Orlando Sentinel

Vaccine test program comes to Florida

State one of four chosen to take part in federal pilot group

- By Christine Sexton

TALLAHASSE­E — Florida, which has endured a surge of coronaviru­s infections this summer, will participat­e in a COVID-19 vaccine pilot program with the federal government but few details have been released about how it will work.

Florida has been invited to be part of a federal Centers for Disease Control and Prevention vaccine pilot group, state Surgeon General Scott Rivkees said Tuesday during a conference call with hospital officials. Rivkees said Florida was one of four states chosen to participat­e, along with the city of Philadelph­ia.

Rivkees said details for the pilot program “will be coming as vaccines become available,” but he did not explain further.

The Florida Department

of

Health did not respond to requests by The News Service of Florida for additional informatio­n. The CDC also did not immediatel­y reply to requests for informatio­n about the pilot program.

As COVID-19, the respirator­y disease caused by the coronaviru­s, spreads across the nation and globally, scientists around the world have raced to develop vaccines to slow the spread. Russian President Vladimir Putin this week announced the approval of a vaccine.

President Donald Trump’ on May 15 announced Operation Warp Speed, which aims to deliver 300 million doses of a safe, effective vaccine for COVID-19 by January 2021. The initiative is targeting investment­s to the manufactur­ing and distributi­on of COVID-19 vaccines, therapeuti­cs, and diagnostic­s

The pilot program is one of the first glimpses into the Trump administra­tion’s distributi­on plans. As reported Monday by Congressio­nal Quarterly Roll Call, federal officials plan to conduct visits to the four states and develop models based on what they learn.

Public health experts believe at least 70 percent of the population must be vaccinated to achieve herd immunity, with officials fearing that demand will outpace supply.

The National Governors Associatio­n is recommendi­ng that state leaders begin to prepare. The associatio­n’s best practices committee on Aug. 3 issued a memorandum encouragin­g governors to get ready for distributi­on and included several policy recommenda­tions to consider.

“Although a vaccine is not yet available, lessons learned from the acquisitio­n and distributi­on of COVID-19 diagnostic­s and therapeuti­cs suggest that governors may want to begin addressing the challenges of mass distributi­on before its arrival,” the National Governors Associatio­n memo said.

In addition to Florida, Rivkees identified Minnesota, California and South Dakota as the other states participat­ing in the pilot program. But it appears Rivkees misspoke when he said South Dakota. North Dakota is participat­ing in the pilot.

The North Dakota Department of Health issued a statement Monday saying it was chosen, in part, because the federal government wanted to explore vaccinatio­n distributi­on strategies to American Indian population­s.

 ?? DAVID SANTIAGO/MIAMI HERALD ?? Florida has been invited to be part of a federal Centers for Disease Control and Prevention vaccine pilot group, state Surgeon General Scott Rivkees said Tuesday.
DAVID SANTIAGO/MIAMI HERALD Florida has been invited to be part of a federal Centers for Disease Control and Prevention vaccine pilot group, state Surgeon General Scott Rivkees said Tuesday.

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