Las Vegas Review-Journal

Mass vaccinatio­ns on the horizon

Health district plans to run handful of sites

- By Mary Hynes

The Southern Nevada Health District, which has administer­ed roughly onethird of the COVID-19 vaccine it has received to date, is on the brink of a mass vaccinatio­n campaign, officials said Wednesday.

The district has received about 70,000 doses of vaccine and distribute­d 21,000 doses, officials said, with the bulk so far going to acute care hospitals and long-term care facilities.

“Most of that vaccine was received in the last two weeks,” Dr. Fermin Leguen, acting chief health officer for the health district, said during an afternoon online briefing. “Therefore, we are now in the initial phase of really going into a more active, and mass, vaccinatio­n campaign beyond the hospital setting.”

Efforts also are underway to vaccinate others in the so-called priority Tier 1, including staff at behavioral centers and medical practices, Leguen said. First responders also are in Tier 1, some of whom received their first shots at University Medical Center last week.

There was no word Wednesday on when Tier 2 vaccinatio­ns — which includes those 75 and older — might begin in Clark County. A Review-journal question about the time frame asked during the briefing and a follow-up email went unanswered.

The district plans to set up four or five points of dispensing, or PODS, for distributi­ng vaccine. Each POD will be able to vaccinate as many as 1,000 people per day, said clinical services director Joann Rupiper.

She estimated that the

district would vaccinate 500 people Wednesday, adding “we’re expecting to ramp that up fairly quickly.”

“And we’re expecting to have four or five PODS at a time,” she continued. “So that number is likely to increase a lot.”

The district is dispensing vaccine for eligible groups at both its headquarte­rs and at Western High School. The sites are not open to the public.

Rupiper said that the approach to vaccinatin­g those 75 and older would be multifacet­ed.

“So 75 and up is as diverse group as any other group,” Rupiper said. “What we need to think about is how do they get the other vaccines and other types of health care. So it looks like at this point that our pharmacies will have some capacity to address those needs for that group.”

Some large health care providers also will be receiving the vaccine to give to their patients.

Teachers also are in Tier 2, with prioritiza­tion subject to change based on new federal guidance and changing local conditions. The district is making plans to vaccinate some 40,000 to 45,000 people within the Clark County School District, Rupiper said.

Rupiper acknowledg­ed that efforts to vaccinate school district personnel here are lagging behind counties such as Washoe, which are poised to begin the shots.

“As far as Washoe County being further along, of course they are because they have less people,” Rupiper said. “So that’s why we’re a little slower … and because frankly we just have more people to vaccinate … but I think we’re … not too far off.”

Teachers will be a priority, she said, because “we do want to get children back in school.”

More informatio­n about COVID-19 vaccinatio­ns can be found at snhd.info/covid.

 ?? L.E. Baskow Las Vegas Review-journal @Left_eye_images ?? Veteran Levi Williams receives a COVID-19 vaccine from nurse Darrel Cowlishaw at the VA Southern Nevada Health Care System in North Las Vegas.
L.E. Baskow Las Vegas Review-journal @Left_eye_images Veteran Levi Williams receives a COVID-19 vaccine from nurse Darrel Cowlishaw at the VA Southern Nevada Health Care System in North Las Vegas.

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