Category: Covid-19 Vaccine

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Harford Health Department cancels COVID-19 vaccine clinic after 90% of sign-ups were found to be ineligible – Baltimore Sun

March 6, 2021

Maryland is in Phase 1C of vaccinations, which also includes those in eligible in phases 1A and 1B. Adults 65 and older, healthcare workers, first responders, residents and staff of nursing homes, assisted living and other congregate settings, educators, and essential workers in some sectors such as the postal service, manufacturing, lab services and agriculture are eligible.

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Harford Health Department cancels COVID-19 vaccine clinic after 90% of sign-ups were found to be ineligible - Baltimore Sun

Americans vaccinated against COVID-19 still wait for advice – The Associated Press

March 6, 2021

More than 28 million Americans fully vaccinated against the coronavirus will have to keep waiting for guidance from federal health officials for what they should and shouldnt do.

The Biden administration said Friday its focused on getting the guidance right and accommodating emerging science, but the delays add to the uncertainty around bringing about an end to the pandemic as the nations virus fatigue grows.

These are complex issues and the science is rapidly evolving, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention Director Dr. Rochelle Walensky said Friday. We are making sure and taking time to get this right and we will be releasing this guidance soon.

Such guidance would address a flood of questions coming in from people who have been fully vaccinated against COVID-19: Do I still have to wear a mask? Can I go to a bar now? Can I finally see my grandchildren?

The need has slowly grown since January, when the first Americans began to complete the two-dose series of COVID-19 vaccines then available. Now, more than half of people 65 and older have received at least one shot, according to Andy Slavitt, a senior administration adviser on the pandemic.

In Washington state, Raul Espinoza Gomez has 22 grandchildren and great-grandchildren and an appointment Saturday for his second dose of coronavirus vaccine.

By Easter, the 77-year-olds immune system will be ready to protect him from the virus. But how the family celebrates will depend on government advice, said Melissa Espinoza, 47, of Carnation, Washington, who plans to drive Gomez, her father-in-law, to get his second shot.

We didnt gather together as a big family at Christmas, she said. We go by what the state and federal guidelines recommend. Weve had family members adversely affected by COVID. We know the risks are severe.

Worried about persistently high case loads and deaths, the Biden administration has condemned efforts to relax states virus restrictions and pleaded with the public for several months more patience.

The caution has drawn critics, who point to the administrations own warnings that fatigue is winning as evidence that they need to be more optimistic about the path ahead to secure the cooperation of those who are yet to be vaccinated.

I think its going to be overly proscriptive and conservative and thats the wrong message, former FDA Commissioner Scott Gottlieb told CNBC Wednesday of the forthcoming CDC guidance. If we continue to be very proscriptive and not give people a realistic vision for what a better future is going to look like, theyre going to start to ignore the public health guidance.

Dr. Jeremy Faust, an emergency physician at Brigham and Womens Hospital in the Division of Health Policy and Public Health, encouraged the CDC to be clearer about when and how it plans to produce guidelines for the vaccinated.

Making the decision to go by the science is also making the decision that youre going to have to make a decision, which is really difficult when the science isnt settled, he told the AP. Theyre drinking from a firehose of science, and sometimes, it gets messy.

More than 55.5 million Americans have received at least one dose of vaccine, and slightly more than half of those 28.7 million have gotten the recommended two doses. The single-dose Johnson & Johnson shot soon will add a couple million more Americans with questions about what new freedoms they can safely enjoy.

I do hope I get to see my great-grandchildren more, said Rolando Solar, 92, who received his second dose in Miami Wednesday. But I know things will not go back to normal and, for an old man like me, this is as good as it will be.

Tami Katz-Freiman, 65, of Miami, got her second dose three weeks ago, and plans to watch the Miami Film Festival virtually Sunday at the home of unvaccinated friends. All will wear masks.

We didnt have to discuss it with each other, because its very clear to me that when there is a doubt and you dont have a CDC straightforward rule you better be on the safe side and take care for yourself, Katz-Freiman said.

