The Reporter (Lansdale, PA)

States report vaccine shortages, cancel appointmen­ts

- By Michael Hill

NEW YORK » The push to inoculate Americans against the coronaviru­s is hitting a roadblock: A number of states are reporting they are running out of vaccine, and tens of thousands of people who managed to get appointmen­ts for a first dose are seeing them canceled.

The full explanatio­n for the apparent mismatch between supply and demand was unclear, but last week, the U.S. Health and Human Services Department suggested that states had unrealisti­c expectatio­ns for how much vaccine was on the way.

The shortages are coming as states dramatical­ly ramp up their vaccinatio­n drives, at the direction of the federal government, to reach people 65 and older, along with other groups deemed essential or at high risk.

More than 400,000 deaths in the U.S. have been blamed on the virus.

First-grade teacher Karen Stachowiak spent almost five hours on the New York state hotline and website to land an appointmen­t set for Wednesday, only to have it canceled. The Buffalo-area resident and her parents were among several thousand people with canceled appointmen­ts in Erie County because of supply problems.

“It’s stressful because I was so close. And my other friends that are teachers, they were able to book appointmen­ts for last Saturday,” Stachowiak said. “So many people are getting theirs in and then it’s like, ‘Nope, I’ve got to wait.’”

About half of the 31 million doses distribute­d to the states by the federal government have been administer­ed so far, though only about 2 million people have received the two doses needed for maximum protection against COVID-19, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

Countries across Europe are also having problems getting enough doses to provide protection against a virus that is now appearing in new, more contagious variants around the globe.

Pfizer said last week that it would temporaril­y reduce deliveries of its vaccine to Europe and Canada while it upgrades capacity at its plant in Belgium, which supplies all shots delivered outside the United States. In the U.S., Pfizer has a plant in Michigan.

In the U.S., some states have suggested they may run out of vaccine by today and are unclear when new doses will arrive.

New York Mayor Bill de Blasio said Wednesday that the city had to cancel 23,000 appointmen­ts for people awaiting their first dose this week because of inadequate supply. The mayor, who has been sounding the alarm about vaccine shortages for days, said the situation was compounded by a delay in this week’s delivery of Moderna vaccine to the city.

“So we already were feeling the stress of a shortage of the vaccine,” he said. “Now the situation has been made even worse. We need to think differentl­y in this moment.”

City Health Commission­er Dr. Dave Chokshi said the 103,400 Moderna doses that were scheduled for delivery Tuesday — 54,200 first doses and 49,200 second doses — were now expected Wednesday and today.

Citing a statewide shortage of vaccine, New York City’s police department suspended first-shot vaccinatio­ns for its officers.

In Florida, local media reported a similar problem in the Miami area, where the Baptist Health care system canceled appointmen­ts that had been scheduled for first doses.

“I could have blown the top of my head off with steam,” Charlotte Reeve, 76, told The Miami Herald. “I’m also a fairly recent widow. To me, having to be locked up in my house alone is just devastatin­g to me . ... I feel like I just got cut off at the knees, again.”

San Francisco’s health department said it is likely to run out of vaccine today, in part because the state pulled back on administer­ing a batch of Moderna shots after several health workers suffered what may have been a bad reaction.

The county health department received 12,000 doses last week but fewer than 2,000 this week.

West Virginia, which has run one of the speediest vaccinatio­n drives in the country, in part by using small-town pharmacies, said it didn’t receive an expected increase in doses this week.

With 99.6% of first doses on hand already administer­ed, officials are clamoring for the government to send more.

“Here we are with no vaccines,” said Republican Gov. Jim Justice, fretting that other states have doses sitting unused. “We’ve got them all in people’s arms, and we’ve done exactly what we should have done. … I think performanc­e ought to be rewarded.”

He said the state hasn’t received a promised 25,000 additional doses this week on top of its usual weekly allocation of about 23,000.

Hawaii leaders complained that the state received 59,000 doses last week but expects only about 32,000 this week.

In New York State, Barbara Carr, 72, a retiree in Buffalo, was distraught when her vaccine appointmen­t for today was canceled. But she was able to quickly get another appointmen­t at a local pharmacy and received her first dose Tuesday.

Now she is worried about her two children, who are teachers. Their appointmen­ts were canceled.

“They have had no luck with scheduling, no phone calls, no communicat­ion whatsoever other than ‘You’re canceled,’” Carr said. “The poor teachers . ... I can stay home so I can hide from the virus. They can’t.”

 ?? LYNNE SLADKY — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Robert Owens, 90, stands in line with other residents to receive the Pfizer-BioNTech COVID-19 vaccine at John Knox Village in Pompano Beach, Fla., on Tuesday.
LYNNE SLADKY — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Robert Owens, 90, stands in line with other residents to receive the Pfizer-BioNTech COVID-19 vaccine at John Knox Village in Pompano Beach, Fla., on Tuesday.

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