'I want to feel safe again': Americans lament slow pace of U.S. COVID-19
vaccine rollout
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[January 23, 2021]
By Sharon Bernstein
SACRAMENTO, Calif. (Reuters) - Jerry
Shapiro, a 78-year-old pharmacist from Los Angeles, is at the top of the
list of Californians now eligible for the COVID-19 vaccine, but more
than a month after the state began inoculations, he has yet to receive
one.
Shapiro said he has spent hours calling multiple health agencies and
making fruitless computer searches, an experience familiar to many
people across the United States, as the days-old administration of
President Joe Biden races to bring the country's slow, chaotic vaccine
rollout up to speed.
"Why not make it easy?" asked Shapiro, who is also concerned about his
wife because of medical conditions that would make her particularly
vulnerable to the virus. "Have it in your neighborhood. Set up an
appointment, get your shot and be done."
The United States is the nation hardest-hit by COVID-19, with 24.51
million cases and 409,987 deaths by early Friday morning. More than
4,000 Americans died of the disease on Thursday for the second day in a
row.
Even so, vaccine rollout, which the administration of former President
Donald Trump left to the states to carry out without a federal blueprint
or sufficient funding, has proven to be choppy.
From California, where distribution has varied from county to county, to
New York where the largest city in the nation is running low on supply,
states and healthcare providers have struggled to acquire, store and
distribute vaccines.
"We’re burning through our supply," New York Mayor Bill de Blasio posted
on Twitter on Friday. "We need more doses IMMEDIATELY so we can protect
the most vulnerable residents in our city. We need more doses so we can
fight back."
New York Governor Andrew Cuomo said just 67% of healthcare workers in
New York have received a vaccine dose and he warned that if the federal
government does not find a way to quickly ramp up production, everyone
would suffer.
"The hospital workers are the people who, if they get sick, the hospital
capacity will collapse,” Cuomo said at a news conference. “If the
hospital capacity collapses, we have to close the economy.”
In New Jersey, Governor Phil Murphy said the state's vaccination program
had managed to get 70% of its vaccine supply into people's arms, but
that a federal program within the state to help nursing home residents
had distributed only 10% of its supply.
The country's top infectious disease expert, Dr. Anthony Fauci, said on
Friday the federal government had put too much of the responsibility for
distributing the vaccine on state governments.
"States were doing things that clearly were not the right direction -
and that's unfortunate," Fauci said on CNN.
Instead, he said, the administration should collaborate with the states
to help them plan their rollouts and make sure that vaccines got into
people's arms.
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Sid Greenawalt, 87, receives the coronavirus disease (COVID-19)
vaccine at the Brightwater Senior Living community in Highland,
California, U.S., January 22, 2021. REUTERS/Lucy Nicholson
DISTRIBUTION CHALLENGES
Fewer than half of the nearly 38 million vaccine doses shipped to
date by the federal government have actually made it into the arms
of Americans, the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention
(CDC) reported on Thursday.
Some individual states have lagged behind with just a third or 40%
of their vaccine allotments being administered as of Thursday, which
marked the one-year anniversary of the first locally transmitted
COVID-19 case documented in the United States.
A key problem is organizing the distribution of vaccines to smaller
clinics and pharmacies - rather than just to large medical centers
and retail pharmaceutical chains.
In California, only a handful of independent pharmacies have been
able to acquire vaccines for their customers - generally only in
rural areas where the big chain stores are not present, said Sonya
Frausto, a pharmacist in the state capital of Sacramento.
Shapiro, who owns an independent pharmacy in downtown Los Angeles,
said customers have been calling daily seeking vaccines, but he has
to tell them he has no supply.
He and his wife finally made appointments to receive a vaccine on
Saturday, after repeated phone calls and hours on hold led them to
healthcare giant Kaiser Permanente. The Shapiros are not Kaiser
members, but the nonprofit is offering them shots nonetheless, Jerry
Shapiro said.
In Sacramento, 65-year-old restaurateur Jami Goldstene would feel a
lot safer at her public-facing job if she could get a vaccine. She
is technically eligible because of her age, but has yet to be
offered an appointment - or even find a way to make one - despite
hours on the phone and the internet.
"It's very frustrating," she said. "I want to be over with it. I
want to feel safe again."
(Reporting by Sharon Bernstein in Sacramento, Calif.; Additional
reporting by Barbara Goldberg and Maria Caspani in New York, Lisa
Lambert in Washington, Brad Brooks in Lubbock, Tex., and Anurag Maan
in Bengaluru; Editing by Frank McGurty and Matthew Lewis)
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