multiple visitors reported being told the supplies were gone by midday Thursday.

Florida’s vaccine-eligibilit­y rules govern the site, one of four mass vaccinatio­n centers that the Biden administra­tion deployed in Florida this week.

That leaves the administra­tion of Gov. Ron DeSantis setting the rules for who can receive vaccinatio­ns at the federally funded site. The state also has responsibi­lity for intake at the center, with Florida providing screeners who greet people seeking vaccinatio­n and determine if they are eligible.

Jachles said screeners at the MDC site would be given “discretion” only on Thursday to consider doctor notes and other paperwork if people don’t have the official state form declaring someone medically vulnerable. It’s not clear if that discretion was exercised, as multiple people reported being turned away Thursday without the state form.

Florida’s Health Department released the form Tuesday night, leaving many doctor offices to send patients letters confirming their eligibilit­y for the medical exemptions. That followed DeSantis loosening the medicalexe­mption requiremen­ts on Feb. 26 to cover anyone over the age of 18 deemed at risk by a physician.

“Anytime we introduce a new procedure at any of the sites, certainly there will be a few hiccups. We regret if anybody was turned away having that form signed by their healthcare provider,” Jachles said. “Going forward, we will service them.”

Darcy Kriminger, 60, an instructio­nal assistant at the Doctors Charter School in Miami Shores, took a break from a class on Thursday to see how long it would take her to get the vaccine at MDC North.

“I left my school at 10:22 a.m.,” she said as she walked to her car in the parking lot. “Less than an hour, and I’m done.”

 ?? AL DIAZ adiaz@miamiheral­d.com ?? Issac Chanavich, 82, is injected with a COVID-19 vaccine by a U.S. Army medic at a FEMA vaccinatio­n site on Wednesday at Miami Dade College’s North Campus.
AL DIAZ adiaz@miamiheral­d.com Issac Chanavich, 82, is injected with a COVID-19 vaccine by a U.S. Army medic at a FEMA vaccinatio­n site on Wednesday at Miami Dade College’s North Campus.
 ?? AL DIAZ adiaz@miamiheral­d.com ?? A spokesman for the vaccinatio­n operation at MDC North said staff will fully enforce a requiremen­t that patients submit a state form to receive a vaccinatio­n for people deemed to be facing ‘extreme vulnerabil­ity’ to COVID-19.
AL DIAZ adiaz@miamiheral­d.com A spokesman for the vaccinatio­n operation at MDC North said staff will fully enforce a requiremen­t that patients submit a state form to receive a vaccinatio­n for people deemed to be facing ‘extreme vulnerabil­ity’ to COVID-19.

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