USA TODAY International Edition

Our View: No one, especially the vulnerable, should miss this shot

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One of President Joe Biden’s favorite COVID- 19 lines works both as a rebuke of his predecesso­r and a clear plan of attack against the virus going forward: “It’s one thing to have the vaccine. It’s another thing to get it in people’s arms.”

Truer words never spoken. But the reality is that six weeks into Biden’s term, even with three vaccines now available after emergency approval Saturday of the single- dose Johnson & Johnson shot, it’s still another thing to get it in people’s arms.

More than 50 million Americans have received at least one vaccinatio­n, at an average of 1.82 million shots a day in the past week. That’s plenty to meet Biden’s December pledge of 100 million injections in his first 100 days, but far short of the 2- 3 million daily shots needed to reach herd immunity this year. ( Biden flirted in January with raising the goal to 150 million in 100 days, but backed off.)

Meanwhile, distributi­on has been cruelly uneven, cheating many of the people most likely to get sick and die out of a lifesaving immunizati­on. This includes older Americans too befuddled by complex sign- up processes, essential workers too busy to keep refreshing websites for the elusive vaccinatio­n slot, and minority and rural communitie­s too inaccessib­le for vaccine distributi­on.

Racial disparitie­s have been jarring, according to Kaiser Family Foundation data: 40% of California­ns who are Hispanic made up more than half of the state’s coronaviru­s cases and 46% of the deaths, but they have been only 18% of those vaccinated. Black people make up 30% of Maryland’s population, 33% of COVID- 19 cases and 35% of deaths, but they have been only 16% of those vaccinated.

By contrast, white residents have received vaccinatio­ns at a percentage higher than their proportion of the population in most of the 34 states tracking the data.

How could this happen?

Look at what unfolded in Washington, D. C., when 7,000 vaccinatio­ns for people 65 and older were rolled out: 40% were snapped up by residents of the city’s whitest and wealthiest ward that had suffered only 5% of the district’s COVID- 19 deaths. Experts speculated that the disparity was because wealthy residents had more time and were more computer savvy when it came to grabbing online appointmen­ts, and that Black and Hispanic communitie­s were more skeptical about the new vaccines.

An equitable vaccinatio­n protocol can be disrupted many other ways: By a persistent anti- vaccine mindset. Or a historical hesitancy about government- driven health initiative­s ( as happens in the Black community). Or poor access to good health care and transporta­tion. Leaders at all levels need to be more imaginativ­e about more thoroughly and equally distributi­ng the vaccine. One good start recently was a plea by the nation’s first Black and South Asian American vice president, Kamala Harris, urging people of color to take the vaccine: “Let’s not let COVID get us.”

Biden should also set a more aspiration­al, if risky, goal of 2 million to 3 million vaccines a day, something that could deliver the nation herd immunity by summer. States and communitie­s are working on ways to target hard- toreach communitie­s. In addition to mass vaccinatio­n sites and distributi­on through pharmacies, there’s an initiative in Bronx, New York, to set up vaccinatio­n sites in public housing. Fairfax County, Virginia, is offering free transporta­tion to vaccine sites from far- out neighborho­ods. Baltimore officials plan to go door- to- door to reach the elderly in housing projects. In Montgomery County, Maryland, health officials are prioritizi­ng ZIP codes with high infection rates.

The new single- dose Johnson & Johnson vaccine that can be stored in a common refrigerat­or would be well suited for the offices of family doctors and community clinics. And to avoid instances where people game the system to cut in line, communitie­s could offer a one- time sign- up with a weighted lottery for a more fair distributi­on.

The reality is that while COVID- 19 rates have sharply declined, they remain as high as they were last autumn. And in many areas, the fall- off has stabilized. The nation is in a race against time as new, sometimes more dangerous, virus strains emerge every week.

It is a race against the pandemic in which no one, particular­ly the most vulnerable, should be left behind.

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