Three weeks ago, the CDC announced that fully vaccinated people do not have to go into quarantine if they have contact with someone with a confirmed infection (for 90 days after the final shot). But the agency said nothing beyond that, noted Dr. Leana Wen, an emergency physician and public health professor at George Washington University.

That (quarantine guidance) seems to imply to me that your chance of contracting COVID-19 and being a carrier to others is pretty low, said Wen, who previously ran Baltimores health department.

(But) we need to focus on what is most relevant to peoples lives, and my patients are not coming in and asking me: If Im vaccinated, do I still need to quarantine if Im exposed? she continued.

Id say the most common question I get is Can I visit my grandchildren? Wen said.

Experts say its understandable that the CDC has been cautious when many scientific questions remain, including how long vaccine-induced immunity lasts, and whether vaccinated people are still able to transmit the virus to others. The answers are important when advising someone what kind of risk they face in different settings, and how much of a risk they are to others.

The vaccines at their best, in the clinical trials, were 95% effective, I didnt say 100%. And thats why we have to keep wearing masks most of the time, said Dr. William Schaffner, an infectious-diseases expert at Vanderbilt University.

But CDC has needed to come out with something more for vaccinated people than sticking with the same old mask wearing, social distancing guidance, he added.

People are so eager to do something and they want to see some tangible benefit from the vaccines. Americans are impatient. They want to get on with it, Schaffner said.

Indeed, there is a real cost to putting off this guidance, as people turn to their own doctors for advice, or just make their own assumptions and decisions, Wen said.

Waiting too long can diminish the agencys relevance on this kind of matter, said Wen, who believes CDC should have had some kind of guidance in place for vaccinated people back in January.

Clearly, vaccinated people should have been encouraged to go get cancer screenings, dental care, or other needed medical appointments. CDC officials also could have said that its OK for small groups of fully vaccinated people maybe two or three couples, for example to gather together for a dinner or other small gathering, she said.

Regarding small gatherings among people who have been fully vaccinated, the relative risk is so low that you would not have to wear a mask, that you could have a good social gathering within the home, said Dr. Anthony Fauci, the governments leading infectious diseases doctor, during a recent White House briefing.

Some experts discussed the possibility that movie theaters or cruise ships or certain other businesses might open up to vaccinated people, and ask for proof of vaccination status. Israels government has begun issuing a green pass vaccination certificate to anyone who has received two doses of COVID vaccine through an accredited vaccination service.

I dont know if in this country we would tolerate the federal government issue some kind of pass, the way they did in Israel, Wen said. But businesses might want such passes and they would be an incentive that might help the overall rate of vaccination, Wen said.

The only incentive Espinozas family needed for vaccination was seeing her and her husband hospitalized with COVID-19 this winter. Still recovering, she uses oxygen at home.

Vaccination of the family elders means one step closer to returning to traditions they love: Church on Palm Sunday and, a week later, an Easter egg hunt for the kids and a meal featuring slow-cooked barbacoa, a Mexican beef dish.

I hope people will stay home and stay safe as much as possible until we can all get vaccinated and eradicate this disease, Espinoza said.

___

This story has been updated to correct Gottliebs first name.

___

Associated Press reporter Kelli Kennedy in Miami contributed to this report.

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Americans vaccinated against COVID-19 still wait for advice - The Associated Press

Three vaccines. Increased manufacturing. How US will have enough COVID-19 vaccine for every US adult in May or even sooner. – USA TODAY

March 6, 2021

President Biden said the U.S. will have enough COVID-19 vaccines for every adult by the end of May, two months earlier than expected. USA TODAY

As vaccine experts welcomed President JoeBiden's accelerated timeline for distribution, they offered some caution about whether the companies can reach their promised doses and delivery dates.Whilethere's never 100% certainty in manufacturing, pharmaceutical manufacturing is especiallyfinicky and demanding.

