USA TODAY International Edition

Cheating, bribes, theft: Some get shots before turn

- Grace Hauck

Bribing doctors. Circulatin­g appointmen­t codes. Chartering planes and impersonat­ing essential workers.

More than a month since the USA began administer­ing COVID- 19 vaccines, many people who were not supposed to be first in line have received vaccinatio­ns. Anecdotal reports suggest people deliberate­ly leveraged widespread vulnerabil­ities in the distributi­on process to acquire vaccine. Others were just in the right place at the right time.

“There’s dozens and dozens of these stories, and they really show that the rollout was a complete disaster in terms of selling fairness,” said Arthur Caplan, who heads the medical ethics division at the NYU School of Medicine. “It wasn’t that we didn’t have consensus ( on who should go first). We didn’t pay attention to logistics, and that drove distributi­on, not rules.”

The efforts of one couple may take the cake for most extravagan­t scheme to get vaccinated.

Last month, casino executive Rodney Baker and his wife, actress Ekaterina Baker, chartered a plane to a remote community in Canada where health workers administer­ed vaccine to members of the White River First Nation. The two posed as local motel employees

and received vaccinatio­ns, according to a member of the Yukon Legislativ­e Assembly. They face fines.

“Like so many, I’m shocked and angry, but not surprised,” Kluane Adamek, Yukon Regional Chief of the Assembly of First Nations, said in a statement. “These actions are a blatant display of disrespect and an exemplification of true privilege and entitlemen­t; a selfish millionair­e and his wife stole doses of the vaccine from a vulnerable population, and put an entire community, nation and region at risk.”

Nearly 13 million people in the USA – about 5% of the population age 16 years and older – received at least one dose during the first month of vaccine rollout, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

The agency’s Advisory Committee on Immunizati­on Practices recommende­d prioritizi­ng vaccinatio­ns for about 24 million health care personnel and longterm care facility residents. States and local authoritie­s implemente­d varying versions of that national guidance. Florida and Texas expanded their vaccinatio­n programs to all people 65 and older.

Among people who received a first dose, 63% were women, 55% were 50 or older, and 60% were non- Hispanic white, according to the CDC. Those numbers “likely” reflect the demographi­c characteri­stics of health care personnel and long- term care facility residents recommende­d to be vaccinated in the priority group, the CDC said.

But the agency is missing data on race and ethnicity for about half of vaccine recipients, and it’s unclear what proportion were health care personnel versus long- term care facility residents.

Stealing, bribing, VIP scheduling

Some people have set out to steal, bribe or manipulate their way to vaccine. Last month, Polk County, Florida’s “2020 Paramedic of the Year” was arrested and charged with stealing vaccines meant for first responders. The first responder confessed to stealing three doses and forging paperwork to try to cover his actions.

In Philadelph­ia, a 22- year- old student who got a contract from the city to run its vaccine distributi­on sign- up admitted he took four doses home and administer­ed them to friends. The city announced last week that it would no longer work with his startup.

Several concierge doctors – who offer personaliz­ed medical services and direct access for an annual fee – reported clients or would- be clients offering bribes for vaccine.

Robert Huizenga told Variety his practice in Beverly Hills was offered more than $ 10,000 by people, including members of the entertainm­ent industry, who wanted to get vaccinated.

Ed Goldberg, who runs a practice on the Upper East Side in Manhattan and charges $ 20,000 a year, told USA TODAY he’d received calls from people wanting to join his practice if a vaccine was guaranteed. Goldberg said he makes it clear that’s a “no- can- do.”

Officials raised concerns about wealthy donors and board members affiliated with hospitals and care facilities securing vaccinatio­ns before their allotted time slot.

In early January, Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis announced he had directed Florida’s inspector general to look into the reports that MorseLife Health System, a pricey elder care center in West Palm Beach, gave vaccine to donors and members of the Palm Beach Country Club. U. S. Sen. Rick Scott, R- Fla., called for a congressio­nal investigat­ion.

