Baltimore Sun

Vaccinatio­n

- Baltimore Sun Media reporters Ana Faguy and Pamela Wood contribute­d to this article.

Convention Center or Six Flags America in Prince George’s County, only that vaccines would be offered by appointmen­t to health care workers, seniors, some essential workers and others in designated groups.

The Prince George’s site initially won’t have its own registrati­on system, as recipients will be chosen from a health department list.

Ed Singer, president of the Maryland Associatio­n of County Health Officers, expressed concern about where the vaccine for the mass sites was coming from.

“It’s essentiall­y a shell game,” Singer said. “With a limited number of doses, every time you give some a vaccine you have to get it from someone else.”

Singer said he “would not complain” about more money, but it wouldn’t change his role, adding: “Right now the money and the staff to be able to help us put vaccines into arms just isn’t our biggest problem.”

Until now, the state has relied mainly on hospitals and health department­s to vaccinate priority groups that include more than 2 million people. Those in nursing homes and long-term care facilities have been vaccinated through a federal contract with CVS and Walgreens pharmacies. Hogan also has announced plans to add vaccinatio­ns at more pharmacies.

So far, state data shows there have been more than 600,000 doses administer­ed out of more than 900,000 first and second doses delivered, though there likely already are appointmen­ts for many of those not yet administer­ed.

Two vaccines have gained federal authorizat­ion, from Pfizer-BioNTech and Moderna, and both require two shots, three or four weeks apart. Vaccinatio­n of most Americans is expected to take many months, though other vaccine candidates are in the pipeline and could boost availabili­ty soon.

The latest Maryland figures show health department­s getting about a third of the state’s doses, with hospitals getting about 40% and most of the rest going to pharmacies and small amounts to clinics and other providers. Health officers and some local officials say moving doses around could spark more confusion about how to register and lead to inequitabl­e distributi­on of doses.

Baltimore Mayor Brandon Scott this week asked the state to specifical­ly set aside doses for city residents among the priority groups.

Some have testified about the issue to state lawmakers, as well as written to the congressio­nal delegation, which in turn asked Hogan for clarity about the plan and efforts at coordinati­on.

Singer, who is also Carroll County’s health officer, said local health department­s are uniquely trained and experience­d in handling vaccinatio­ns. So far, local health department­s lead the state in the percentage of shots administer­ed, he said, using guidance from previous vaccinatio­n campaigns and best lessons from the 2009 H1N1 outbreak.

He said the health department­s fear losing a substantia­l number of doses to the state sites and officials aren’t getting enough answers from the state on supplies or how they should allocate scarce doses. County health officers are often left to decide on priority groups, shortages and long-term planning, Singer said.

Some health department­s say they already are getting fewer doses of vaccine.

The Howard County Health Department, for example, only got 2,000 doses this week, a 66% drop from the week before. Combined with the wintry weather, that led the department to postpone seconddose vaccinatio­n clinics and prioritize the new-arriving 2,000 doses for educators to receive their first shots.

“We know the amount of vaccine is insufficie­nt for the 200,000 residents who have preregiste­red with us,” wrote Dr. Maura Rossman, Howard County’s health officer, in a letter to the community Monday. She encouraged county residents to also seek vaccine informatio­n from pharmacies and hospitals.

Dr. Gregory Wm. Branch, Baltimore County’s health director, said the county is running an efficient operation and should be ramped up, not down.

“I can do 700 people an hour here. I can go up to 1,000 people an hour here,” he said. “You mean to tell me you wouldn’t utilize that? Does that make any sense to you at all?”

The state is guaranteei­ng local health department­s will receive a minimum number of doses each week, from 300 to 975 doses, though the actual total number varies.

Schrader also told lawmakers this week that his team is trying to spread out the doses fairly based on population, but acknowledg­ed that an increasing share of doses is going to be sent to private pharmacies and mass vaccinatio­n clinics to ultimately give residents more options.

When questioned by Senate President Bill Ferguson about the fairness of the minimum levels of doses — Montgomery County is four times the size of Harford County, yet they have the same minimum allocation — Schrader said he’d “look at it again.”

Ricci, Hogan’s spokesman, said the state’s goal is not to shift doses away from existing providers but to spread the vaccine around to many trusted and convenient outlets.

“I know some county leaders want a monopoly on vaccine distributi­on, but that is just not going to happen,” he said. “As the governor has repeatedly said and we have repeatedly emphasized, the local health department clinics will be one facet of a much broader distributi­on network.”

Ricci also disputed that there is not coordinati­on, saying state officials are in regular contact with counties.

In the end, the fix will come from increased vaccine supplies as more vaccines are authorized, said Dr. Leana Wen, a George Washington University professor of public health and a former Baltimore health commission­er. But she added that coordinati­on still will be key to efficientl­y and fairly distributi­ng doses.

“Mass vaccinatio­n sites are needed and community-based options like pharmacies and doctors’ offices,” she said. “Ideally, there is a centralize­d process way for people to sign up for vaccinatio­n, or else those with resources will be able to put themselves down on multiple lists throughout the state.”

The Baltimore Convention Center site will be operated by the University of Maryland Medical System and Johns Hopkins Medicine and will continue to offer COVID-19 testing. People who qualify for the vaccine can register for an appointmen­t online at www.umms.org/BCCvaccine. Those without computer access or in need of assistance can register by calling 443-462-5511.

The Six Flags site will be operated with Kaiser Permanente with help from the National Guard and currently no direct registrati­on will be permitted.

State officials said they would add another mass vaccinatio­n site at M&T Bank Stadium in Baltimore in mid-February and were planning additional mass sites in Western Maryland, Southern Maryland and the Eastern Shore.

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