Pritzker Announces the Next Phase of
COVID-19 Vaccine Distribution Plan, Lowers Vaccine Age to 65
Phase 1B Follows ACIP Guidelines, But
Prioritizes Equity and Protects Most Vulnerable Illinoisans by
Lowering Vaccine Age to 65 from 75
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[January 07, 2021]
Building on guidance by the Centers for Disease
Control and Prevention’s (CDC) Advisory Committee on Immunization
Practices (ACIP) and the Illinois Department of Public Health (IDPH),
Governor JB Pritzker announced guidelines for the next stage of
COVID-19 vaccine distribution across Illinois – Phase 1B.
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“ACIP’s guidance serves as the foundational
blueprint for Illinois’ Phase 1B plan, with one key adjustment: here
in Illinois we are more strongly pursuing equity in the distribution
of our vaccinations,” said Governor JB Pritzker. “For people of
color, multi-generational institutional racism in the provision of
healthcare has reduced access to care, caused higher rates of
environmental and social risk, and increased co-morbidities. I
believe our exit plan for this pandemic must, on balance, overcome
structural inequalities that has allowed COVID-19 to rage through
our most vulnerable communities.”
CLICK TO ENLARGE “With limited amounts of vaccine
available at this time, it is important to prioritize individuals
who are at greatest risk of exposure to COVID-19 and those at
greatest risk of severe illness or death,” said IDPH Director Dr.
Ngozi Ezike. “Generally, Latinx and Black populations have been
disproportionately impacted by COVID-19 with data showing related
deaths at younger ages. We are hopeful that by lowering the
eligibility age to 65 years we can help reduce this disparity.”
Phase 1B will begin when Phase 1A is substantially complete. It will
include all Illinois residents age 65 years and older and “frontline
essential workers,” as outlined by ACIP. In order to reduce COVID-19
mortality and limit community spread in Black and Brown communities,
Illinois reduced the age eligibility in Phase 1B by 10 years from
ACIP’s recommendation. Currently, the average age of COVID-19 death
is 81 for White residents, 72 for Black residents and 68 for Latino
residents.
The frontline essential workers designation includes many residents
who carry a higher risk of COVID-19 exposure because of their work
duties, often because they are unable to work from home, and/or they
must work closely to others without being able to socially distance.
Communities of color are disproportionately represented in many of
these industries.
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The category defined by the federal government as
frontline essential workers, which the CDC estimates as about 30
million Americans, includes first responders; education workers,
including teachers, support staff and childcare workers;
manufacturing, distribution and agriculture workers, including
grocery store workers; United States Postal Service workers; public
transit employees; corrections workers and incarcerated people, and
others.
All in all, Phase 1B totals approximately 3.2
million people throughout the state of Illinois.
Prioritizing equity is a critical component of every phase of the
state’s vaccine distribution plan. Lowering the age eligibility and
including frontlines essential workers in phase 1B is a pivotal step
towards protecting all of Illinois’ elderly residents and
Illinoisans who have been disproportionally impacted by the pandemic
and ensuring the benefits of vaccination reach all our communities
in a fair manner. As the state enters Phase
1B, the administration will be utilizing every available resource at
the state’s disposal to ensure that as many Illinoisans as possible
are able to receive the vaccine as quickly as possible. The Illinois
National Guard will be assisting in the development of mass
vaccination sites and the state will be increasing the number of
providers enrolled in the state’s vaccination database to support
widespread availability when the time comes.
These efforts are in line with the equity directive released earlier
in the pandemic with a focus on ensuring vulnerable and historically
marginalized communities receive equitable and informed access to
COVID-19 vaccines. The state will continue to proactively expand
infrastructure, especially in communities of color, to move these
vaccines through Illinois at an even faster pace once there is an
increase in the federal distribution pipeline. The IDPH team
continues to review ACIP’s recommendations for Phase 1C.
As the state moves forward, it is critical that Illinoisans continue
to follow public health mitigations to suppress the spread of the
virus until vaccines are available for wider distribution.
See Pdf
document for additional information about the phases.
[Office of the Governor JB Pritzker] |