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Morning Briefing

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Thursday, Jun 3 2021

Full Issue

More States Offer Shot Incentives Though Some Show Mixed Results

Money and prizes are offered up to residents in West Virginia and Ohio who get vaccinated, while Maine ends its current program after only 15% of eligible residents claimed their reward.

West Virginia is giving its vaccine incentive program a boost to get more residents immunized from the coronavirus, Gov. Jim Justice announced on Tuesday. All residents who get a COVID-19 vaccine will be enrolled in the chance to win a college scholarship, a tricked-out truck, or hunting rifles, in addition to a $1.588 million grand prize. The program, which will run from June 20 through Aug. 4, will be paid for through federal pandemic relief funds. "The faster we get people across the finish line the more lives we save. That's all there is to it," Justice said. "If the tab just keeps running the cost is enormous. The hospitalizations are enormous. We have to get all of our folks across the finish line." (Diaz, 6/2)

Ohio residents who were recently vaccinated may want to answer their phone on Vax-A-Million days, even if the number isn鈥檛 familiar. It might be Ohio Gov. Mike DeWine on the other end. ... Jonathan Carlyle, of Toledo, won the $1 million prize and Zoie Vincent, of Mayfield Village in Cuyahoga County, won the college scholarship. More than 3.2 million Ohioans entered their names for a shot at the $1 million, up from the 2.8 million who had registered for last week鈥檚 drawing. More than 133,000 children entered their names for the scholarship, up from just over 104,000 last week. (Welsh-Huggins, 6/3)

More than 5,300 Mainers claimed rewards under the state鈥檚 COVID-19 vaccine incentive program in May, but the total represented less than 15 percent of the eligible adults vaccinated during that period. State health officials still said Wednesday that they were happy with the program and were exploring other ways to incentivize people to get the vaccine as roughly 350,000 eligible Mainers aged 12 and older remain unvaccinated, according to federal data. (Piper, 6/2)

In other updates on the vaccine rollout 鈥

Maryland officials are beginning to wind down some of the mass coronavirus vaccination sites, beginning with the M&T Bank Stadium in Baltimore and Ripken Stadium in Aberdeen. Ripken Stadium will close this month and M&T will close next month, according to officials with Harford County and the Maryland Stadium Authority. (Cohn, 6/2)

Oklahomans can expect to get texts beginning this week from the Oklahoma Health Department with information about COVID-19 vaccinations. The department is launching a statewide texting campaign to reach people across the state with details about how to find an appointment near them.聽The state Health Department said the texts will be sent to residents in areas across the state with lower vaccination rates. The campaign will target adults ages 18 to 54 in rural areas, excluding the Oklahoma City and Tulsa metro areas. (Branham, 6/3)

Liany Arroyo, the director of the Hartford Health Department, spends a lot of her time studying neighborhoods in Hartford and finding patterns in their vaccination rates. The downtown areas of Hartford and those that lie to the west of the city show higher vaccination rates in general. Other neighborhoods have sharply lower rates. 鈥淭he West End is a more affluent neighborhood,鈥 Arroyo said. 鈥淭here鈥檚 a dividing line there.鈥 (Pananjady and Altimari, 6/3)

Nursing home worker Adelina Ramos identifies with colleagues who are skeptical about getting the COVID-19 vaccine because she once was, too. "I was, like, uh-uh. I don't trust the vaccine,鈥 Ramos, 35, remembers thinking before it became available at Greenville Center, the Rhode Island nursing home where she's worked for five years. ... But the certified nursing assistant (CNA) has since become an advocate for vaccination among her coworkers. Her labor union has asked her to speak with other CNAs who have not yet been vaccinated. She even testified in Congress about the lack of vaccine education for her and her colleagues. (Ravitz, 6/2)

Any publicly funded entity in Michigan, including local school districts and universities, would be prohibited from requiring a COVID-19 vaccination under a controversial bill passed Wednesday in the state House.聽The measure, HB 4667,聽attempts to ban government-sanctioned vaccine passports, an effort supporters say limits state access to confidential health information. But opponents note the measure 鈥斅爐outed by pandemic conspiracy theorists聽鈥斅爄s unnecessary and will likely lead to unanticipated negative consequences.聽(Boucher, 6/2)

In updates from California 鈥

Some rural counties in Northern California are falling further behind in COVID-19 vaccination rates compared with the rest of the state, causing cases to remain flat or, in some cases, to rise. A Times analysis found that the counties with the lowest vaccination rates were likely to have higher recent case rates per capita. Counties in rural Northern California and the greater Sacramento area fared worst, while Southern California and the Bay Area have fared best in terms of higher rates of vaccination and lower daily case rates, the analysis found. (Money, Lin II and Greene, 6/2)

A Bay Area county sits atop an unfortunate list. Alameda County has wasted more coronavirus vaccine doses than any other county in California, according to The Sacramento Bee, which based its reporting on data obtained through a public records request. The data, which the Bee shared with this news organization, shows the East Bay county tossed 7,055 shots, or 0.39% of the more than 1.8 million it received. That鈥檚 three times more than any other Bay Area County wasted. More than 6,000 of Alameda鈥檚 wasted doses were spoiled Pfizer vaccines, which must be kept at very cold temperatures and used quickly after they are thawed. (DeRuy, 6/2)

California is set to fully reopen in less than two weeks and do away with virtually all mask and social distancing requirements for vaccinated people, but those who regulate workplaces in the state aren鈥檛 ready to go that far and that has business groups upset. The California Occupational Safety and Health Standards Board meets Thursday and will consider new workplace rules that would only allow workers to go maskless if everyone in a room is fully vaccinated against the coronavirus. The rules could remain in place into early next year even though coronavirus cases have fallen dramatically after a severe winter spike and as more people are vaccinated. (Thompson, 6/3)

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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