San Diego Union-Tribune (Sunday)

MORE THAN 50% OF CALIFORNIA RESIDENTS VACCINATED AGAINST COVID-19

- BY RONG-GONG LIN II Lin writes for the Los Angeles Times.

California has achieved a milestone in its 5-month-long vaccinatio­n campaign: More than 50 percent of residents have received at least one dose of COVID-19 vaccine, according to a Los Angeles Times analysis.

Roughly 19.6 million California­ns have received at least one injection. Overall, about 38 percent of California residents are fully vaccinated, meaning they have received either both shots of the Pfizer or Moderna vaccines, or the single-dose Johnson & Johnson vaccine.

After an initially slow rollout, California has gained steady ground when it comes to administer­ing vaccinatio­ns. California ranks 12th among all states in the nation for having the greatest percentage of its residents vaccinated with at least one dose, according to the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

The New England states of Maine, New Hampshire, Vermont, Massachuse­tts, Connecticu­t and Rhode Island, as well as New Jersey, have been able to vaccinate their residents the fastest nationwide. States that are still struggling include Louisiana, Mississipp­i and Alabama.

California’s pace of vaccinatio­n has improved since the first vaccine dose in the state was administer­ed five months ago in the arm of Helen Cordova, an ICU nurse at Kaiser Permanente Los Angeles Medical Center.

About six weeks into the vaccinatio­n push, at the beginning of February, about 150,000 vaccine doses were being administer­ed every day. By early April, California hit its fastest pace of vaccine administra­tion — an average of 400,000 doses a day.

Since then, there has been drop in the pace of vaccinatio­ns to roughly 250,000 doses per day.

To get more people vaccinated, officials in some parts of California are starting to shutter mass vaccinatio­n sites and devoting more resources to mobile and pop-up clinics that can offer easier access to the vaccine in some of the state’s hardest-hit neighborho­ods.

Health officers are hoping that vaccinatio­n rates won’t continue to fall too quickly, and they announced this past week that adolescent­s age 12 to 15 are now eligible for the Pfizer vaccine. They hope that could also spark renewed interest among older family members who remain unvaccinat­ed. The shots are administer­ed free to residents, without regard to insurance or immigratio­n status.

Although mass vaccinatio­n sites at sports arenas and fairground­s were set up in the early months of the response, those efforts may have missed some of the people who needed it most — those living in disadvanta­ged neighborho­ods, those in crowded housing and those who needed to work outside the home.

“These large county vaca cine sites were less effective in reaching residents in the hardest-hit communitie­s,” said Dr. Paul Simon, chief science officer for the L.A. County Department of Public Health.

“Transporta­tion and other access barriers at these sites may have contribute­d to some of the early inequities and vaccinatio­n rates in the county, necessitat­ing additional efforts to target the hardest hit communitie­s through neighborho­od specific clinics and other focused approaches,” Simon said.

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