Feds Shift Strategy on Vaccine

Plan to speed up distribution includes getting vaccines into pharmacies
By Newser Editors and Wire Services
Posted Jan 12, 2021 9:08 AM CST
More People Are Now Eligible for Vaccination
President-elect Joe Biden receives his second dose of the coronavirus vaccine at ChristianaCare Christiana Hospital in Newark, Del., on Monday.   (AP Photo/Susan Walsh)

The Trump administration is asking states to speed delivery of COVID-19 vaccines to people 65 and older and to others at high risk by no longer holding back the second dose of the two-dose shots, officials said Tuesday, per the AP. Health and Human Services Secretary Alex Azar said that "the administration in the states has been too narrowly focused." As a result, he said, the Trump administration is now asking states to vaccinate people age 65 and over and those under 65 with underlying health conditions that put them at high risk. He said the vaccine production is such that the second dose of the two-shot vaccine can be released without jeopardizing immunization for those who got the first shot. "We now believe that our manufacturing is predictable enough that we can ensure second doses are available for people from ongoing production," Azar told ABC's Good Morning America.

So far, the vaccine rollout has been primarily to health care workers and nursing home residents, and the slow pace has frustrated many Americans at a time when the coronavirus death toll has continued to rise. More than 376,000 people have died, according to the Johns Hopkins database. Azar said it was time to move "to the next phase on the vaccine program" and expand the pool of those eligible to get the first dose. That also means expanding the number of places where people can be vaccinated. "We've already distributed more vaccine than we have health care workers and people in nursing homes," Azar said. "We've got to get to more channels of administration. We've got to get it to pharmacies, get it to community health centers." He said the federal government "will deploy teams to support states doing mass vaccination efforts if they wish to do so."

(More coronavirus vaccine stories.)

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