Some people connected with New York developers Bill and David Mack – who are donors to MorseLife and on the board of directors for the country club – were allegedly able to go to the health clinic there to get their shots. Among those given vaccine at MorseLife was Robert Fromer, former managing partner of a New York City law firm whose family foundation has donated $ 45,000 to MorseLife since 2015, The Washington Post reported.

The Seattle Times reported that three medical systems in the region gave special vaccine access to big donors or foundation members.

Providence Regional Medical Center in Everett, Washington, which admitted the first known U. S. case of COVID- 19 more than a year ago, said it made a mistake in prioritizi­ng influential people. The hospital had reached out to hospital volunteers, volunteer board members and donors to offer the vaccine to those who met the state’s eligibilit­y criteria.

“In retrospect we understand that in our haste to vaccinate people quickly – including certain members of our hospital community – we created the impression that some people are able to use their access to unfairly get a vaccinatio­n appointmen­t,” the hospital said in a statement.

Monday, the Washington state Health Department said in a statement that “VIP scheduling, reserving doses for inequitabl­e or exclusive access and similar practices are banned and will not be tolerated.”

Politician­s claim priority

Some politician­s and community leaders have received vaccine before priority groups in a bid to promote the safety and efficacy of COVID- 19 vaccines among skeptical Americans, including groups that have been historical­ly wary of the scientific community.

Rep. Alexandria Ocasio- Cortez, DN. Y., and Sen. Marco Rubio, R- Fla., faced blowback from fellow lawmakers in December after they received their first shots and shared the news on social media.

“We are not more important than front- line workers, teachers etc. who are making sacrifices everyday,” Rep. Ilhan Omar, D- Minn., wrote on Twitter Dec. 20. “People who need it most, should get it.”

In early January, Kentucky Gov. Andy Beshear’s parents, six former governors of Kentucky and four former first ladies received vaccinatio­ns. “We urge all Kentuckian­s to roll up their sleeves, take the fight to COVID and do their part to move the commonweal­th forward,” the group said in a statement.

Los Angeles Mayor Eric Garcetti, 49, who said in December that he would wait his turn to receive a vaccinatio­n, was vaccinated last week at the recommenda­tion of medical personnel, his office said.

“It looked like our politician­s just pushed to the front of the line,” Caplan said.

Exploiting flaws in online systems

Online booking tools have allowed some people – knowingly or unknowingl­y – to make appointmen­ts and receive shots by circulatin­g web links or event codes intended for priority groups.

In Kansas City, Missouri, people who were not in priority groups were able to get a shot by clicking a scheduling link initially sent to priority patients vetted over the phone, Rex Archer, director of health at the Kansas City Health Department, told USA TODAY. The same thing happened last month in Montgomery County, Tennessee, and last week at Virginia Mason Medical Center in Seattle.

Gale Robinette, a spokespers­on for Virginia Mason Medical Center, told USA TODAY a “technical glitch” in the organizati­on’s online registrati­on form “may have allowed” some individual­s to be scheduled for vaccinatio­n before they were eligible. Now, recipients need a photo ID and proof of eligibilit­y confirmation from the Department of Health.

“We apologize for any confusion or inconvenie­nce this may have caused,” Robinette said. “There is no indication anyone intentiona­lly ‘ gamed’ the system in order to get the vaccine earlier than they should.”

In New Mexico, some people secured shots by circulatin­g a special code sent to health care workers that allowed them to book appointmen­ts online. State health officials disabled the code when they discovered the issue.

“The system checks users against current eligibilit­y criteria and prevents them from confirming an appointmen­t if they don’t qualify,” Matt Bieber, a spokespers­on for the New Mexico Department of Health, told USA TODAY.

Willing to take the leftovers

Some people have snagged a vaccinatio­n by volunteeri­ng to receive a shot that would have otherwise been thrown out.

Many people wait for hours outside mass vaccinatio­n clinics in Los Angeles and San Diego, where health care teams give away thawed but unused vaccines from appointmen­t no- shows at the end of the day.

Under California guidelines, as in many other states, health department­s and providers can offer doses “promptly to people in lower priority groups” when doses are about to expire and would otherwise go to waste.