People like to think making vaccines is like making widgets or automobilesbut its not,saidRobert Van Exan, president of Immunization Policy and Knowledge Translation, a vaccine production consulting firm.

The process is complex, with so many variablesthat vaccine manufacturers can't count on every batch making it through to the end.

You can be going along and getting a certain yield and then all of the suddenyour yield drops and you dont know why," Van Exan said. "Test delays or failures, raw material supply chain, lot failures and yield problems are just some of the examples of things that can result in supply disruptions."

Biden said Tuesday there will be enough COVID-19 vaccine available inMay for every adult in the U.S., nearly two months earlier than his administration predicted three weeks ago,thanks to a deal brokeredbetween pharmaceutical giants Merck and Johnson & Johnson.

That timeline didn't surprise experts.In fact, some say the U.S. could reach that milestone by mid-April.

'Vaccine angels' can only do so much: US struggles to make it easier to find COVID-19 vaccination appointments

The COVID-19 vaccine is using new technology that has never been used before in traditional vaccines. Here's how an mRNA vaccine works. USA TODAY

To get there,officials plan on 400 million doses from Moderna and Pfizer-BioNTech, enough to vaccinate 200 million people, plus an additional 100 million doses of the one-shot Johnson & Johnson vaccine. That is more thanenough for the nation's 255 million adults.

The achievement is incredibly exciting and gives me a lot of hope, said Melissa McPheeters, a professor of health policy and biomedical informatics at Vanderbilt University Medical Center.

We are within view of turning a corner from a scarcity mindset, she said.

The administration made use of the Defense Production Act to forge thecollaboration between Merck and Johnson & Johnson, usually fierce rivals. It also agreed to invest an additional $100 million to increase manufacturing of the vaccine itself and the vial-filling plants (called "fill and finish"), two of the biggest bottlenecks facing the J&J vaccine,White House coronavirus adviser Andy Slavitt said Wednesday.

With the manufacturing boost provided by Merck, Johnson & Johnson has agreed to ship 20 million doses by the end of March and an additional 80 million by the end of May.

Moderna and Pfizer-BioNTech initiallyplanned to deliver their 200 million doses each by the end of June, but manufacturing the vaccines, based on mRNA technology,turned out to be faster than anticipated, speeding the process up by a month, said Moncef Slaoui, head of the vaccine development effort during the Trump administration, told USA TODAY.

The accelerated pace of all three authorized vaccine developments could mean doses will be abundantly available within a month, some experts say.

"I would guess that by mid- to late-April, all adults who want vaccine will be able to get it,"said Dr. Trudy Larson,dean of the school of community health sciences at the University of Nevada-Reno. "At that point, I would think a big push would start for getting all college-going students vaccinated."

'Somewhere in there, the vaccine got overpromised': How the COVID-19 vaccination process turned chaotic and confusing

The Biden administration has promised to have "enough vaccines for every adult by the end of May." There's some wiggle room in there.

Officials didnot say every adult would be fully vaccinated by then, which would mean two doses for the Pfizer-BioNTechand Moderna shots. They also didn't say that shots would bein arms but that vaccine would be available.

Still, having enough doses to give at least one to every adult is an impressive accomplishment,saidDr. George Rutherford, an epidemiologist and biostatistician at the University of California, San Francisco.

"It's wonderful, it's a huge milestone," he said.

A COVID-19 vaccine kit includes an alcohol swab, fresh latex gloves, a vaccine syringe, and a bandage. The vaccine kit sits ready for the next patient at the Emergence Health Network DayHab center in East El Paso on Jan. 7, 2021.(Photo: Aaron E. Martinez/El Paso Times)

Now, the next phase convincing those who aren't clamoring to get vaccinated must begin in earnest.

"There are still challenges ahead in dealing with vaccine hesitancy," said Dr. Corey Casper, chief executive officer of the Infectious Disease Research Institute, a nonprofit based in Seattle that conducts global research on infectious diseases.

