USA TODAY International Edition

Mass vaccinatio­n sites soon arriving

FEMA may set up 100 high- volume clinics across USA

- Elizabeth Weise

SAN FRANCISCO – Jim Stephens got the text at 8 p. m. and was so excited he couldn’t sleep. He had an appointmen­t the next morning to get a COVID- 19 vaccine at the city’s first mass vaccinatio­n clinic.

The 76- year- old drove up after it opened at 8 a. m. and was waved into a line of cars flowing slowly but steadily

through a temporary chain- link fence. He drove along a line of volunteers, making choreograp­hed stops.

First, his appointmen­t paperwork was checked. At the next checkpoint, he was given a surgical mask. A few feet farther, a volunteer went over possible side effects.

Finally, he rolled up to the table where a nurse stood ready to give him his shot.

“Frankly, I was nervous that they would run out,” Stephens said from the seat of his car before his injection. Still clutching his appointmen­t notification, he looked around, a huge grin on his face. “This is fantastic. Now I feel wonderful.”

As part of President Joe Biden’s COVID- 19 strategy, such mass vaccinatio­n clinics will soon become familiar to millions of Americans. The Federal Emergency Management Agency could run up to 100 high- volume sites nationwide within a month to help reach the administra­tion’s goal of giving 1.5 million shots a day during Biden’s first 100 days in office.

Though public health experts stress smaller pop- up sites must be employed to reach communitie­s with access issues and vaccine hesitancy, large centralize­d hubs will play a key role.

“These kinds of mass vaccinatio­n sites will be a significant, and maybe even a major, part of vaccinatio­n everywhere,” said Dr. Joshua Adler, chief clinical officer for UCSF Health, which cosponsors the site.

Communitie­s are largely coming up with their own mass vaccinatio­n plans, sometimes based on coronaviru­s testing sites, but they don’t have to reinvent the wheel for COVID- 19. High- volume clinics can be based on templates for influenza vaccinatio­ns developed and refined by public health and medical experts since at least 2005, said Dr. Kelly Moore, deputy director of the nonprofit Immunizati­on Action Coalition.

States have drilled on these types of clinics for years, Moore said, and her organizati­on collects resources for conducting such clinics and posts them on a central website.

Things don’t always start smoothly. Last weekend in Delaware, nightmaris­h lines at two mass sites on Saturday gave way to a more orderly system by Sunday, and 11,154 seniors and health care personnel got vaccinated. Extreme cold caused Department of Health computer batteries to run down, leading to registrati­on issues, which were resolved with generators.

In New York’s Broome County, mass vaccinatio­n appointmen­ts had to be voided because a website scheduled them prematurel­y.

Even with a road map, a multitude of details must be worked out to run such a campaign. The complexity was on display in San Francisco, where the first mass vaccinatio­n site opened Jan. 22. As of Tuesday, about 2,500 people had received their first COVID- 19 shot.

Officials plan to have a total of three sites in three corners of the city to make them accessible to most residents. The first, near the city’s southern edge, is in a parking lot slated to become public housing.

“It’s complicate­d, it’s challengin­g, but we want to get vaccine out the door and into arms as fast as we possibly can,” Mayor London Breed said at a news conference Monday.

Adler described the setup as a “soft launch” with limited hours to work out kinks before the site ramps up to full capacity. A winter storm shut it down Wednesday, but the city hopes to have it up and running again Friday.

The speed at which everything came together was a welcome surprise.

“When I was told this site was going up in a few days, I said, ‘ Can you really do that?’ ” said Dr. Grant Colfax, director of the city’s Department of Public Health. “I owe a few people bottles of champagne now.”

The rate- limiting factor for San Francisco and many other locations is doses.

“This is not a people problem, this is a vaccine problem,” Adler said.

The city could offer at least 10,000 doses a day if it had them. “That’s why we need massive supplies of vaccine,” Colfax said.

To get an appointmen­t, people must be older than 75 and receive their medical care at UCSF Medical Center, which provided vaccine and volunteers to staff the clinic. As more doses become available, that will expand to include patients from other medical systems and those in the public health system. Some people over 70 have gotten vaccine

“We want to get vaccine out the door and into arms as fast as we possibly can.”

San Francisco Mayor London Breed

when there were extra appointmen­ts.

The city offers only as many appointmen­ts in a day as it has doses, so many patients don’t learn if they are among the lucky ones until the night before.

“The text came through on our 37th wedding anniversar­y,” said Ralph Keeney, 77. “We figured this was the best present we could have.”

Post- It notes help get job done

The drill is simple but staff- intensive. On the first weekend, traffic officials and large lighted signs directed people to circle around the back of an enormous fenced parking lot next to a former concrete reservoir.

At the entrance, after people got a fresh surgical mask and had their paperwork checked, brightly colored Post-It notes were slapped on their windshield­s, one for each person getting vaccinated.

The Post- It notes were a brainstorm by nurse Heather Taylor. She was giving shots and needed to quickly see how many people were waiting in line, so she could be prepared with syringes. The handy, colorful sticky notes did the trick.

By Sunday afternoon, the practice had spread throughout the vaccinatio­n clinic; cars lined up in all eight lanes at the main entrance sported bright, fluttering squares on their windshield­s.

