Set expectations for an all-hands-on-deck, 24/7 operation. With thousands of Americans dying every day, there is no excuse for lifesaving vaccines languishing in freezers. The federal government needs to give states strict parameters for when their vaccine allocation must be administered before it’s diverted elsewhere. States, in turn, should impose similar requirements to their distribution sites: Use it, or lose it. ...
Establish targets and help locales meet them. The federal government should set ambitious targets for each region and ask state and local health departments what they need to reach them. Let’s say a region’s goal is to vaccinate 10,000 residents per day by March 1. What will it take to do this? The stimulus package just passed by Congress will provide many needed resources, but it’s coming months later than it should. How can the federal government provide support in the meantime?
For example, if it’s too difficult for local health departments to maintain all their other pandemic operations on top of scaling up a vaccination program, can the National Guard take over testing? If there are vulnerable residents in hard-to-reach areas, can the federal government supply and staff mobile vans? ...
Recruit an army of vaccinators. It makes no sense to have already exhausted hospital workers take on the job of vaccinating their communities. Instead, we should be enlisting community health workers, retired health professionals, and medical, nursing and dental students. ...
Pilot mass vaccinations in select cities. Rather than distributing vaccines solely on a per-capita basis, the federal government should identify cities and counties that can immediately launch mass vaccination programs. ...
Build community vaccination centers. The last place that vaccinations should be done are overcrowded hospitals. ...Germany has already set up dozens of mass vaccination centers capable of inoculating thousands every day. Italy has established pop-up vaccination pavilions. Some states have plans to do this, too. ...
Streamline processes. Getting the shot takes seconds; it’s the paperwork that takes time. Why not require the paperwork be completed in advance? Imagine if everyone who wants to be vaccinated must first watch an informational video, complete an online registration form and sign a consent form. ...Israel has designed an app that accomplishes exactly this purpose. That’s partly why Israel has already vaccinated 11 percent of its population, including 41 percent of those over 60.
Developing a safe, effective vaccine was a moonshot. Now, we need a similar all-out effort to turn vaccines into vaccinations....
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