Surveys consistently show a large percentage of Americans aren't certain about getting immunized against COVID-19. Butthere's also data that once they see their friends, coworkers and neighbors being vaccinated, hesitation seems to wane.

Tracking COVID-19 vaccine distribution by state: How many people have been vaccinated in the US?

Not everyone, however, will be easilyconvinced, said Jeffrey Shaman, a professor of environmental health science and Columbia University, who has been modeling COVID-19 cases nationwide.

"There will be those who are going to need to be chided, or reminded, that getting vaccinated is good not just for them, but for their community and for their country," he said.

Contributing: Karen Weintraub, USA TODAY

Contact Elizabeth Weise at eweise@usatoday.com

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Three vaccines. Increased manufacturing. How US will have enough COVID-19 vaccine for every US adult in May or even sooner. - USA TODAY

How the Sutter Health COVID-19 vaccine shortage was (kind of) fixed – KRON4

March 6, 2021

SAN FRANCISCO (KRON) Sutter Health is expecting a new shipment of the COVID-19 vaccine after being forced to cancel thousands of appointments, but its not enough to get everyone back in line.

The healthcare company said it started postponing vaccinations in February, and so far has stopped appointments all the way through March 9. This included second-dose appointments, which are time-sensitive.

Sutter Health said on Tuesday that due to a lack of supply, up to 40,000-second dose appointments would be canceled this week, and possibly up to 50,000 more second dose appointments in the weeks ahead.

Now, some slightly better news: Sutter says the state has committed to giving them 60,000 doses over the next two weeks That would still leave them 30,000 doses short.

Sutter is saying, Many county and local health partners have given Sutter vaccine in recent days. This additional and unexpected supply, along with the states commitment, allows us to reschedule those impacted patients, starting as early as this weekend.

They say, as long as we continue to receive sufficient supply, we anticipate being able to complete all second dose vaccinations well within the CDCs recommended timeframe,which is up to six-weeks between doses.

Patients began getting calls on Thursday to reschedule their previously canceled vaccine appointments.

Due to the timing of the delivery, Sutter Health said we do expect many patients will need to be postponed 7-14 days.

All patients who have an appointment beyond March 9 were not impacted.

Sutter Health launched vaccination appointments first for patients ages 75 and up, in accordance with the states guidance, on January 14.

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How the Sutter Health COVID-19 vaccine shortage was (kind of) fixed - KRON4

Hogan says Maryland better than most states at administering COVID-19 vaccines. Hes right unless you consider population. – Baltimore Sun

March 6, 2021

Hogan said Tuesday that about 230,000 of the doses have gone to federal agencies, though the difference between the states and CDCs figures was about 360,000 then and has since grown to more than 400,000. Regardless, that gap affects where Maryland stands in another measure of getting doses to its residents.

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Hogan says Maryland better than most states at administering COVID-19 vaccines. Hes right unless you consider population. - Baltimore Sun

The Rev. Al Green gets the COVID-19 vaccine – wreg.com

March 6, 2021

MEMPHIS, Tenn. The Rev. Al Green is the latest celebrity to get the COVID-19 vaccine and hes encouraging others to do the same.

The 74-year-old singer, songwriter and record producer received his first dose of the vaccine at Saint Francis Hospital-Memphis Thursday.

Green is the pastor at Full Gospel Tabernacle in Memphis, and according to his management team, a strong advocate of everyone getting vaccinated when they can, especially members of the African-American community.

Green is best known for recording a series of well-known soul hit singles in the early 1970s, including Lets Stay Together, Love and Happiness, and Tired of Being Alone.

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The Rev. Al Green gets the COVID-19 vaccine - wreg.com

Study looks at impact of COVID-19 vaccines on fertility – Wink News – Wink News

March 4, 2021

WINK NEWS

Thousands have already received the COVID-19 vaccine while others say not so fast.

Their big concern? Its impacts on possibly having children.

