State records highest one-day total of vaccines administered
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[January 28, 2021]
By GRACE BARBIC
Capitol News Illinois
gbarbic@capitolnewsillinois.com
SPRINGFIELD – The number of vaccinations
administered in one day in Illinois saw a record spike Tuesday as the
statewide seven-day rolling positivity rate continued to decrease to
levels not seen since mid-October.
The rolling case positivity rate hit 4.5 percent as of Wednesday,
decreasing for the 19th consecutive day to hit its lowest number since
Oct. 13.
That came as the state reported 53,628 doses of the COVID-19 vaccine
were administered Tuesday, the highest reported one-day total to date.
It was more than 25,000 doses higher than were administered the day
prior and almost 20,000 more than were administered the previous seven
days on average.
Gov. JB Pritzker said Wednesday while touring a vaccine site in Lake
County he was encouraged by President Joe Biden's efforts to escalate
vaccine production nationwide.
The Biden administration announced an increase in weekly allocations to
states starting next week, from about 8.6 million doses total to a
minimum of 10 million doses over the next three weeks, according to USA
Today.
Biden also secured a deal with drug companies Pfizer-BioNTech and
Moderna to purchase an additional 200 million doses of the COVID-19
vaccine by the end of the summer.
Despite the potential increase in manufacturing of the vaccine, Pritzker
said there is no guarantee that every Illinois resident will be
vaccinated by the summer.
“A 16 percent increase (in vaccine dose delivery) isn’t enough, but it’s
a lot better than we were getting from the previous administration and
it's an indicator that this administration really is listening to the
governors and understanding that there aren’t enough vaccine doses for
people who need them and want them right now,” Pritzker said.
The New York Times compiled data that shows what percentage of state
populations have been vaccinated, and as of Wednesday, Illinois ranked
44th at 4.7 percent of people having received the first dose of the
vaccine. The data also shows that Illinois has only used 48 percent of
the doses of the vaccine it has received.
Pritzker said the federal government’s delay in the Pharmacy Partnership
Program for long-term care facilities is partially to blame, considering
an allotment of the state’s doses are required to go towards this
program and can’t otherwise be touched.
“If you take all of those doses out and remove the number of second
doses that have been delivered to the State of Illinois … we are
actually doing quite well as a state at getting administration of
vaccinations, putting them in people’s arms,” Pritzker said.
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Gov. JB Pritzker on Wednesday addresses reporters at
the Lake County Fairgrounds, which are serving as a COVID-19
vaccination site. (Credit: Illinois.gov)
A total of nearly 1.8 million doses of the Pfizer-BioNTech and
Moderna COVID-19 vaccine have been delivered to the state. Of this
total, 537,050 doses have been allocated for long-term care
facilities through a partnership with nationwide pharmacy chains CVS
and Walgreens.
The Illinois Department of Public Health is currently reporting
773,623 vaccines have been administered, including 117,983 for
long-term care facilities.
That means about 52 percent of the shots distributed to the state
and Chicago have been administered, while 22 percent distributed to
the partnership program have been administered.
IDPH reported 3,751 new confirmed and probable cases of COVID-19
Wednesday, including 81 additional deaths. Within the last 24 hours,
80,124 test results have been reported for 15.6 million total test
results since the pandemic began.
As of Tuesday night 2,931 COVID-19 patients were reported to be in
the hospital, with 591 in intensive care unit beds. There were 300
patients with COVID-19 reported to be on ventilators.
There have been 1.1 million total cases of COVID-19 recorded in the
state and 18,964 total deaths.
There was no movement in tier mitigations reported Wednesday. Region
4 in Metro East near St. Louis still remains in Tier 2, in which no
indoor dining is allowed.
Five of the state’s 11 mitigation regions – Regions 7, 8, 9, 10 and
11 in Chicago and surrounding suburban counties – remain under Tier
1, in which indoor dining is open with limited capacity.
The remaining five regions have opened indoor dining and resumed
youth sports under Phase 4. Those include Region 1 in northern
Illinois, Region 2 in north-central Illinois, Region 3 in
west-central Illinois, Region 5 in southern Illinois and Region 6 in
east-central Illinois.
Capitol News Illinois is a nonprofit, nonpartisan
news service covering state government and distributed to more than
400 newspapers statewide. It is funded primarily by the Illinois
Press Foundation and the Robert R. McCormick Foundation. |