COVID-19 vaccine chasers hunt, wait and hope in Los Angeles
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[February 09, 2021]
By Norma Galeana
SANTA FE SPRINGS, Calif. (Reuters) - Jose
Luis Espinoza had been chasing a COVID-19 vaccine for more than three
weeks.
He hadn't hugged his 98-year-old father in a long time, and was hoping a
vaccine would change that. Last week, he struck gold in Santa Fe
Springs.
"It was the last dose they gave, and I was the lucky one," the
68-year-old said.
The chase for leftover vaccine doses is widespread and competitive in
Los Angeles. The wait can last for hours outside a clinic or vaccination
site, and most people are turned away without a shot.
Clinics have leftover doses when people cancel their appointments at the
last minute or don't show up. Once opened, vaccine vials have an expiry
date: 5 days for the Pfizer vaccine and 30 days for the Moderna one.
"We need to make sure if we're going to pull out that vaccine, that we
have the people signed up and the resources and the event scheduled,"
said Will Baker, clinic manager for private ambulance service CARE
Ambulance, stressing the importance of not wasting any of the precious
doses.
'NEVER GUARANTEED'
Vaccine chasers have been criticized for getting doses when it's not
their turn, perhaps taking it away from someone who might need it more.
"I'm here in the hope that there's some that might be left over," said
Cynthia Perez, 48, the first to arrive when the Santa Fe Springs clinic
opened at 2:00pm.
"So I'm not trying to jump the line. I'm just trying to take advantage
of any vaccines or any doses that might be thrown away," she said.
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Jose Luis Espinoza, 68, receives a dose of the Pfizer vaccine
against the coronavirus disease (COVID-19) after waiting for a
leftover one at a clinic in Santa Fe Springs, California, United
States, February 2, 2021. Picture taken February 2, 2021.
REUTERS/Norma Galeana
Perez said she had a child with asthma, and was in ill-health
herself, adding, "I'm trying to get ahead of the curve a bit and
stay healthy."
As the evening wore on, the line of chasers outside the clinic grew,
and Baker took down their details. Throughout the day, he counted
the doses left at each vaccine station, revised the list of
appointments, and did the math.
When the clinic closed at 6 p.m., and there was a single shot left
over, he called Espinoza's name.
"I went over the guidelines and I looked for anyone in the line that
was 1A," Baker explained, referring to the first category of vaccine
allocation as recommended by the U.S. Centers for Disease Control
and Prevention.
"We did have one person in the line that met the 1A criteria and we
were able to get him a vaccine today," he said.
Then Baker went outside and told the rest of the line there were no
more doses for the day, apologizing and thanking everyone for their
patience.
Perez picked up her bag and headed home, disappointed but not
deterred.
"You can't be upset. It's never guaranteed," she said.
(Reporting by Norma Galeana; Editing by Sandra Stojanovic, Karishma
Singh and Gerry Doyle)
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