Fertility and pregnancy concerns are leading to vaccine hesitancy, and researchers are hoping to dispel the myths.

What if there is something in there that wasnt tested that will cause females to be sterile? asked Stacey Clarke, whos concerned about fertility issues with the vaccine.

It just leaves me feeling uneasy, said Nicole Linsley, a fertility patient.

Its not just women who have vaccine anxiety. Dr. Ranjith Ramasamy with the University of Miami said his male patients ask questions, too.

The concern with the potential of the vaccine, the COVID vaccine, causing male fertility issues arises from the fact that the actual COVID virus can bind to receptors inside the testes, said Ramasamy, the director of reproductive urology at the Miller School of Medicine.

In a previous study, Ramasamy found the coronavirus in mens testes, and for some men, it temporarily lowered their sperm counts. But Ramasamy says because both the Pfizer and Moderna vaccines dont use the actual virus, they likely wont impact male fertility.

People think that the vaccine actually has the virus in it. But the Pfizer and the Moderna vaccines that have emergency use authorization from the FDA, are just the mRNA vaccines that make a protein that the COVID virus expresses. So it is not the full virus and it does not biologically appear to actually bind to the testes and affect testicular function, he said.

The Johnson and Johnson vaccine could be a different story.

The J&J vaccine is the actual virus. And so now all of the concerns about the potential virus binding to the testes and impacting sperm count remains, and probably remains more with the J&J vaccine compared to the Pfizer and the Moderna vaccines, Ramasamy said.

Still, Ramasamy recommends if youre eligible to get the vaccine, you should get it.

National medical experts say the loss of fertility is scientifically unlikely. In a joint statement,the American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists (ACOG), the American Society for Reproductive Medicine (ASRM), and the Society for Maternal-Fetal Medicine (SMFM) said:

Throughout the COVID-19 pandemic, patients have had questions about the impact of the virus on their health. Now, as the rollout of the COVID vaccines progresses, patients similarly have questions about whether the vaccine is right for their individual health needs.As experts in reproductive health, we continue to recommend that the vaccine be available to pregnant individuals. We also assure patients that there is no evidence that the vaccine can lead to loss of fertility. While fertility was not specifically studied in the clinical trials of the vaccine, no loss of fertility has been reported among trial participants or among the millions who have received the vaccines since their authorization, and no signs of infertility appeared in animal studies. Loss of fertility is scientifically unlikely.

Out of abundance of caution and to provide reassurance to the public, we are actually doing a study at the University of Miami to evaluate the effect of the vaccine on male fertility and male testosterone production. We believe that it shouldnt really affect male fertility or testosterone production, said Ramasamy. We see a lot of young men who are attempting conception right now or attempting fertility, who want to preserve their future fertility, and have actually told us that theyre willing to wait for the study results, to reassure them before they go ahead and get the vaccine.

So far, there is no data to suggest the vaccines negatively impact womens fertility. In fact, in studies done by Pfizer and Moderna, several women participating in clinical trials got pregnant.

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Study looks at impact of COVID-19 vaccines on fertility - Wink News - Wink News

California will reserve 40% of COVID-19 vaccine for disadvantaged areas to speed reopenings – Los Angeles Times

March 4, 2021

In a major shift in policy, California officials said Wednesday night they will now devote 40% of available COVID-19 vaccines to residents in the most disadvantaged areas in a move designed to both slow the spread of coronavirus and speed up the reopening of the economy.

After roughly another 400,000 doses are administered to people who live in Californias hardest hit communities which could happen within the next two weeks officials in Gov. Gavin Newsoms administration said the state intends to significantly relax the rules for counties to exit the most restrictive tier of Californias coronavirus reopening blueprint.

The shift comes amid mounting evidence that Latino and Black communities are falling behind white and Asian ones in getting access to the vaccine. This has sparked concern in part because those underserved communities have been hardest hit by COVID-19. They are home to many essential workers, who have contracted the virus on the job and then spread it at home.

