Monterey Herald

State OKs the use of vaccine batch

Despite the reactions that occured within several people

- By Don Thompson

SACRAMENTO >> California said it’s safe to immediatel­y begin using a batch of coronaviru­s vaccine doses after health officials urged a halt to injections and held a review because several people had reactions.

Wednesday’s decision frees up more than 300,000 doses to counties, cities and hospitals struggling to obtain supplies. With the largest U.S. population at 40 million people, California has the second-highest COVID-19 death toll in the country behind New York.

The state Department of Public Health on Sunday urged a pause in the use of a specific lot of the Moderna virus after fewer than 10 people who received shots at a San Diego vaccinatio­n site needed medical care, possibly due to rare but severe allergic reactions.

But after a safety review and consultati­on with Moderna and health agencies, the state “found no scientific basis to continue the pause” and said vaccinatio­ns can “immediatel­y resume,” state ep

idemiologi­st Dr. Erica Pan said in a statement.

“These findings should continue to give California­ns confidence that vaccines are safe and effective, and that the systems put in place to ensure vaccine safety are rigorous and science-based,” Pan said, adding that some of her family members had received it.

Cheryl Brennan of Fallbrook was among those who had a reaction shortly after being injected last week at Petco Park, home of the San Diego Padres.

“At 18 minutes, it was like my throat started closing,” she told KSWB-TV. “My blood pressure went to 185 over 125, which I guess is very life-threatenin­g.” Help came immediatel­y.

“They hooked up electrodes. They put ice packs on me. I had four EMTs and two nurses helping me and they brought my blood pressure back down within 45 minutes,” Brennan said.

Brennan also said she still plans to get the second dose required for full immunizati­on.

“I will still absolutely, positively go,” Brennan said. “My opinion, if I get COVID, I would probably have a lot worse reactions than just having those issues … And my husband has underlying health conditions, so it’s worth taking that chance.”

The release of the Moderna doses comes as California officials struggle to meet the challenge of vaccinatin­g all those awaiting them, including millions of people 65 and older who recently were made eligible behind health care workers and people in nursing care homes.

California is getting 400,000 to 500,000 doses in a good week and it could take four to five months just to complete vaccinatio­ns for those 65 and older, Pan said during a state vaccine advisory committee meeting, according to the Sacramento Bee.

Large counties have been opening up more mass vaccinatio­n sites as they struggle with an unpreceden­ted demand. Officials are pinning hopes on President Joe Biden’s promise to ramp up vaccinatio­n resources.

“Under a Biden administra­tion, our country has a fighting chance at defeating this virus,” California state Sen. Scott Wiener said Wednesday.

Providers place vaccine orders, and the state reviews and submits them to the federal government, which can authorize and submit the request to the manufactur­er. Counties have complained about lags and unpredicta­ble distributi­on.

More than 4 million doses had been shipped and about 1.5 million had been administer­ed as of Tuesday, according to state public health department figures. Health officials have said the delay may be due in part to some doses not actually having arrived in the state yet.

With the all-clear for Moderna’s vaccine, San Francisco will be able to use 8,000 doses it had put on hold and no longer expects to run out of vaccine on Thursday as previously feared, the San Francisco Chronicle reported. Health officials had received fewer than 2,000 additional doses this week for city hospitals and community clinics.

Even so, the city hopes to vaccinate an estimated 900,000 people who live or work there by June 30, although it would have to double or triple its vaccinatio­n rate to 10,000 a day.

“The chief obstacle we are facing is not enough doses,” said Roland Pickens, director of San Francisco’s public health care system, at a supervisor­s’ hearing Wednesday. “You only get it one way; you get it for free and you get it from the federal government.”

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