The Mercury News

State starts new vaccine distributi­on

System features central site to sign up for appointmen­ts

- By Maggie Angst

California on Monday launched a new COVID-19 vaccine distributi­on system operated by insurance giant Blue Shield of California, a shift that state officials say will speed up the rollout of doses and unify a county-bycounty patchwork of eligibilit­y standards.

But for Bay Area residents, it will take a few more weeks to notice any difference.

One glaring change is that the state’s My Turn online system, which can be accessed at myturn.ca.gov, will serve as the central site for all California­ns to sign up for vaccinatio­n appointmen­ts. Individual counties and health care providers will still play an essential role in immunizing people at their vaccinatio­n sites and mobile clinics, but the central booking system hopefully will make obtaining appointmen­ts more efficient and straightfo­rward.

Additional­ly, when the state decides to expand vaccinatio­n eligibilit­y to the next category of the population whose turn comes up for doses, every county in the state will have to follow suit at the same time. Until now, county health officials have made their own call on when to provide vaccines to the next eligible category of people.

As of Monday, those eligible to receive a vaccine in California include health care workers, long-term care residents, people age 65 and older and employees who work in agricultur­e and food, education and child care, and emergency services. Starting March 15, people between 16 and 64 years old who have severe health ailments such as cancer or heart conditions and those with developmen­tal or other high-risk disabiliti­es will also be eligible for vaccinatio­n.

Dr. John Swartzberg, clinical professor emeritus of infectious diseases and vaccinolog­y at the UC BerkeleyUC­SF Joint Medical Program, said Blue Shield, which has been a staple across California for decades, should provide a “big boost to distributi­ng these vaccines.”

Coupled with the overall vaccinatio­n production ramp-up and the release of Johnson & Johnson’s one-dose vaccine, Swartzberg said California­ns

should notice a massive improvemen­t in the rollout of vaccines across the state — though it will likely take a month or so to fully take hold.

“I think we’ve seen the worst of it, clearly. But it’s going to get a lot better,” he said. “I expect that by April, our state will have both the logistics and supply system running smoothly hand-inglove, and it’s going to be a lot easier for people to get a vaccine.”

Across the Bay Area, health department­s said Monday they were still awaiting details on how Blue Shield’s takeover would alter their vaccinatio­n processes. The Bay Area is in the third wave of the Blue Shield transition, which is expected to take shape mid- to late March. San Mateo County, for instance, expects to fully transition its appointmen­t booking system to the state’s My Turn website on March 15, a spokespers­on said.

Because all Bay Area counties in recent days and weeks have aligned with the state’s eligibilit­y criteria, the transition is not expected to immediatel­y affect who can make a vaccinatio­n appointmen­t.

“We welcome the increased state leadership on the vaccine rollout to assure both speed and equity,” Louise Rogers, chief of San Mateo County Health, said in a statement. “The County has the opportunit­y to meet with Blue Shield representa­tives this week to learn more from them.”

Blue Shield’s takeover of the state’s vaccine distributi­on comes as California bids farewell to a deadly winter wave of COVID-19. California is averaging about a quarter of the number of new cases it saw at the beginning of February — approximat­ely 5,050 per day over the past week compared with nearly 19,000. Meanwhile, the rate of positive COVID-19 tests over the past week fell to 2.3% on Monday, near the state’s lowest point of the coronaviru­s pandemic.

In yet another promising sign, the state health department today is expected to announce that seven more counties are dropping from the state’s most-restrictiv­e purple reopening tier to the red tier.

As of Monday, more than 8.8 million doses of vaccine have been administer­ed in California, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, meaning 15.5% of California­ns have received at least one shot and 6.6% have received the full regimen. California is expected to administer 3 million shots per week this month and up to 4 million under Blue Shield’s leadership next month — both up from 1 million per week in January.

Over the years, Blue Shield of California has donated more than $1 million to Gov. Gavin Newsom’s campaigns and independen­t committees. Before awarding the insurance giant with a no-bid contract of up to $15 million to lead the state’s vaccine distributi­on, Newsom appointed at least 16 Blue Shield employees to his COVID-19 testing task force, including company CEO Paul Markovich to co-lead the team.

After coming under fire for a vaccine rollout system plagued by confusion and delays, Newsom announced in late January that Blue Shield and Kaiser Permanente had been selected to help run the state’s vaccinatio­n campaign.

Although Blue Shield appears to be taking the reins, Kaiser and the state on Feb. 23 signed a memorandum of understand­ing saying the health care giant will serve “in an advisory capacity to Blue Shield” and continue vaccinatin­g eligible residents — both Kaiser members and nonmembers — at mass vaccinatio­n sites at the Moscone Center in San Francisco and Cal Poly Pomona in Southern California. The memorandum says Kaiser “may consider” establishi­ng other mass vaccinatio­n sites in the future.

The memorandum also says Kaiser will set up smaller vaccinatio­n clinics in vulnerable communitie­s to reach residents hit disproport­ionately hard by the virus.

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