But the move adds yet another shift in the states rocky vaccine rollout, which has been marked by big shortages of supply. It comes at a time when more people are becoming eligible for immunizations.

In a few weeks, the state will recommend to counties that millions of people with underlying health problems and disabilities join the line. With large amounts of vaccine now reserved, there will be less to go around to other groups. Officials are hoping for major boosts in vaccine supply in the coming weeks.

Newsom himself foreshadowed the concept during a briefing in Long Beach early Wednesday afternoon, though he did not offer specifics at that time.

We want to incorporate vaccination rates into the tiering, and that will allow people to move more quickly through the tiers, he said.

Currently, 1.6 million COVID-19 vaccine doses have been administered to individuals who live in the states hardest-hit communities specifically, those in the lowest quartile of the California Healthy Places index, a measure of socioeconomic opportunity that takes into account economic, social, education, housing and transportation factors.

Once 2 million doses have been administered in these communities, the state will relax the threshold by which a county can exit the most restrictive purple category of the states four-tier, color-coded reopening plan. In that category, indoor operations are forbidden or severely limited at many businesses and public spaces, including restaurant dining rooms, gyms, museums, zoos and aquariums.

In Southern California, targeted communities would include South Los Angeles, the Eastside, Koreatown, Chinatown, Compton, southeast L.A. County, the eastern San Fernando Valley, Santa Ana, and a number of heavily Latino communities along the Interstate 10 corridor between Pomona and San Bernardino.

Administration officials said that quartile consists of roughly 400 different ZIP codes sprinkled throughout the state, though many of them are in the Central Valley and in and around Los Angeles County.

Counties tier assignments are based on three criteria: average daily case rates, adjusted based on the number of tests performed; the testing positivity rate; and a health equity metric intended to ensure that the positivity rate in poorer communities is not significantly worse than the countys overall figure.

Currently, counties generally must have an adjusted daily coronavirus case rate at or below 7.0 new cases per day per 100,000 people to move from the purple tier to the more permissive red tier.

After the state achieves its 2-million dose goal, however, counties with a case rate of up to 10 new cases per day per 100,000 people will become eligible for the red tier.

The change in policy stands to accelerate the movement for many Southern California counties, allowing them to broadly reopen their economies sooner. Under the new proposed rules, L.A., Orange and San Bernardino counties would already be eligible to exit the purple tier, while Riverside, Ventura and San Diego counties would also be close to qualifying.

Per 100,000 residents, L.A. County currently has an adjusted daily case rate of 7.2; Orange, 7.6; Riverside, 11.3; San Bernardino, 9; San Diego, 10.8 and Ventura, 10.6.

Once a total of 4 million doses are administered to these lower-income communities, state officials will also relax the thresholds for entering the subsequent tiers, the orange and yellow tiers. However, they did not specify what those new thresholds would be.

The orange tier would allow sports fans to return to outdoor professional sports venues and allow indoor family entertainment centers like bowling alleys and escape rooms to reopen; the yellow tier allows large theme parks to reopen.

Even with these steps, we will still have some of the strongest public health protections in the nation, said one Newsom administration official.

Administration officials confirmed that the states previously announced dedicated dose share for educators 10% of Californias weekly allotment will remain in place.

Providers throughout California have administered more than 9.4 million total COVID-19 vaccine doses to date. Though the state has worked to ramp up how quickly available shots are going into arms, tens of millions of residents are still waiting for their turn in line.

Along with promoting equity in the states vaccine rollout, the administration officials said the plan discussed Wednesday is pragmatic. Vaccinating those most at risk of being victims or vectors of the coronavirus will help stymie its spread. Plus, vaccinating significant numbers of people better armors the wider community against widespread transmission meaning the thresholds to more widely reopen businesses and public spaces no longer will need to be as strict.

Though she said she wasnt privy to the specifics of the proposal, Los Angeles County Public Health Director Barbara Ferrer said Wednesday afternoon that she thinks it would make sense for vaccinations to play some kind of role in guiding the reopening process.

