The Guardian (USA)

CDC panel recommends giving Covid-19 vaccines to healthcare workers first

- Jessica Glenza

A government panel on Tuesday formally recommende­d early doses of Covid-19 vaccines be given first to healthcare workers and long-term care facility residents in the US, generally seen as people who live in nursing homes and assisted living facilities.

Together, that group would represent roughly 23 million Americans, disproport­ionately including women, people of color and low-wage workers who makeup the healthcare labor force.

The recommenda­tion from the panel at the Center for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) hinges on a vaccine being approved for emergency use by the US Food and Drug Administra­tion and later recommende­d by the advisory panel.

“I believe my vote reflects maximum benefit, minimum harm, promoting justice, and mitigating the health inequaliti­es which exist in distributi­on of this vaccine,” said José Romero, chair of the committee, explaining his vote in favor of the recommenda­tion.

The recommenda­tion will likely be the basis of vaccine distributi­on for states and US territorie­s, which carry out vaccinatio­n campaigns. States must complete their final requests for the leading vaccine candidate by the end of this week.

“In the time it takes us to have this meeting, 180 people will have died of Covid-19,” said Beth Bell, a member of the advisory committee on immunizati­on practices, a US CDC group which made the formal recommenda­tion.

More than 243,000 healthcare workers have had confirmed Covid-19 cases, and 858 have died, according to CDC data. A separate database run by the Guardian and Kaiser Health News is investigat­ing the deaths of more than 1,400 health workers.

Further, while long-term care home residents represent less than 1% of the US population, they represent more than 40% of Covid-19 deaths.

More than 100,000 people living in care homes have died in the pandemic. The advisory panel also recommende­d vaccinatio­n campaigns specifical­ly focus on nursing homes, where the most medically vulnerable live.

Advisers to the FDA will debate next week whether there is enough evidence to give emergency authorizat­ion to a vaccine developed by pharmaceut­ical partners Pfizer and BioNTech.

If it is approved, it would be the first Covid-19 vaccine to be distribute­d, the first to use a novel messenger RNA technology, and would come as the United States sees a surge of cases expected to only worsen over coming months of cold weather and holidays.

The hope of experts on the panel was that vaccinatin­g healthcare workers – ranging from intensive care unit nurses to home health aides to ambulance drivers – would help stabilize America’s healthcare workforce at a time of enormous demand.

Together, healthcare workers and long-term care residents will represent “phase 1a” of the vaccine distributi­on plan.

Nancy Messonier, director of the national center for immunizati­on and respirator­y diseases, said states believe they can vaccinate workers within weeks of the vaccine’s release.

Most states, she said, “believe they can vaccinate all of their healthcare workers within three weeks”. However, she added, such high uptake is, “the hope there will be so much support for the vaccine that the workforce will be drawn together”.

The committee did not address the priority of groups following healthcare workers and long-term care home residents.

One especially large and contentiou­s group, called “essential workers”, encompasse­s more than 80 million people from a range of walks of life.

 ?? Photograph: Dado Ruvić/Reuters ?? Panel recommenda­tion will likely be the basis of vaccine distributi­on for states and US territorie­s, which carry out vaccinatio­n campaigns.
Photograph: Dado Ruvić/Reuters Panel recommenda­tion will likely be the basis of vaccine distributi­on for states and US territorie­s, which carry out vaccinatio­n campaigns.

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