Morning Briefing
Summaries of health policy coverage from major news organizations
Mass Vaccinations And Massive Surge Place Dueling Pressures On Hospitals
Stephen Nuckolls, who runs a North Carolina health care medical group called Coastal Carolina Health Care, has deep freezers capable of storing the two authorized COVID-19 vaccines and hundreds of staff ready to give it. But after two weeks of emailing the North Carolina health department, he couldn鈥檛 get a supply. (Kopp, 1/13)
In other distribution updates from Mississippi, Michigan, Ohio, Virginia and elsewhere 鈥
Mississippi no longer can offer COVID-19 vaccine 鈥 beyond the doses reserved for people with appointments 鈥 until next month when more vaccine becomes available, the State Department of Health said Wednesday. The announcement comes one day after Gov. Tate Reeves said he is expanding vaccine eligibility to a wider population 鈥 those 65 and older or with pre-existing conditions. The governor said he wants to get 鈥渟hots in the arms鈥 of Mississippians as quickly as possible, vowing to open vaccines to first responders and teachers next week. (Lee, 1/13)
Michigan health systems have asked the state of Michigan to reallocate hundreds of thousands of COVID-19 vaccine doses sitting idly in deep freezers to hospitals and local health departments. Once unused vaccine doses are reallocated, health system executives say their nurses and medical assistants can quickly expand the number of vaccinations for people over age 65 and essential workers, including teachers and first responders. (Greene, 1/13)
Ohio doesn't have a statewide waitlist or registration form for those seeking a COVID-19 vaccine, but several local health departments have set them up.聽Starting next week, Ohioans ages 80 and older can obtain聽COVID-19 vaccines. Ohio is expected to receive about 100,000 doses for a population that includes about 420,000 residents.聽The Ohio Department of Health will list locations where older Ohioans can obtain COVID-19 vaccines on its website, coronavirus.ohio.gov, starting Thursday. Local health departments also will release information about where vaccines will be distributed in their areas. Some health departments have set up waitlists to notify residents when they are eligible for a vaccine. (Balmert, 1/13)
KHN: California Counties 鈥楩lying The Plane As We Build It鈥 In A Plodding Vaccine Rollout聽
In these first lumbering weeks of the largest vaccination campaign in U.S. history, Dr. Julie Vaishampayan has had a battlefront view of a daunting logistical operation. Vaishampayan is the health officer in Stanislaus County, an almond-growing mecca in California鈥檚 Central Valley that has recorded about 40,000 cases of covid-19 and lost 700 people to the illness. Her charge is to see that potentially lifesaving covid shots make it into the arms of 550,000 residents. (Barry-Jester, 1/14)
KHN: Delicate Covid Vaccines Slow Rollout 鈥 Leading To Shots Given Out Of Turn Or, Worse, Wasted聽
For Heather Suri, a registered nurse in Virginia, the race to vaccinate Americans against covid has thrown up some unprecedented obstacles. The vaccines themselves are delicate and require a fair bit of focus over time. Consider Moderna鈥檚 instructions for preparing its doses: Select the number of shots that will be given. Thaw the vials for 2.5 hours in a refrigerator set between 36 and 46 degrees. Then rest them at room temperature for 15 minutes. Do not refreeze. Swirl gently between each withdrawal. Do not shake. Inspect each vial for particulate matter or discoloration. Store any unused vaccine in refrigeration. (Pradhan, 1/14)
The unexpected blessing was a logistics headache, said Amy Compton-Phillips, chief clinical officer at multistate hospital system Providence. The Pfizer injection kits sent to hospitals had only five syringes and five needles. 鈥淪o for the sixth or seventh dose, there鈥檚 no syringe or needle,鈥 Dr. Compton-Phillips said. Those essentials are in short supply, she said, 鈥渟o we are turning over rocks trying to give people those doses.鈥 (Winkler, 1/13)