The Oklahoman

Vaccinatio­n at three-month high

Boosters and employer mandates drive increase

- John Seewer

The number of Americans getting COVID-19 vaccines has steadily increased to a three-month high as seniors and people with medical conditions seek boosters, and government and employer mandates push more workers to take their first doses.

Demand is expected to spike in a few weeks when elementary school children can begin getting shots, and some states are reopening mass vaccinatio­n clinics in anticipati­on.

In Missouri, a mass vaccinatio­n site at a former Toys R Us store is set to open Monday. Virginia plans to roll out nine large vaccinatio­n centers over the next few weeks, including one at the Richmond Internatio­nal Raceway.

Colorado opened four mass vaccinatio­n sites in mid-September, largely to deal with employer mandates, and officials saw a 38% increase in vaccinatio­ns statewide during the first week.

The total number of doses being administer­ed in the U.S. is climbing toward an average of 1 million per day, almost double the level from mid-July – but still far below last spring.

Organizers of the effort to reach the roughly 67 million unvaccinat­ed American adults say the rise in demand can be traced to approval of the Pfizer booster, mandates that have forced employees to choose between the shot and their jobs and sobering statistics that show nearly all COVID-19 deaths are among the unvaccinat­ed.

“We’re seeing people who need the shot to keep a job,” said Dr. Ricardo Gonzalez-Fisher, who runs a mobile vaccine clinic mostly for Latino patients in Colorado.

Last weekend, his clinic delivered 30 shots to people outside the Mexican Consulate in Denver. “On these days, 30 is a very good number,” he said.

Virginia’s state vaccine coordinato­r, Dr. Danny Avula, said opening the large vaccinatio­n centers, will allow local health department­s to focus on reaching underserve­d communitie­s. “This should really help relieve the burden for our local providers,” he said.

Last week, the number of people getting shots at a mall in Charlottes­ville, Virginia, doubled over the previous week, said Ryan McKay, who oversees COVID-19 operations for the Blue Ridge Health District.

The big push now, he said, is in neighborho­ods where rates are low. The health district has set up mobile clinics at weekend basketball tournament­s, high school football games and even at a corner market where 20 people were vaccinated in a day.

“Those 20 vaccinatio­ns sound small, but it’s really a huge success,” McKay said.

Alba Lopez in Ohio decided to get the Pfizer vaccine Friday at the Columbus Public Health Department after tiring of twice-weekly testing required by her employer, Chase Bank, and filling out an online form each day indicating whether she had a fever and how she felt.

The vaccine “helped me to avoid all that,” said Lopez, who also figured her company will eventually require it.

Health officials in Springfield, Missouri, an early epicenter of the delta surge, are opening the new vaccinatio­n site at the former toy store because they anticipate seeing an influx of people.

“All told, in the coming weeks and months, we are expecting more than 120,000 people to seek vaccine,” said Jon Mooney, assistant director of the Springfield-Greene County Health Department. “We are already experienci­ng increased demand in the last week or two.”

Cases in the Springfield area are falling, but 78 people remain hospitaliz­ed in the city, and federal officials have determined that community transmissi­on remains high.

Mitchell Maccarone, 24, got his second shot Thursday at a CVS Pharmacy in North Smithfield, Rhode Island. He wanted to wait until the vaccine received full FDA approval.

“Before I put something in my body, I want to make sure it’s fully approved,” he said. “I’m also not in a high-risk age group. I am healthy, and I had COVID, and it was really just the sniffles.”

Vaccinatio­n sites opened in the past week in Memphis, Tennessee, and Tampa, Florida, drew mostly people seeking booster shots rather than their first or second shots, said organizers who expect demand to rise.

A bump in vaccinatio­ns in Louisiana began in August, when so many were getting sick from the highly contagious delta variant, said Sheree Taillon, vaccine incentive coordinato­r for the state’s health department.

But now there are few first-timers seeking shots, and most people coming for their boosters are older people and those who rushed to get vaccinated last winter, she said. And COVID-19 deaths and hospitaliz­ations are dropping.

“The fear is leaving yet again,” she said. “I feel that fear is the only thing to get folks vaccinated at this point.”

 ?? JAE C. HONG/AP FILE ?? The number of Americans getting COVID-19 vaccine shots is nearing an average of 1 million per day. Demand is expected to spike in a few weeks when elementary school age children can begin getting vaccinated.
JAE C. HONG/AP FILE The number of Americans getting COVID-19 vaccine shots is nearing an average of 1 million per day. Demand is expected to spike in a few weeks when elementary school age children can begin getting vaccinated.

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