New Haven Register (Sunday) (New Haven, CT)

Data: More COVID-19 vaccines are wasted as demand drops in Connecticu­t

- By Dave Altimari and Kasturi Pananjady CTMIRROR.ORG

At a recent COVID vaccine clinic in eastern Connecticu­t, where the Uncas Health District was offering all three varieties of vaccine, one person requested Moderna.

That meant officials had to open a vial of the Moderna vaccine. Each vial contains 10 doses.

“We are at the point where we aren’t going to turn anybody away who wants to get vaccinated,” said Patrick McCormack, the director of the health district. “We have needed to be more creative in how we manage our doses, so we don’t waste them, and so far we have done pretty well — but it is getting harder.”

Vaccine waste has sharply increased in recent weeks as demand has dropped, officials said. As of June 16, 1,616 vaccine doses had gone to waste in Connecticu­t, according to the state Department of Public Health. More than 500 of those doses — nearly a third — were wasted since the end of May.

More than 4 million doses have been administer­ed in the state since December. DPH spokespers­on Maura Fitzgerald described the doses wasted as “a small price to pay.”

Nationally, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention collects data on dose wastage, though not all states were reporting their numbers to the agency, according to reporting by Kaiser Health News. The CDC has not yet responded to a CT Mirror request for state-by-state dose wastage data.

No consequenc­es for waste

The state’s numbers do not include doses shipped directly from the federal government to federally qualified health centers and pharmacies such as CVS and Walgreens.

As the state’s vaccine effort has slowed significan­tly, the amount of waste will likely increase, something state officials anticipate­d in a memorandum to vaccinator­s in mid-May. The memo stressed the need to vaccinate as many people as possible, even if it means wasting vaccine doses.

“While we want to continue to follow best practices to use every dose possible, we do not want that to be at the expense of missing an opportunit­y to vaccinate every eligible person when they are ready to get vaccinated,” the May 17 memo said.

“Keep in mind that there are no negative consequenc­es for reporting waste, and it will not negatively impact future allocation­s. CT DPH recognizes that unused expired vaccine is a normal part of this phase of the vaccinatio­n program.”

The United States and other developed nations in the West have ordered enough vaccines to vaccinate their population­s many times over. Meanwhile, the World Health Organizati­on’s Covax initiative to promote global vaccine equity is suffering from supply shortages, and the virus has been ravaging South America and South Asia in recent weeks. The United States has pledged to donate 500 million doses of Pfizer to Covax by 2022, up from the 60 million originally promised.

Urgency is gone

In the early stages of the vaccine campaign, the demand was so great that officials rarely had to worry about wasting vaccine. The only reported waste was for a few that were dropped or when officials didn’t realize that a vial contained six doses instead of five doses.

But back then, officials kept emergency lists of people they could call and get them to come to a clinic if there was an extra dose or two, or there would be another clinic close enough to transport it there. Now, most mass vaccinatio­n centers have been closed or curtailed to doing mostly second doses, and the emphasis is on pop-up clinics or mobile clinics designed to reach people who either cannot get to a mass vaccinatio­n site or have been reluctant to get vaccinated.

“That opportunit­y to fall back on other vaccine clinics is gone,” McCormack said. “The sense of urgency in people to get vaccinated is gone too, so there are no more stand-by lists to call on.”

Many local health directors have been using extra doses to vaccinate homebound residents who have signed up to get vaccinated through DPH’s homebound program, but even that has trickled to almost nothing. The Uncas Health District, which had almost 50 homebound cases when the program was first unveiled in May, had only two this week.

Clinics closing

Most of the state’s mass vaccinatio­n sites have already been closed, or are about to be, as the focus turns to pop-up clinics and mobile clinics aimed at smaller, targeted groups.

Hartford HealthCare Chief Clinical Integratio­n Officer James Cardon said they are getting ready to officially close the Convention Center mass vaccinatio­n site that opened in December and where more than 85,000 vaccines have been administer­ed.

Cardon said vaccines have slowed, and they are now doing fewer than 1,000 a week across all of their vaccinatio­n sites — a total they would have done in one day at one clinic a few months ago.

Cardon said some vaccine wastage is now the “price of doing business.”

“You are going to have partially used vials. It’s just a consequenc­e of where we are at now in the process,” Cardon said. “There’s no way around that, because we are going to give a shot to anyone who raises their hand now.”

Cardon said hospital officials have been more concerned about spoilage of vaccine and have closely monitored expiration dates. He said Hartford Hospital hasn’t used a lot of Johnson & Johnson.

“We have come close to a few deadlines, but we have managed to stay ahead of it so far,” Cardon said.

Local health directors are also starting to shut down their weekly clinics in their communitie­s. Many noticed several weeks ago that people were canceling appointmen­ts at their clinics because vaccines are so widely available — they can be had anywhere from a Walmart to a CVS to a car-racing venue or local fireworks show.

Stratford Director of Public Health Andrea L. Boissevain said she started noticing about a month ago that people just weren’t showing up for appointmen­ts at clinics.

“Up until two clinics ago, we wasted no doses, none whatsoever,” Boissevain said during a recent interview. “It’s just frustratin­g, because I commit eight stations of volunteers, and it’s tough, because I’ve got these people, we’re at a clinic, and we’re twiddling our thumbs.”

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