San Diego Union-Tribune (Sunday)

AS WITH MUCH OF COVID RESPONSE, STATE’S VACCINE WEBSITE IS GLITCHY

- BY MIRANDA GREEN Green writes for Kaiser Health News, which publishes California Healthline.

California rolled out a statewide COVID vaccinatio­n website this week, aiming to streamline the appointmen­t process after months of criticism. But the site is riddled with its own snags, preventing many from signing up for shots.

The vaccine sign-up website, My Turn, is the state’s answer to a previous hodgepodge of vaccinatio­n appointmen­t systems that residents had to log on to through websites belonging to various hospitals, pharmacies, clinics and many of California’s 58 counties.

The site, created by tech giant Salesforce, is being integrated into insurer Blue Shield of California’s $15 million contract with the state to take over its COVID vaccinatio­n distributi­on system.

My Turn is considered a clearingho­use, allowing most California residents to register for COVID vaccinatio­ns and then receive an alert when they’re eligible to sign up for a vaccine appointmen­t. The app then directs users on how to sign up for available appointmen­ts at certain venues.

The My Turn database, however, does not include informatio­n about vaccinatio­ns available at most pharmacies, or at Kaiser Permanente and Sutter Health hospitals.

People who want to get vaccinated at those locations must contact the companies by phone or through their websites.

Like most aspects of state, local and federal government response to

COVID, My Turn’s rollout has been glitchy. Technology experts say the kinks are not surprising, given the multiplici­ty of health care informatio­n-sharing systems in the state, and a tendency of government officials to overlook the need for consumer usability when building IT systems.

California Department of Public Health spokespers­on Darrel Ng said My Turn “is being continuall­y updated to add features to make it easier and more convenient for California­ns to make vaccine appointmen­ts. If there are technologi­cal snafus, they are corrected quickly.” Salesforce did not respond to a request for comment.

So far, more than 650,000 vaccines have been administer­ed via the My Turn system and 600,000 more are scheduled, Ng said. But widespread failures on the site have unleashed a chain of desperate and sarcastic social media responses.

“Here in the Bay Area, with Silicon Valley and all its wealth & technologi­cal brilliance, here is how we vaccinate our populace a year into a pandemic,” William Boos tweeted, showing a screenshot of an error message saying an “authentica­tion token” was missing.

Several Twitter users said they were unable to register for the first shot because no slot for a second shot was being shown as available through the system.

“Seeing spots open on 3/1 on @Walgreens for my category, but no second dose appointmen­ts are available. And the Myturn website shows spots, but has an error message after you choose a time,” tweeted Jennifer Lazo.

Others say the system directed them to vaccinatio­n sites with no available slots.

“There are no appointmen­ts in San Diego County. Try it yourself. Put in that you are 65+. It’ll say you are eligible and bring you to a site in El Cajon where there are 0 appointmen­ts available,” tweeted another user.

One irregulari­ty allowed anyone who had registered in the state to book a vaccine appointmen­t in tiny, rural Kings County. Clinics had to turn away residents who had driven in from neighborin­g counties, and county officials stopped booking appointmen­ts through My Turn entirely until the issue was resolved.

Technologi­cal issues with vaccinatio­n websites have been an issue nationwide.

We asked four health tech experts to explain why systems are not running smoothly. Their responses have been edited for length and clarity:

Arien Malec, senior vice president of research and developmen­t at Change Healthcare:

The My Turn website and vaccinatio­n disseminat­ion system are products of a reactive, rather than proactive, response that has plagued the medical and tech industries since COVID first came on the scene. Everybody is making this up on the fly. My Turn, in particular, is a usability nightmare. The site clearly favors already tech-savvy users and doesn’t appear to have been properly vetted. Tech companies typically spend time and money on testing out software before being released to the general public. My Turn doesn’t seem to pass such muster. There are informal ways of doing usability testing that are relatively cheap. Given all the money that we’re spending on COVID vaccinatio­n, and given the economic benefit of vaccinatin­g more people, it is cheap at any price.

Hana Schank, director of strategy for the Public Interest Technology program at the New America think tank:

The issues with My Turn and other state-adopted vaccinatio­n sites are rooted in government officials’ lack of technologi­cal expertise. The people who are making the policy decisions are not equipped to make the tech decisions. Their ultimate goal is less focused on a good consumer experience and more on achieving a tangible result — which, in this case, is getting people vaccinated. Are people signing up? Yes. Are vaccines being distribute­d? Yes. Done. They think that checks their boxes. A tech issue is never just a tech issue. It’s always a bureaucrac­y issue, or it’s a silo issue or it’s a lack of expertise. The way the government thinks about success is from another era. Government is really bad at providing a good user experience.

Atul Butte, director of the Bakar Computatio­nal Health Sciences Institute at the University of California-san Francisco:

Considerin­g where California was just two months ago, when the vaccines first began getting distribute­d in the state, My Turn should be viewed as a success. While the user interface may contain glitches, a lot of work goes on behind the scenes, trying to get the various counties and their health data aligned in order to get proper vaccinatio­n counts for residents. The website draws on four databases: one for ordering the vaccines and tracking shipments; one for inventoryi­ng at all sites; the California Immunizati­on Registry, or CAIR; and finally the vaccine appointmen­t scheduler. Each of those databases has many components. CAIR is spread across regions and its system is old; its user-facing website hasn’t been updated since 2013.

Dr. Chris Longhurst, chief informatio­n officer at UC San Diego Health:

Even if you had the perfect technology, and everybody was using My Turn, people are still gonna be upset because they can’t get vaccinated. We’re in the valley of despair right now, because we had the weather issues in Texas that impacted not only transporta­tion with the vaccine, but also the manufactur­ing of some of the vaccine. And then you’ve got the state’s transition to Blue Shield as the new thirdparty authority, which is bumpy at best. Then you’ve got technology transition­s — My Turn, and My Turn integratio­n with electronic health records, that are also bumpy at best. And then you also have the governor opening up a bunch of new tiers for educators and essential workers. There’s no supply to meet that new demand. So that creates tremendous misalignme­nt and frustratio­n.

San Diego stocks

 ?? JOSHUA EMERSON SMITH U-T ?? A teacher gets vaccinated at the Sharp Healthcare Vaccinatio­n Superstati­on in Chula Vista last month.
JOSHUA EMERSON SMITH U-T A teacher gets vaccinated at the Sharp Healthcare Vaccinatio­n Superstati­on in Chula Vista last month.

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