Two months later, the situation has reversed. Supply constraints are
slowing ambitious vaccination programs, as massive sites capable of
putting shots into thousands of arms daily in states including New
York, California, Florida and Texas, as well as hospitals and
pharmacies, beg for more doses.
Nearly a dozen state and local officials told Reuters they could
vaccinate up to four times more people, but federal vaccine
shipments remain frustratingly small.
Two months into the vaccine rollout, most states have received
enough doses to vaccinate fewer than 10% of their residents. With
deliveries based on population, most states receive fewer than a
100,000 doses per week of the Pfizer Inc/BioNTech SE and Moderna Inc
vaccines that both require two shots.
States and localities “have gotten themselves together ... and they
can handle a lot more doses,” said Claire Hannan, director of the
Association of Immunization Managers, a trade group for local public
health departments. “They just need more supply.”
Health officials say the stakes are higher than ever as more
contagious variants of the coronavirus spread.
The Biden administration has said it will continue to increase dose
allocations and remains on track to make shots available to all
Americans by late summer.
Despite the frustration, the United States is a global leader in
vaccinations, with around 66 million doses shipped and nearly 45
million shots administered.
SLOW RAMP UP
Weekly dose shipments have increased to 11 million from 8.6 million
since Biden took control of the White House Jan. 20, and may
increase to around 13 million by the end of the month. Officials
said they cannot project out more than three weeks but are working
to improve supply visibility.
At that pace, the administration could hit its goal of distributing
100 million shots in its first 100 days nearly a month ahead of
schedule, and hit a target of 150 million shots without any increase
in weekly dose allocations.
Some experts said the United States has the potential to distribute
220 million doses or more by the end of March. Pfizer and Moderna
have contracts to deliver those shots, and a third vaccine from
Johnson & Johnson could be authorized by the end of this month or
early March.
Biden promised to help states ramp up vaccinations with an assist
from the military and government agencies after his predecessor
largely left them to their own devices.
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Federal data shows that
vaccines shipped have consistently exceeded
shots given by around 20 million doses for over
a month. White House officials said the
discrepancy was largely due to states holding
back doses to ensure people get their second
shot on schedule.
The Biden administration has helped set up two
mass vaccination sites in California and is
urging Congress to provide funds for more. It
has also started shipping vaccines directly to
6,500 pharmacies around the country and will
launch a similar program next week with
community health centers. 'WISH
WE COULD DO MORE'
State and local officials told Reuters what is holding them back now
is not lack of distribution sites but dose shortages.
States and counties have set up dozens of mass vaccination centers –
publicly-operated facilities that can give shots to 1,000 or more
people per day – mostly near major cities such as Boston, Los
Angeles and New York, according to state officials and a review of
public information.
One county official said he recently helped open two mass
vaccination centers near Seattle that could boost daily inoculations
from about 1,000 per day to as much as 6,000, if only they had more
vaccine.
“All of our sites are hampered by a lack of vaccines,” said Mark Del
Beccaro, assistant deputy chief of coronavirus testing and
immunization programs for King County, where Seattle is located.
Some local officials said they need federal funding to maintain
vaccination capabilities. King County currently only has funding to
keep sites going through March, Del Beccaro said.
Hospitals and pharmacies are facing similar constraints, according
to officials from half a dozen states.
“I wish we could do more,” said Steve Hoffart, owner of Magnolia
Pharmacy outside Houston, adding that he has not received vaccine
shipments since January.
Hoffart said he fields some 15 emails a day from people seeking
shots. “I try to keep patients hopeful.”
(Reporting by Carl O'Donnell; Editing by Caroline Humer and Bill
Berkrot)
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