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Tuesday, Feb 2 2021

Full Issue

DHS Won't Make Arrests, Encourages Immigrants To Get Vaccines

The government agency has no timeline for vaccinating immigrants, but the message is softer than under the previous administration.

The U.S. government says it won鈥檛 be making routine immigration enforcement arrests at COVID-19 vaccination sites. Vaccination sites will be considered 鈥渟ensitive locations鈥 and generally off limits for enforcement actions, the Department of Homeland Security said in a statement Monday. (2/1)

The Department of Homeland Security (DHS) on Monday said it would not conduct enforcement activities near COVID-19 vaccination sites as a way to encourage immigrants to seek the vaccine regardless of their status. 鈥淚t is a moral and public health imperative to ensure that all individuals residing in the United States have access to the vaccine,鈥 the agency wrote in a release.聽鈥淒HS is committed to ensuring that every individual who needs a vaccine can get one, regardless of their immigration status.鈥 (Beitsch, 2/1)

In other updates on the vaccine rollout 鈥

A sprawling winter storm crippled Covid-19 vaccination sites across the Northeast on Monday, further complicating an undertaking that鈥檚 been marred by repeated delays and delivery problems. Officials halted distribution efforts from Washington to Maine as the storm marched up the East Coast, where it鈥檚 expected to leave as much as 2 feet of snow in some areas. The delays come just as health officials warn new, more easily transmissible strains of the virus could be identified throughout the region. (Young and Eisenberg, 2/1)

As part of President Joe Biden's plan to give 150 million vaccinations over 100 days, the Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA) is deploying or supporting vaccination efforts in 11 states, including Texas. Arizona, Nevada, Texas and Washington are currently home to nine federally supported vaccination sites as of Jan. 27, NBC News' Laura Strickler and Dennis Romero reported over the weekend.(Rosenthal, 2/1)

The state鈥檚 Department of Public Health has told its employees 鈥 already stretched from pandemic duty 鈥 that they can鈥檛 take annual leave or vacation till at least April. In a Jan. 8 memo obtained by Georgia Health News, the state agency described a three-month moratorium on taking leave due to the vaccination rollout. (Miller, 2/1)

Optum accidentally charged 249 Medicare Advantage enrollees for the COVID-19 vaccine. The New Mexico Superintendent of Insurance Office said that the UnitedHealth Group subsidiary accidentally charged enrollees $34 for the administration of the vaccine and $0.05 for the vaccine itself. An Optum spokesperson said the company is contacting anyone who was sent an invoice to tell them that they do not need to pay any fees associated with the coronavirus vaccine, and all members who have already paid the bill will receive a refund. (Tepper, 2/1)

Some of America鈥檚 biggest retailers are preparing to take a central role in administering Covid-19 shots, hoping to avoid logjams and other complications that have slowed the vaccine rollout鈥檚 early days. The U.S. fell far short of its initial goal of inoculating 20 million people by the end of 2020, with health departments, hospital systems and long-term-care facilities beset by supply-chain bottlenecks, vaccine hesitancy and confusing, scattershot systems for making appointments. (Terlep and Kang, 2/1)

KHN: Head-Scratching Over Newsom鈥檚 Choice Of Blue Shield To Lead Vaccination Push聽

California Gov. Gavin Newsom, struggling to salvage a once-bright political future dimmed by his mishandling of the covid crisis, tapped nonprofit health insurer Blue Shield of California last week to allocate the state鈥檚 covid vaccine. The company has thus far said little about how it plans to reorganize a gargantuan and complicated vaccination campaign that has befuddled and frustrated public health officials and vaccine seekers alike. (Wolfson, 2/1)

KHN and WHYY: In Philadelphia, A Scandal Erupts Over Vaccination Startup Led By 22-Year-Old聽

It started as a group of college friends who wanted to help during the pandemic. They had tech skills, so they used 3D printers to make face shields. Then they organized as a nonprofit, Philly Fighting Covid, and opened a testing site in a Philadelphia neighborhood that didn鈥檛 have one yet. The organization鈥檚 leader, Andrei Doroshin, had bigger ambitions. Even before the first coronavirus vaccine was authorized, the 22-year-old graduate student at Drexel University planned to get involved, although he has no background in health care. (Feldman, Marin and Yu, 2/2)

This is part of the Morning Briefing, a summary of health policy coverage from major news organizations. Sign up for an email subscription.
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