The Mercury News

First vaccines to high-risk groups

Health care workers, nursing home residents prioritize­d; 40M doses expected by end of month

- By Lisa M. Krieger lkrieger@bayareanew­sgroup.com

A federal advisory committee voted on Tuesday to recommend distributi­on of precious COVID-19 vaccines first to health care workers and long-term care residents, a move that marks the beginning of the end of a pandemic that is claiming one American life every minute.

The historic agreement, which likely will be followed by California and other state public health department­s, is a triage plan: With too many needy people and too few doses, these two groups were deemed most deserving of protection.

“To all the people out there anxiously waiting for vaccine, we hope that this vote gets us one step closer to the day when we can all feel safe again, and when this pandemic is over,” said Dr. Nancy Messonnier, director of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention’s National Center for Immunizati­on and Respirator­y Diseases.

Until more doses are available, access within these two groups also will be restricted, according to the panel called the Advisory Committee on Immunizati­on Practices, comprised of physicians and public health experts.

For instance, health care workers with direct patient contact will be first in line. Care facilities that provide services to the most frail and oldest adults will also be prioritize­d. So will the health care workers who staff these facilities.

Only 40 million doses will be available nationwide by the end of December. Because two doses are required, this will protect 20 million people. But after the vaccines receive federal authorizat­ion, an additional 5 million to 10 million doses will be available every week. The U. S. has an estimated 17 million health care workers. California alone has up to 2 million people at risk of exposure through their work in health care or long-term care settings. The state also has nearly half a million residents in skilled nursing facilities,

assisted living facilities and similar settings.

California initially will get 327,000 doses, according to Gov. Gavin Newsom, far short of what is needed.

The state’s “Phase 1 allocation” plans for high-risk groups, which likely will mirror the federal group’s decision Tuesday, will be finalized this week. States have a Friday deadline to submit initial vaccine distributi­on plans.

The state is also determinin­g allocation­s for counties in a prioritiza­tion framework that is still under developmen­t, according to the California Department of Public Health.

Two state “work ing groups” are designing these plans. A Drafting Guidelines Workgroup is developing California- specific guidance for the prioritiza­tion and allocation of vaccine. The Community Vaccine Advisory Committee is providing input to ensure equitable access.

Health care workers across the country have been hit hard by the pandemic, with at least 243,000 infections and 858 deaths, according to data presented at the advisory committee meeting.

Residents and staff at care homes also have been disproport­ionately affected, with nearly 500,000 infections and 70,000 deaths.

“It’s something I’ve been dreaming about for months now,” said infectious disease expert Dr. Peter ChinHong, who works on the front lines of COVID-19 care, treating some of UC San Francisco’s most infectious patients. “It’s not only because we’re being protected individual­ly, but because we come into contact with so many potentiall­y infected patients every day, others will be protected.”

Despite wearing gloves, gowns and goggles, “I don’t pull my kids as close as I would normally do. The chances of infection are low, but it’s still always a lingering doubt in my mind,” he said.

California’s hospitals already are planning distributi­on, experts say. It’s not based on seniority or status but rather those at highest risk.

“Direct caregivers like respirator­y therapists, janitors who clean the rooms, housekeepe­rs, transporte­rs who are moving patients, respirator­y therapists, phlebotomi­sts that are testing patients — they’re all at risk,” said Sal Rosselli, president of the National Union of Healthcare Workers, which represents more than 15,000 health care workers in California and Hawaii.

Residents of long-term care facilities are also at extreme risk not only because of their age and disabiliti­es but because they live together. And many have have other illnesses, such as diabetes and heart disease, said Los Altos geriatric specialist Dr. Mehrdad Ayati.

Preventing infections in those facilities will reduce the burden on hospitals, he said, because “they are the ones sending patients to the hospital,” Ayati said. Early in the pandemic, many of the most devastatin­g outbreaks were caused by infections introduced by health care workers in those facilities, he said.

The pharmacies that provide care to these facilities, such as CVS and Walgreens, already have reached out to describe their plans, said Ayati.

Federal and state authoritie­s have not yet decided which groups would be next in line. Based on recommenda­tions by the National Academy of Medicine, the “Phase 2” group would likely include people with significan­t illnesses, “essential workers” who cannot telework, teachers and school staff, older adults, people in homeless shelters and incarcerat­ed people and staff. Young adults, children and workers who can telecommut­e would be last.

Two vaccines — one from Pfizer and its partner BioNTech,

the second from Moderna — have filed for an emergency use authorizat­ion from the U. S. Food and Drug Administra­tion. Both enlist a new and hitherto unproven idea of using messenger RNA to trick our own cells into making a viral protein, triggering an antibody response. These requests are under review by the FDA’s Vaccines and Related Biological Products Advisory Committee.

If the FDA gives the goahead, Pfizer said it could start delivering vaccines no later than Dec. 14. Moderna says its vaccine would be ready a week later.

The approach causes unease for Liz Thurstone, a registered nurse at San Jose’s Regional Medical Center. “I want to protect myself and those around me,” she said. But the vaccine strategy “is difficult for me to wrap my head around. At this moment, I am reserving my final decision but am leaning towards accepting the vaccine.”

So far, 13.6 million people in the country have been infected, and nearly 270,000 have died.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States