For some, a COVID-19 vaccine means jumping through hoops or hitting the
road
[September 06, 2025]
By TOM MURPHY
Michelle Newmark has tried — and failed — a couple times to get an
updated COVID-19 vaccine.
First, she was told she needed a prescription. Then she learned that her
local CVS drugstore won't have shots for a couple more weeks. The
Reston, Virginia, resident was considering a drive to Maryland to get
vaccinated before a friend told her of a closer CVS that was booking
appointments.
What was once a simple process has become “a whole different beast this
year,” Newmark said.
“It’s very frustrating that I can’t get a vaccine that I feel should be
widely available like it always has been in the past,” she said.
The debut of updated COVID-19 vaccines has gotten off to a clunky start
in many states. Limits on who can get the shots and prescription
requirements are confusing customers and leaving some people worried
about whether they will get protection from the virus this fall.
Health Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. has insisted that everyone who
wants a shot still can get one after consulting with a doctor, but he
also told a Senate committee hearing Thursday that this access “depends
on the states.”
The situation is changing daily and varies by state. And it may take
time for vaccine-seekers to understand how the system works now for
them.
“We anticipate it will get to be a little bit more of a smooth road in
the coming weeks,” said Brigid Groves, a vice president with the
American Pharmacists Association.

In the meantime, challenges are cropping up, and some patients are
hitting the road to get vaccinated.
Lee Yarosh made plans to drive about 30 miles from Ossining, New York,
to a Fairfield, Connecticut, drugstore to get vaccinated because the
71-year-old retiree couldn't schedule a vaccine closer to home.
On Friday, New York Gov. Kathy Hochul signed an executive order allowing
pharmacists to administer the vaccine to patients as young as 3. But
Yarosh is keeping his Monday appointment in Connecticut because he needs
the vaccination ahead of a trip to Europe.
Chris Stone said he tried about five times to book a COVID-19 shot
appointment online at his usual drugstore, but he was only allowed to
schedule a flu vaccination. The 69-year-old Richmond, Virginia, resident
said he expects to get the shot from his doctor during a checkup next
month. But he doesn’t want to wait that long.
“If they fiddle around too long … it’s going to be really hard to get
the coverage you want during the winter season,” Stone said.
Most Americans get their COVID-19 vaccines at drugstores, and many seek
shots in the late summer or early fall to get protection against any
winter surges in cases.
Pharmacists in most states can administer updated vaccinations without a
prescription thanks to approval of the shots from the Food and Drug
Administration last week.
But several states are requiring prescriptions — which are normally not
needed for vaccines — as they wait for a recommendation on the shots
from a committee that advises the Centers for Disease Control and
Prevention.
That committee won’t meet until later this month.
Some states, including Pennsylvania and New Mexico, were waiting for
that recommendation before allowing pharmacists to give the vaccines.
But they have since changed rules to let pharmacists start vaccinating
sooner.
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Co-owner Marc Ost at Eric's Rx Shoppe unpacks a shipment of COVID-19
vaccines in Horsham, Pa., Tuesday, Sept. 2, 2025. (AP Photo/Matt
Rourke)
 Before that, Pennsylvania drugstore
owner Marc Ost said his store fielded more than 50 calls from
customers asking about the COVID-19 shots. His pharmacists couldn't
administer the shots until the state changed the rules on Wednesday.
“There’s been a lot of confusion as to what we can and can’t do and
a lot unclear guidance,” said Ost, co-owner of Eric’s RX Shoppe in
Horsham, outside Philadelphia.
In New Mexico, pharmacists were given the go-ahead to give COVID-19
shots based on state health department guidelines, with Health
Secretary Gina DeBlassie saying in a statement that the state
“cannot afford to wait for the federal government to act on this
matter.”
As of Friday morning, CVS Health — the nation’s largest drugstore
chain — said its pharmacists can provide vaccines without a
prescription in 38 states. Prescriptions are required in 11 states
plus Washington, D.C., but its pharmacists cannot give the shots in
Nevada.
In some states where CVS runs in-store clinics, customers can get
vaccinated there even if they can't get a shot at the store pharmacy
counter, spokesperson Amy Thibault said. She noted that the
pharmacies and clinics are governed by different regulators.
New limits on who can get a vaccine also are raising questions among
customers. Previously in the U.S., the vaccines were recommended for
people ages 6 months and older.
But the recent FDA approval limits the shots for people age 65 and
older and those younger who have a health condition that makes them
high-risk for a serious case of COVID-19.
Doctors and pharmacists say they still expect many people to qualify
for the shots because the list of conditions that would make someone
high-risk is long. It includes ex-smokers and people who are
physically inactive.
And pharmacists will mostly rely on the patient’s word that they
have a condition that makes them eligible for a shot.
Even so, the fact that there are now limitations worries Jen Spector.

The 57-year-old Doylestown, Pennsylvania, resident should easily
qualify for a shot because she has diabetes, rheumatoid arthritis
and some other medical conditions. Still, Spector says she’s nervous
that someone will turn her down when she tries to get vaccinated.
“If I get sick, it could take my body a year to heal from all this,”
she said. “My immune system is crap.”
___
Associated Press reporter Anthony Izaguirre contributed from Albany,
New York.
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