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		State announces new vaccination sites
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		[March 04, 2021] 
		By JERRY NOWICKICapitol News Illinois
 jnowicki@capitolnewsillinois.com
 
 
  SPRINGFIELD – The state announced new mass 
		vaccination sites in Adams and Cook counties Wednesday and added 
		National Guard support for sites in the state’s southernmost seven 
		counties. 
 That brings the number of state-supported mass vaccination sites to 18, 
		according to the governor’s office, while there are more than 880 sites 
		throughout the state where eligible recipients can be vaccinated. 
		Information on where to find vaccination sites and appointments is 
		available at coronavirus.illinois.gov, although appointments are still 
		limited due to limited supply.
 
 Those currently eligible for the vaccine include people age 65 and older 
		and those age 16-64 with preexisting conditions and comorbidities, as 
		well as frontline essential workers and inmates.
 
 According to a New York Times database, Illinois was 23rd of all states 
		with 16 percent of its population having received one dose of a COVID-19 
		vaccine as of Tuesday – numbers that did not yet include distribution of 
		the Johnson & Johnson vaccine which was approved over the weekend.
 
		
		 
		The state was 46th overall, however, for percentage of the population 
		having received two doses of vaccine as of Tuesday, sitting at 6.8 
		percent. By Wednesday, that number was at 7.11 percent, according to the 
		Illinois Department of Public Health.
 On average over the previous seven days, the state had administered 
		84,202 vaccinations per day as of Wednesday. That included 82,449 doses 
		administered over the previous 24 hours.
 
 Providers in the state have received more than 3.8 million doses of 
		COVID-19 vaccine, and more than 2.9 million, or 75 percent, have been 
		administered, according to IDPH.
 
 As of March 1, more than 1,070 National Guard members were deployed 
		across the state to assist with COVID-19 response and vaccination 
		efforts.
 
 While the state announced the deployment of new mobile teams in the 
		state’s southern seven counties, similar teams are currently operating 
		in Cook, St. Clair, Sangamon, Jackson, Winnebago and Madison counties. 
		Those teams are deployed to reach rural and underserved communities with 
		priority sites determined by local health departments.
 
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			The graph shows the number of intensive care unit beds in use by 
			COVID-19 patients, non-COVID patients and the availability rate of 
			beds throughout the pandemic. (Credit: Jerry Nowicki of Capitol News 
			Illinois) 
            
			 
            There is no charge to receive a COVID-19 vaccine and insurance is 
			not required. The vaccine will be administered regardless of 
			immigration status, according to a news release from the governor’s 
			office. 
 The state expects to receive 100,000 doses daily from the federal 
			government later this month, so the added vaccination sites are an 
			effort to build the capacity needed to administer the added supply, 
			Gov. JB Pritzker said in a news release.
 
 The 18 state-supported mass vaccination sites can distribute between 
			135 doses daily in suburban Cook County to 6,000 daily at the United 
			Center arena where the Chicago Bills and Blackhawks play. A site in 
			Peoria can administer 2,100 doses daily, while one at Southern 
			Illinois University can administer 540 daily, among others. There 
			are 12 such sites in Cook County, as well as in Carbondale, 
			Belleville, Springfield, Winnebago County, Collinsville and Quincy.
 
 Meanwhile, virus transmission rates and hospitalizations continue to 
			remain near their pandemic lows. The COVID-19 case positivity rate 
			was 2.4 percent Wednesday for the fifth consecutive day.
 
 The 275 intensive care beds in use by COVID-19 patients Tuesday 
			night represented a low since the state began reporting the numbers 
			daily in April. The 1,260 hospital beds and 138 ventilators in use 
			by COVID-19 patients were near pandemic lows as well.
 
 Still, the virus claimed an additional 44 lives over the previous 24 
			hours, bringing the death count to 20,626 since the pandemic began. 
			There have been more than 1.1 million cases and 18 million test 
			results reported since the pandemic began.
 
 As of Wednesday, a total of 70 variant cases have been identified in 
			Illinois, including 69 of the variant first found in the United 
			Kingdom and one first found in South Africa.
 
 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.
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