Such on- the- ground tweaks are an example of the developing system. Though there are playbooks for mass flu vaccinatio­n, COVID- 19 comes with special requiremen­ts. Everyone must be spaced 6 feet apart, and those getting shots must be kept and observed for 15 minutes in case of adverse reactions.

“We started from scratch,” said Martha Cohen, the mayor’s director of special events.

Cohen usually plans for big events such as parades when the San Francisco Giants win the World Series or, more recently, outdoor voting in front of City Hall.

“This is an event, it’s like doing a show. Only it’s a really important one,” she said.

If not for COVID- 19 restrictio­ns, the site could fit 50 of the rented plastic tents the nurses worked under, but factoring in social distance they could have only 28. To protect the vaccinator­s from traffic, the city rented bright orange, water- filled Jersey barriers and arranged them in a U- shape in front of their work areas.

At the vaccinatio­n tables, the nurses wasted no time.

“We’re aiming for just 10 minutes from the entrance to the shot and then a 15- minute observatio­n period,” Adler said.

Inja Kim, 77, came prepared after she and her husband saw on the news that people waited in line for five hours at a mass vaccinatio­n clinic at Dodger Stadium in Los Angeles. But she never had time to eat her stash of Kind Bars, biscotti and granola bars or break into her thermos of hot tea.

“This is great. It only took 25 minutes,” she said. “I guess we’ll have to eat all this at home.”

Simple delivery methods

The system for syringe delivery was low- tech but effective.

A temporary pharmacy was set up in a San Francisco City College building adjacent to the parking lot. Pharmacist­s took 10- dose Moderna vials out of refrigerat­ors and drew down the vaccine into syringes. The syringes were kept in a refrigerat­or and taken out four at a time, so none was unrefriger­ated for more than the 60 allowed minutes.

Runners put them into red plastic containers and carried them out to the front of the building, where staff members in an electric golf cart waited.

Another clinic worker walked up and down the vaccine tents, checking to make sure each had enough vaccine. When more was needed, the worker held up a small green flag and waved it. That signaled the people in the golf cart to zip over with newly filled syringes and take away the used ones.

“It’s working pretty well,” Taylor said as she readied two shots for a couple pulling in next to her tent, its table covered with hand sanitizer, alcohol wipes, gloves and a stack of clipboards and forms.

Once vaccinated, people drove to a large parking area where San Francisco traffic control officers waved them into spaced spots. Doctors and nurses walked around the cars, checking for adverse reactions.

“We’re telling people to honk their horns or flash their lights if they’re experienci­ng any difficulties,” Adler said. “So far, we’ve had very few.”

After 15 minutes, a final duo of traffic officers guided the vaccinated out the front entrance – and happily on with their lives.

John Paul Cruger- Hansen was one of them. The 77- year- old was so excited to get the vaccine he brought the internatio­nal immunizati­on certificate he got decades ago when he immigrated to the USA from Denmark.

“I was hoping they’d fill it in, COVID next to smallpox,” he said, showing off the fading yellow booklet. “This will totally change my level of happiness.”

His wife, Debbie, too young for the shot, spent the visit taking photos and video of the entire process.

“We texted it to our daughter, we texted it to everyone,” Cruger- Hansen said. “The next thing is to get Debbie vaccinated, and then we can start to get back to normal.”

 ?? MARTIN KLIMEK FOR USA TODAY ?? University of California- San Francisco employee Mary Hoffman uses a flag to request additional vaccine doses at a mass vaccinatio­n site at City College of San Francisco on Jan. 22.
MARTIN KLIMEK FOR USA TODAY University of California- San Francisco employee Mary Hoffman uses a flag to request additional vaccine doses at a mass vaccinatio­n site at City College of San Francisco on Jan. 22.
 ??  ?? Ralph Kenney, 77, receives the Moderna COVID- 19 vaccine at City College of San Francisco on Jan. 22. A text notifying him of his appointmen­t came on his 37th wedding anniversar­y, and he called it “the best present” he could get.
Ralph Kenney, 77, receives the Moderna COVID- 19 vaccine at City College of San Francisco on Jan. 22. A text notifying him of his appointmen­t came on his 37th wedding anniversar­y, and he called it “the best present” he could get.
 ?? PHOTOS BY MARTIN KLIMEK FOR USA TODAY ?? Moderna’s COVID- 19 vaccine is administer­ed at City College of San Francisco, the city’s first mass vaccinatio­n site, on Jan. 22. Health care workers and organizati­ons push for faster distributi­on of vaccines.
PHOTOS BY MARTIN KLIMEK FOR USA TODAY Moderna’s COVID- 19 vaccine is administer­ed at City College of San Francisco, the city’s first mass vaccinatio­n site, on Jan. 22. Health care workers and organizati­ons push for faster distributi­on of vaccines.
 ??  ?? Patricia Warnock, 76, of San Rafael, Calif., is vaccinated at City College of San Francisco. To get an appointmen­t at the mass vaccinatio­n site, people must be older than 75 and receive their medical care at UCSF Medical Center.
Patricia Warnock, 76, of San Rafael, Calif., is vaccinated at City College of San Francisco. To get an appointmen­t at the mass vaccinatio­n site, people must be older than 75 and receive their medical care at UCSF Medical Center.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States