Joint plans to launch the two sites on Feb. 16, at the
Oakland-Alameda Coliseum in Oakland and the California State
University campus in east Los Angeles, were detailed separately on
Wednesday by Governor Gavin Newsom and the Biden administration's
COVID-19 response coordinator, Jeff Zients.
The two sites, which the state's Department of Health said will be
capable of administering several thousand shots per day each, mark
the first of more than 100 such vaccination centers expected to be
established in communities of color across the United States,
according to Newsom.
"Equity is the call of this moment," Newsom told reporters outside
the Oakland coliseum. "The reason this site was chosen was the
framework of making sure that communities that are often left behind
are not left behind."
Black and Hispanic populations, overly represented among the working
poor and accounting for a large share of high-risk jobs in food
service, factories, warehouses and healthcare, have been ravaged by
the pandemic.
They also suffer disproportionately from chronic underlying health
conditions, such as diabetes and heart disease, that put them at
higher risk of severe illness if infected by the coronavirus.
Their risk of exposure, and the risk of transmitting the virus to
others, is further amplified by rampant overcrowded housing in the
greater Los Angeles and the San Francisco Bay areas, where
multi-generational households frequently live in cramped conditions.
Public health experts have pointed to extreme overcrowding in Los
Angeles housing as a primary factor driving the year-end wave of
infections that turned Southern California into a U.S. epicenter of
the pandemic.
VACCINE HESITANCY
Moreover, skepticism about the safety of vaccines runs particularly
deep in minority and working-class communities long distrustful of
government authorities and lacking access to healthcare services.
The race to achieve collective immunity through widespread
vaccinations has grown increasingly urgent with the advent of more
highly transmissible coronavirus variants, some of which may also be
partially resistant to vaccines.
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While rates of COVID-19
infections, hospitalizations and deaths have
leveled off in the United States in recent
weeks, case loads and mortality remain high.
The United States has reported 26.5 million known coronavirus
infections to date, with nearly 450,000 proving fatal as of
Wednesday.
President Joe Biden last month branded the nation's COVID-19
immunization launch a "dismal failure," citing what he called a lack
of detailed planning by the Trump administration that left the
states to largely fend for themselves.
Biden has vowed to accelerate immunizations, with a focus on
ensuring equitable access.
The United States has administered over 32 million doses of COVID-19
vaccine so far, according to a Reuters tally. Newsom said California
is averaging more than 1 million shots weekly and would increase
that pace.
But a study this week found that Blacks and Hispanics had received a
smaller proportion of shots than their representation among
healthcare workers and nursing home residents.
The two vaccination centers opening in Oakland and Los Angeles will
be staffed and equipped largely by the Federal Emergency Management
Agency (FEMA), setting them apart from existing county-run
inoculation sites.
"These (FEMA) sites in California are just the beginning," Zients
told reporters. "We are working with, in partnership in states
across the country, to stand up new sites."
The White House on Tuesday said it would start shipping vaccines
directly to retail pharmacies alongside ongoing deliveries to
states, increasing weekly supplies of shots nationwide to 11.5
million.
(Reporting and writing by Steve Gorman in Los Angeles; Additional
reporting by Jarrett Renshaw in Philadelphia; Editing by Rosalba
O'Brien and John Stonestreet)
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