Fewer than 10% of doses allocated to those Arkansas seniors have
been administered, according to the state health department. The two
pharmacies are working with about 40% of the state's facilities.
Some of those were told that they were scheduled for February or
March, said Dr. Joe Thompson, former Arkansas surgeon general and
chief executive of the Arkansas Center for Health Improvement
"This is not acceptable," said Thompson. "We're seeing a failure in
deployment by CVS and Walgreens."
Federal health officials in recent days have urged broadening
vaccine eligibility to tens of millions of Americans to speed the
national inoculation program rollout. Meanwhile, seniors at some
long-term care facilities - who account for about 1% of the U.S.
population but 40% of COVID-19 deaths and were supposed to be at the
front of the line - continue to wait.
State and local officials and long-term care operators in states
including Florida, California, Arizona, Indiana and Pennsylvania
told Reuters they have turned to alternative providers for
vaccinations for their residents or staff because the pharmacy
chains were scheduling shots weeks out.
Some 75,000 long-term care facilities signed up to receive vaccines
from CVS Health Corp and Walgreens Boots Alliance Inc under the U.S.
Centers for Disease Control and Prevention's (CDC) Pharmacy
Partnership Program.
"I think they face serious bandwidth issues in terms of scheduling,"
said David Grabowski, a Harvard Medical School professor and
healthcare policy expert. "I find it very distressing that we
haven't been doing this more rapidly. This is really a matter of
life or death."
Arkansas Governor Asa Hutchinson in a statement on Thursday said the
two pharmacy chains assured him that all long-term care residents
assigned to them would be vaccinated by the end of this month.
Many states prioritized homes with patients requiring medical care,
which contributed to delays at other long-term care facilities.
CVS said it plans to finish all shots at assigned facilities within
nine to 12 weeks of the first dose. That means states like
California, Florida, Arizona, Alabama, Oklahoma and Pennsylvania,
which were among the last to activate the second-phase of facility
vaccinations, may not be finished until April.
"State decisions on which facilities are activated when have a
significant impact on timing," CVS spokesman T.J. Crawford said,
noting that the company has administered 1 million shots and is on
track with its federal agreement.
Others hurdles included confirming vaccine availability, the winter
holidays, vaccine hesitancy and fresh COVID-19 outbreaks, the
companies said.
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That resulted in "a little bit
slower start than what we were hoping for. Now
that we've gotten past the first of the year,
you're seeing a quick and rapid acceleration,"
said Rick Gates, Walgreens' senior vice
president of pharmacy and healthcare. The
company has done more than 500,000 shots and
expects to be done by March.
'OVERWHELMED BY THE SHEER VOLUME'
Meanwhile, central Florida's Seminole County is
deploying mobile clinics to some assisted living
facilities. "We went because
they either have not been contacted by the private providers or they
had concerns because of some type of issue," said county emergency
manager Alan Harris.
"CVS and Walgreens, I think, are overwhelmed by the sheer volume of
long-term care facilities in Florida," Harris said.
The state of Florida has hired health services firm CDR Maguire to
take over vaccinations at about 1,900 assisted living facilities
that CVS or Walgreens had scheduled on or after Jan. 24.
Los Angeles County opted out of the CVS-Walgreens
partnership and is asking facilities that can to pick up and
administer vaccine themselves. In Northern California's Contra Costa
County, nonprofit Choice in Aging joined John Muir Health and Kaiser
Permanente in pitching in to help.
Choice in Aging is targeting facilities with six or fewer beds in
historically underserved communities. "This is a population that is
never prioritized," said Choice in Aging CEO Debbie Toth.
The CDC on Thursday said 26% of the 4.7 million vaccine doses
allocated for long-term care sites had been administered, lagging
even the woeful 36% of the 30.6 million available nationwide.
West Virginia, which opted out of CDC Pharmacy Partnership, did
extensive planning and tapped its existing network of long-term care
pharmacies to quickly vaccinate nursing home residents in an
all-hands-on-deck effort, said Dr. Michael Wasserman, former
president of the California Association of Long Term Care Medicine.
"Community pharmacies absolutely should be involved," said American
Pharmacists Association CEO Scott Knoer. "I wish they would have
been from the get-go."
(Reporting By Lisa Baertlein and Deena Beasley; additional reporting
by Carl O'Donnell in New York; Editing by Peter Hendersonand Bill
Berkrot)
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