From NYT:
“Helping
People Find COVID-19 Vaccines Is Aim of CDC-Backed Site”
The Centers for
Disease Control and Prevention, hoping to make it easier for Americans to find
COVID-19 vaccines, is backing the test of a centralized online portal where the
public can search for nearby vaccination locations with doses on hand. The
website, called Vaccine Finder, is run by Boston Children’s Hospital with the
help of several collaborators. It grew out of the H1N1 flu pandemic of 2009 and
has been used for years to coordinate the distribution of flu and childhood
vaccines. It expanded Wednesday to include the availability of coronavirus
vaccines in several states. If the program goes well, the website’s developers
plan to expand it nationwide in coming weeks to include nearly all vaccine
providers that agree to be featured. That would make the website far more comprehensive
than anything that exists now. “We’re trying to create a trusted site and bring
some order to all this chaos and confusion around availability,” said John
Brownstein, a Boston Children’s Hospital researcher who runs VaccineFinder.org.
The project is
not a panacea. It will not enable people to book appointments; it simply
directs people to other portals where they can try to register to get
vaccinated. Nor does the website address the key constraints — most notably the
limited supply of vaccine doses — that are preventing more people from quickly
getting shots. And there is a risk that the addition of yet another vaccine
website will only exacerbate the current confusion. “It’s not a tool that’s
going to necessarily make things easier for people to get the vaccine,” said
Claire Hannan, executive director of the Association of Immunization Managers.
“They’re going to see where vaccine is, but they’re still going to have challenges
trying to get an appointment.” After a rocky start, the vaccination campaign in
the United States has accelerated in recent weeks. Seventeen percent of adults
have received a first dose, and 7.6% are fully vaccinated, according to the
CDC. That puts the government well on the way to fulfilling President Joe
Biden’s promise that at least 100 million vaccine doses would be administered
in the United States by his 100th day in office; he has since raised that
target to 150 million doses.
Despite the
progress, though, getting appointments for vaccinations has been a source of
great frustration for many people. Appointment slots are filled within minutes
of becoming available. States, local health departments and pharmacy chains
have their own sign-up websites that in many cases do not share data with one
another. The CDC has its own vaccine administration management system, or VAMS,
which some states are using to have people register for vaccinations and to
collect essential data, but state officials have complained that it is clunky.
Exasperated
people have taken matters into their own hands, creating online navigator tools
and “vaccine hunter” Facebook groups in cities like Los Angeles and New Orleans
to help connect people with available doses. When the Vaccine Finder portal
goes live this week, it will include some drugstores and grocery stores
nationwide, plus many other locations, like mass-vaccination sites, in Alaska,
Indiana, Iowa and Tennessee. Kristen Nordlund, a spokeswoman for the CDC, said
the agency was encouraging vaccination locations to “provide accurate and
up-to-date information on location, hours and availability of vaccines, so
Americans can find vaccine sites easier.” Dr. Marcus Plescia, chief medical
officer of the Association of State and Territorial Health Officials, said, “I
think people are optimistic and eagerly awaiting it.” He continued, “As with
anything that we roll out in the middle of this pandemic, if there are glitches
it could end up creating a lot of confusion, but I think we’ll just have to
work through it.” Finding doses was relatively straightforward in the first
weeks of the vaccine rollout, when eligible people — health care workers and
residents and staff at long-term care facilities — were getting vaccinated
mainly where they lived or worked. But states have since expanded their
eligibility criteria to include older people, people with certain medical
conditions and certain front line workers. More locations have also been added
to give out vaccines, including stadiums and local pharmacies.
The federal
government did not create a centralized sign-up system for the vaccine rollout,
and states have been slow to set up their own. In that void, counties, local
health departments, pharmacy chains and other vaccine providers started their
own appointment-booking websites, in some cases adapting systems they already
had and in others buying new tools from vendors. These systems are often not
synchronized to share information like which people have registered on their
websites. That has frustrated state and local health officials, who cannot
cross off their lists people who have secured an appointment at a different
location after registering on multiple systems. “It’s harder to track
vaccination appointments and offer them to people who need it most when the
systems are so disjointed,” said Blaire Bryant, associate legislative director
for health for the National Association of Counties. Federal and state
lawmakers have been clamoring for more centralized registration systems. Rep.
Anthony Brown, D-Md., last week introduced legislation that would create a
nationwide sign-up system where the public can register to get vaccinated. More
states have begun registration websites in recent weeks, but those systems
typically don’t let people reserve a vaccine or an appointment directly.
Instead, they help people navigate existing systems or sign up to get notified
when they can schedule an appointment. The Vaccine Finder website is meant to
complement, not replace, those efforts, said Brownstein, who is also the chief
innovation officer at Boston Children’s Hospital.
Google started
the earliest version of what became the Vaccine Finder website. In 2012
Brownstein and his team took it over. Since then they have been working with
state and local officials to identify locations that offer routine
vaccinations. The project has received federal funding of about $1 million
annually to maintain the website, first from the Department of Health and Human
Services and since 2017 directly from the CDC. The U.S. government has provided
more than $8 million to help the website expand for COVID-19 vaccines. The
Vaccine Finder allows people to enter their ZIP code, the distance they’re
willing to travel and which of the authorized vaccines they are seeking. That
information generates a map dotted with nearby vaccination locations, with
links to appointment-booking websites set up by states, local health
departments and pharmacy chains. Vaccine providers can opt out of being
highlighted on Vaccine Finder. For example, a provider might opt out if it is
only vaccinating a certain slice of the population like health care workers. The
website will show which places have doses available, based on data that vaccine
locations are supposed to report daily. The need to report that information
daily “could be a big lift and lead to varying degrees of accuracy in the
system,” said Adriane Casalotti, chief of government and public affairs at the
National Association of City and County Health Officials. “As with anything,
the value will be in the quality of the data provided,” she added.
^ The article
should have the actual website you can go to listed in it. The website’s not perfect since it doesn't
have all the different States' vaccine rules, etc. but is one of the better
ones. So far the Federal and State Governments have not done a great job in
making a central website to learn about Covid-19, about the Vaccines, about the
different and constantly- changing restrictions. The vaccine website is https://vaccinefinder.org/ ^
https://www.yahoo.com/news/helping-people-covid-19-vaccines-130909412.html
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