Texas to speed COVID-19 shots by devoting more to fewer sites
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[January 11, 2021]
HOUSTON (Reuters) - Texas will allocate
about half of its latest COVID-19 vaccine supplies to just 28 healthcare
sites, officials said on Sunday, aiming to speed distribution amid
rising infections and hospitalizations.
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Distribution efforts in the second most-populous U.S. state have
been falling short, with people forced to wait for hours, online
registration sites unable to keep up, or vaccine locations abruptly
changed because of overwhelming demand.
The state's positivity rate, or percent of cases testing positive,
was 19.2% on Saturday, up nearly 6 percentage points in the past
four weeks. New infections rose by nearly 19,000 and more than
13,000 people were hospitalized, up 4,000 in the past four weeks.
Concentrating deliveries will simplify sign ups and provide more
shots to eligible residents, the state said in a news release.
First-shot allocations are based on estimates of how many people
each location could serve. Department of State Health Services
officials were not available to comment.
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Of the 310,000 doses expected
this week in Texas, about 159,000 will be
delivered to just 28 locations. Smaller sites
will split 38,300 doses and nursing home and
long-term care facilities will get 121,875, the
state said.
(Reporting by Gary McWilliams; Editing by Peter
Cooney)
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