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		State tops single-day vaccine record at 154,201 as universal eligibility 
		nears
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		[April 09, 2021] 
		By TIM KIRSININKASCapitol News Illinois
 tkirsininkas@capitolnewsillinois.com
 
 
  SPRINGFIELD – Gov. JB Pritzker reiterated 
		Thursday that all Illinois residents age 16 and older will be eligible 
		to receive a COVID-19 vaccine beginning Monday, April 12, as vaccine 
		supply – but also virus transmission rates and hospitalizations – 
		continues to increase. 
 More than 80 of the state’s 102 counties have already opened eligibility 
		to individuals age 16 and over in advance of the April 12 eligibility 
		expansion date.
 
 The decision to move to universal adult eligibility at each of the 
		state’s more than 1,000 vaccination sites outside the city of Chicago 
		comes as a result of increased availability of vaccine doses, Pritzker 
		said. The governor first announced the April 12 goal on March 18.
 
		
		 
		
 “We have everything we need to get to the other side of this crisis as 
		vaccine shipments increase and more Americans are ready to be 
		vaccinated,” Pritzker said during a Thursday news conference. “Our fight 
		to stay safe and protect ourselves isn’t over, but with each day and 
		each dose, we move closer and closer to putting this pandemic to an 
		end.”
 
 The city of Chicago, which receives a separate vaccine supply from the 
		state, has said it will expand eligibility to all on April 19, according 
		to the Chicago Sun-Times and other media outlets, but Chicago residents 
		may make appointments at any site that is accepting Illinoisans 
		regardless of address—including several sites in suburban Cook County.
 
 To date, 73 percent of Illinois seniors and 42 percent of Illinoisans 16 
		and over have received at least one dose of a COVID-19 vaccine, and over 
		2.5 million, or 20 percent of Illinois residents, had been fully 
		vaccinated against COVID-19 as of Wednesday.
 
 The state has administered over 6.7 million doses of COVID-19 vaccine 
		thus far and set a single-day record for vaccines administered with 
		154,201 doses Wednesday.
 
 But virus transmission rates also continued to increase Thursday as the 
		vast majority of Illinoisans are short of full vaccination.
 
 Public health officials reported an additional 3,739 new cases of 
		COVID-19 statewide out of 97,741 test results reported over the previous 
		24 hours. The state’s seven-day rolling positivity rate stood at 4.2 
		percent Thursday, the highest since Jan. 30 and up 0.7 percentage points 
		from one week ago.
 
 Officials also reported an increase in COVID-19 hospitalizations 
		Thursday. As of Wednesday night, 1,798 individuals in Illinois were 
		reported to be in the hospital with COVID-19. Of those, 351 were in the 
		ICU and 151 were on ventilators. Those are highs since mid-February.
 
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			Gov. JB Pritzker speaks during a news conference at a 
			mass vaccination site in Forest Park Thursday. Pritzker announced 
			the state will move ahead with plans to expand COVID-19 vaccine 
			eligibility to all residents age 16 and older beginning on Monday. 
			(Credit: blueroomstream.com) 
            
			 
            Pritzker announced an additional 150,000 first-dose vaccine 
			appointments would be made available in Cook County and surrounding 
			areas beginning next week as rapid response teams continue efforts 
			to vaccinate areas with advanced warning signs of COVID-19 
			resurgence.
 Pritzker encouraged residents who are able to make an appointment to 
			receive a vaccine as soon as possible, but said some residents may 
			still encounter difficulties in finding available appointments as 
			the state continues to work to meet demand.
 
 “Even with all of these new appointments, there will not be enough 
			vaccine in week one to get everyone that wants to be vaccinated a 
			dose, but vaccine doses will be arriving more quickly than ever 
			before,” Pritzker said.
 
 “The public health system is doing everything in its power to get 
			these vaccines into the arms of our residents as quickly as the 
			federal government can deliver them,” he added.
 
 Illinois Department of Public Health Director Dr. Ngozi Ezike echoed 
			Pritzker’s message of urgency in receiving a vaccine amid increasing 
			statewide trends in case positivity and hospitalizations due to 
			COVID-19.
 
 “COVID-19 vaccination is one of the strongest, most powerful tools 
			we have to fight this pandemic together,” Ezike said Thursday. “We 
			have a vaccine and we're elated about that, but it doesn't mean that 
			this pandemic is completely over.”
 
 
            
			 
			She warned of the ongoing resurgence of the virus, and noted better 
			herd immunity is needed before the state can roll back mitigation 
			measures, which means more vaccinations are needed.
 
 “Let's continue working to end this pandemic. We need to cross that 
			finish line all together, and it's only a few steps away,” she said.
 
 More information about the COVID-19 vaccine and appointment 
			availability can be found at coronavirus.illinois.gov or by calling 
			833-621-1284.
 
 Capitol News Illinois is a nonprofit, nonpartisan 
			news service covering state government and distributed to more than 
			400 newspapers statewide. It is funded primarily by the Illinois 
			Press Foundation and the Robert R. McCormick Foundation.
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