Why some vaccine sits on shelves while shortages intensify nationwide

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Why some vaccine sits on shelves while shortages intensify nationwide

ALSO SEE:  NY Times Analysis-- Why some vaccine sits on shelves while shortages intensify nationwide

... in one of the most puzzling aspects of the early vaccine rollout, the shortages are intensifying in some jurisdictions, while others have yet to use all their vaccine. The bottleneck isn’t just in administering the vaccines; some states are not ordering everything they’ve been allotted.

The result is widespread confusion about how much vaccine is available from one week to the next, and how much supply states actually need to inoculate residents in priority groups. Both areas of confusion are barriers to the national immunization campaign that President Biden pledged to mount in his first days in office.

The president’s advisers have said they were left no plan by the Trump administration. But what they inherited this week was more like a black box than a bare cupboard — the result of fractured communication among federal, state and local officials and a juggling act between manufacturers making a new product and thousands of providers, from big hospital systems to tiny clinics, struggling to plan around an unknown amount of vaccine.

“We don’t have the visibility that we would hope to have into supply and allocations,” Jeff Zients, the Biden administration’s coronavirus coordinator, acknowledged in a Wednesday briefing.

The delays in ordering and distribution have many causes, including uncertainty about vaccine supply and the status of second doses as well as the hesitancy of some people to get the shots. Also at issue are the logistical hurdles of performing immunizations in long-term-care facilities and the ultracold storage requirements and batch size of the product developed by Pfizer and German company BioNTech. That vaccine, one of two authorized for emergency use in the United States, comes in a minimum order of 975 doses. Once vials are opened, doses must be used within six hours. ...

David Kessler, a top Biden adviser who now leads the federal government’s vaccine accelerator effort, has made few immediate changes to how vaccines will be allocated to 64 jurisdictions and five federal agencies. The new administration has vowed to set up federally run mass vaccination sites but does not anticipate new federal allocations, instead drawing on supply already made available to states, according to an administration official who spoke on the condition of anonymity to discuss ongoing deliberations. ...

Ordering limits are set for states twice a week, on Thursday and Sunday. They reflect updated allocations, so the actual number of unclaimed doses is a moving target. The ordering is spaced out both to ease the burden on distributors and to help states distinguish between first and second doses, with priority given to the latter.

As of early this week, states not ordering up to their limits included Illinois, Kansas, Mississippi, Nevada, South Carolina and Texas, according to Michael Pratt, a former Health and Human Services spokesman. Data compiled by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention indicates the fewest doses per capita have been distributed in Nevada, South Carolina and Texas. By the end of the week, Mississippi had ordered all the vaccine available to the state, officials said. ...

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