Morning Briefing
Summaries of health policy coverage from major news organizations
Iowa Prisoners Given Too Much Vaccine; House Calls Begin In Dallas
Staff from the Iowa Department of Corrections incorrectly gave聽77 inmates overdoses of the Pfizer聽COVID-19 vaccine, the department confirmed to the Des Moines Register. The incident happened Tuesday at the state聽maximum-security prison at Fort Madison, according to Cord Overton, a spokesperson for the department.聽Overton did not say how much extra vaccine each inmate was given.聽(May Sahouri and Leys, 4/21)
The program is the next step in the goal to vaccinate vulnerable residents and comes three months after Dallas County鈥檚 vaccine hub opened at Fair Park in South Dallas. Initial efforts to inoculate Black and Latino people in the county had fallen short, complicated by transportation issues and internet access because of an online registration system. Now, as doses have become more widely available and an increasing number of people are getting inoculated, the city and county have streamlined the vaccination process. (Cooper, 4/21)
Alaska will soon have enough COVID-19 vaccine available in the state for every eligible resident, the state鈥檚 top doctor said Wednesday. 鈥淏y the end of May, we will have enough vaccine for every Alaskan to get vaccinated who鈥檚 16 and above,鈥 Dr. Anne Zink, the state鈥檚 chief medical officer said during a public information call. That estimate is based on how much vaccine the state has already received, as well as projected allocation numbers for May, she said. Data available from the state shows that Alaska will have received just over 508,000 first doses of vaccine by the end of April. (Berman, 4/21)
Starting Friday, New York鈥檚 American Museum of Natural History will open a mass vaccination site, allowing New Yorkers to register to get a jab under the institution鈥檚 iconic 94-foot-long model of a blue whale. (Firozi, 4/20)
Iowa Gov. Kim Reynolds said Wednesday that "vaccine hesitancy is beginning to become a real factor" in Iowa and across the country. The governor noted during her weekly press conference that聽43 of Iowa's 99 counties have declined some or all of next week's COVID-19 vaccine allocation聽due to decreasing demand for the shots.聽The Republican governor implored Iowans to take the vaccine, as she did.聽(Coltrain and Richardson, 4/21)
Pennsylvania Gov. Tom Wolf said Wednesday that he would like to see more Pennsylvanians get vaccinated against the coronavirus, saying inoculations are key to fully reopening the state and avoiding the spread of virus variants. 鈥淚f you haven鈥檛 made an appointment, make one,鈥 said the governor, who received his first dose Monday. 鈥淐ome in. There are openings.鈥 (McCarthy, McDaniel and Steele, 4/21)
Before the pandemic, Sissy Trinh ran after-school programs as founder and executive director of the Chinatown-based youth organization Southeast Asian Community Alliance. But since last year, the organization of five people pivoted to COVID-19 relief, delivering food and other resources to vulnerable residents in Chinatown and Lincoln Heights. She soon realized that existing government programs weren鈥檛 accessible to the families her group served: those with language and technology barriers. (Tseng, 4/21)
KHN: California And Texas Took Different Routes To Vaccination. Who鈥檚 Ahead?
California and Texas, the country鈥檚 two most populous states, have taken radically different approaches to the pandemic and the vaccination campaign to end it. California has trumpeted its reliance on science and policies it says are aimed at improving social equity. Texas state officials have emphasized individual rights and protecting the economy, often ignoring public health warnings but encouraging vaccination 鈥 while calling it a personal choice. (Almendrala and West, 4/22)