From Reuters:
“Scarce
early vaccine supply should go to health workers, nursing homes: U.S. health
advisers”
A panel of
advisers to the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) on
Tuesday voted 13-to-1 to recommend that healthcare workers and residents of
long-term care facilities should be first in line to receive initial doses of
COVID-19 vaccines when they become available. The vote occurred at an emergency
meeting of the Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices (ACIP), which has
been meeting for months to study and recommend who in the United States should
get the first scarce doses of a COVID-19 vaccine.
There are an
estimated 21 million healthcare workers and an additional 3 million nursing
home residents in the United States. Although panel members universally
endorsed the recommendation to include frontline healthcare workers in the
initial allocation, several members of the panel voiced concerns about the inclusion
of long-term care residents. They noted that neither of the two vaccines
currently being reviewed for emergency use - from Moderna Inc and Pfizer Inc
with German partner BioNTech SE were specifically tested in that group. Ultimately,
most members endorsed the early use of the vaccines in long-term care
residents, who make up 6% of COVID-19 cases and nearly 40% of related deaths,
according to the CDC. Dr. Nancy Messonnier, director of the CDC’s National
Center for Immunization and Respiratory Diseases, said most state and local
jurisdictions expect to be able to vaccinate their healthcare workforce within
three weeks of receiving the first shipments of a COVID-19 vaccine.
Initially,
doses of the vaccine will be extremely scarce. CDC officials told the panel
that the agency expects only 5 million to 10 million doses will be available
per week once U.S. regulators authorize vaccines, which could come later this
month. That may require state and local officials tasked with distributing the
vaccines to designate sub-groups within those endorsed categories who are at
highest risk of COVID-19 to receive the first inoculations. CDC officials
suggested states and local jurisdictions consider prioritizing healthcare
workers with direct patient contact, those who provide services to patients or
family members, those who handle infectious materials and workers at long-term
care facilities and residents of skilled nursing facilities. Ultimately, the
CDC expects to have as many as 40 million doses of the two-dose vaccines
available by the end of the year, which would cover roughly 20 million
individuals. People who get the vaccines will sign consent forms and be given a
fact sheet explaining possible side effects, such as fatigue, injection site
pain and body aches. For long-term care residents, the consent forms will also
explain that the vaccines have not been tested in that population, and families
may be included in conversations about potential risks as needed. Because the
vaccines from Moderna and Pfizer may cause temporary flu-like symptoms, the
ACIP panel also recommended that healthcare personnel in the same unit be
vaccinated at different times to avoid the entire unit feeling ill
simultaneously.
ACIP’s recommendations
will be used by state and local health officials to guide their decision making
about how to dole out the vaccines. The group will meet again after the U.S.
Food and Drug Administration authorization to review specific data from the
vaccines to help determine which works best in a specific population, such as
the elderly.
^ Hopefully the
States and Territories will follow these guidelines and vaccinate the elderly
in Long-Term Care Homes and those healthcare workers that will directly work
with Covid-19 patients. ^
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