Once you are vaccinating millions and millions of people, you need to take that into account as you determine the safety of a variety of activities, she said during a briefing Wednesday. I think thats completely appropriate. I mean, we said that all along: vaccines are, in fact, a game changer. But you have to have lots and lots of people getting vaccinated before its going to make a big difference.

State officials are targeting COVID-19 vaccinations for people who live in the lowest quartile of the California Healthy Places index, places that are generally lower income, have crowded housing and have been hit hardest by the pandemic.

(California Healthy Places Index)

Lin reported from San Francisco; Money from Long Beach.

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California will reserve 40% of COVID-19 vaccine for disadvantaged areas to speed reopenings - Los Angeles Times

Governor Cuomo Announces More Than 120K Doses of COVID-19 Vaccine Administered in 24 Hours – ny.gov

March 4, 2021

Governor Andrew M. Cuomo today announced 121,067 first and second doses of the COVID-19 vaccine have been administered in the last 24 hours. As of 11:00 AM today, New York providers have administered 95 percent of first doses. The week 12 allocation from the federal government is in the process of being delivered to providers for administration.

"We remain locked in a footrace to keep the infection and hospitalization rate low and drive the vaccination rate up."Governor Cuomo said."We're making progress on both fronts, and thanks to our vast network of vaccine providers and targeted community efforts, over 15 percent of all New Yorkers have now been vaccinated with at least one dose. The light at the end of the tunnel is bright, and we will continue to get shots in arms quickly and fairly until every New Yorker is vaccinated and we are the first COVID-free state.

Approximately 10 million New Yorkers are currently eligible to receive the vaccine. New York's vast distribution network and large population of eligible individuals still far exceed the supply coming from the federal government. Due to limited supply, New Yorkers are encouraged to remain patient and are advised not to show up at vaccination sites without an appointment.

The'Am I Eligible'screening tool has been updated for individuals with comorbidities and underlying conditions with new appointments released on a rolling basis over the next weeks. New Yorkers can use the following to show they are eligible:

Vaccination program numbers below are for doses distributed and delivered to New York for the state's vaccination program, and do not include those reserved for the federal government's Long Term Care Facility program. A breakdown of the data based on numbers reported to New York State as of 11:00 AM today is as follows. Beginning week 9, allocation totals are inclusive of some excess vaccine doses that have been reallocated from the federal Long Term Care Facility program. The allocation totals below include 20 percent of the week 12 allocation which will finish being distributed to New York provider sites on Sunday.

STATEWIDE BREAKDOWN

First Doses Received - 3,290,980

First Doses Administered - 3,125,025; 95%

Total Doses Received - 5,372,605

TotalDoses Administered - 4,819,412

Region

Total Doses Received

(1st and 2nd)

Total Doses Administered

(1st and 2nd)

% of Total Doses Administered/Received

(1st and 2nd)

Capital Region

332,060

299,234

90.1%

Central New York

288,920

259,107

89.7%

Finger Lakes

329,705

300,941

91.3%

Long Island

691,660

591,280

85.5%

Mid-Hudson

520,305

433,776

83.4%

Mohawk Valley

161,615

134,416

83.2%

New York City

2,335,540

2,142,997

91.8%

North Country

178,450

162,516

91.1%

Southern Tier

178,890

166,799

93.2%

Western New York

355,460

328,346

92.4%

Statewide

5,372,605

4,819,412

89.7%

1st doses fully delivered to New York Providers

2nd doses fully delivered to New York Providers

TOTAL

CUMULATIVE

Week 1

Doses arriving 12/14 - 12/20

163,650

0

163,650

163,650

Week 2

Doses arriving 12/21 - 12/27

452,125

0

452,125

615,775

Week 3

Doses arriving 12/28 - 01/03

227,395

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Governor Cuomo Announces More Than 120K Doses of COVID-19 Vaccine Administered in 24 Hours - ny.gov

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