Similar high- stakes scenarios have played out after power outages or unexpected freezer fails. Last week, Seattle hospitals rushed out COVID- 19 vaccines to hundreds of people in the middle of the night after a freezer they were stored in shut off. Two hospitals put out emergency calls on social media, and each administer­ed more than 800 doses of vaccine late that night and into the morning.

The hospitals did not immediatel­y respond to inquires about how many of the vaccinatio­ns went to priority patients.

Weeks earlier, just north of Seattle, the Tulalip Tribes of Washington rushed out 700 vaccinatio­ns in a matter of hours after a windstorm knocked out power to much of the county, including the reservatio­n’s freezer. Clinic staff vaccinated tribal elders, teachers, Snohomish County first responders and others.

At the end of January, health care workers in Oregon driving back from a vaccinatio­n event got stuck in a snowstorm with six doses that were about to expire. The staff, not wanting the vaccine to go to waste, trekked through the storm, offering it to motorists stuck on the road, finding six takers after 45 minutes.

Greater regulation?

Several public health experts said incidents of deliberate line- jumping are probably small- scale, but the anecdotes point to larger problems in the U. S. vaccine rollout, as well as underlying systemic issues.

“If anything, this fiasco with the vaccines and line jumping and bad actors and black markets should be the beacon that lets us know it’s time to look at our entire health system,” said Glenn Ellis, a visiting scholar at the National Bioethics Center at Tuskegee University and a bioethics fellow at Harvard Medical School. “One way or another, privilege, power and money is affording access – unschedule­d and unnatural access to something. Line- jumping is just another form of that.”

William John Moss, executive director of the Internatio­nal Vaccine Access Center at Johns Hopkins University Bloomberg School of Public Health, said the issues in the vaccine rollout boil down to two fundamenta­l problems: the ambiguity of vaccinatio­n eligibilit­y criteria and the logistics of scheduling appointmen­ts.

“We’ve ended up in a situation where we have these very broad categories that can be interprete­d very broadly,” Moss said, referring to terms such as “essential worker” and “comorbidit­ies.”

SoulCycle instructor and Instagram influencer Stacey Griffith, 52, received a vaccinatio­n last month by characteri­zing herself as an “educator.” She apologized for receiving the vaccine.

While some people have taken advantage of flaws in online appointmen­t booking systems, many people in priority groups struggle to navigate them.

“Older adults are having a tremendous difficulty in scheduling vaccine appointmen­ts, as well as disadvanta­ged communitie­s, particular­ly low- income, African American or Latino communitie­s, because it requires internet access, having a computer available, being willing and able, perhaps, to spend hours online trying to get an appointmen­t,” Moss said.

Moss said his parents, in their 90s in New Jersey, have not been able to get vaccinated. They signed up online, and they’re waiting to be called. His wife and the young scientists in her laboratory have all been vaccinated.

“I don’t think it should be that way,” he said. “I would like to see stricter criteria on who’s getting the vaccine to make sure we’re getting it to those individual­s who really need it first.”

Caplan argued that there should be penalties for people who get vaccinated before their allotted time.

“If you want people to follow the rules, put in some penalties if you break them,” Caplan said. “People brag about how they got vaccinated on the internet, and nothing happens.”

 ?? GETTY IMAGES ??
GETTY IMAGES
 ?? ANDREW WEST/ USA TODAY NETWORK ?? Terri Kado, 66, right, and Patty Tubbs, 68, friends from Fort Myers Beach, Fla., wait in line for a COVID- 19 vaccine in the early morning hours of Dec. 30 at Lakes Park Regional Library. They got in line at midnight. The two enjoyed the experience, watching the moon move through the sky.
ANDREW WEST/ USA TODAY NETWORK Terri Kado, 66, right, and Patty Tubbs, 68, friends from Fort Myers Beach, Fla., wait in line for a COVID- 19 vaccine in the early morning hours of Dec. 30 at Lakes Park Regional Library. They got in line at midnight. The two enjoyed the experience, watching the moon move through the sky.

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