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Utah asks federal officials to confirm state is getting its 'fair share' of COVID-19 vaccine - Salt Lake Tribune

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The Utah Department of Health has reached out to federal health officials to make sure Utah is getting its “fair share” of COVID-19 vaccine, its leader announced Sunday.
Rich Saunders, executive director of the department, released a statement in response to reporting by The Salt Lake Tribune that Utah has been allocated fewer doses per capita than all other states.
“Because Utah is the youngest state in the nation, it follows that we would receive fewer doses than other states,” Saunders said.
While the state has “no reason to believe Utah is receiving fewer doses than it should be,” he said, the state has “inquired with [Centers for Disease Control and Prevention] to ensure Utah is receiving its fair share of vaccine. They are unaware of any discrepancies but have agreed to review their numbers for accuracy.”
Saunders also said the Biden administration has reversed a policy set by former President Donald Trump — and set to take effect this week — to base state vaccine allotments in part on how fast they administer them to residents.
Then-Health and Human Services Secretary Alex Azar announced that policy Jan. 12 at a press briefing. The new system “gives states a strong incentive to ensure that all vaccinations are being promptly reported, which they’re currently not, and it gives states a strong incentive to ensure doses are going to work protecting people, rather than sitting on shelves or in freezers,” Azar said.
The Biden administration did not respond last week to The Tribune’s inquiries about the policy, and it does not appear that HHS or the CDC have issued news releases announcing a reversal.
“Biden administration representatives have assured states this proposal is no longer under consideration.” Saunders said on Sunday. “States will continue to receive their allocation based on their share of the U.S. adult population, and not based on pace of administration.”
The Tribune used the allocated doses per state for Pfizer-BioNTech and Moderna vaccines, divided by each state’s total and adult populations. The Tribune’s analysis showed Utah’s allocation has been the least, both per total population and per adult population only.
Saunders said that conclusion “runs contrary to information we’ve received from the CDC,” but he did not provide an alternate ranking for Utah.
The state reported on Thursday that more than 5,400 doses had been in the state for more than a week, yet had not been used in the hospitals, local health departments and other places that had that vaccine. Gov. Spencer Cox has declared that any doses unused more than a week after delivery will be collected and redistributed.
In his statement, Saunders provided updated information. He said that as of 7 a.m. on Jan. 24, there were 3,164 remaining unused first doses in Utah that had been in the state for more than a week. Of those, he said, 891 are in the possession of an unnamed local pharmacy contracted to use them in long-term care facilities.
“We are actively working to get these doses (and their boost counterparts) transferred to this pharmacy’s local health department on Monday, Jan. 25,” he said.
The remaining 2,273 doses are in hospitals or community health clinics; Saunders did not identify those providers. “These doses are scheduled to be transferred to local health departments by Monday, Jan. 25,” he said.
In a statement Sunday, Cox focused on first doses received at least seven days ago.
“Thanks to our partners — especially local health departments — Utah has administered 100% of the first doses we received seven days ago and we anticipate the same will be true for this week,” he said. “Our first priority remains ensuring we administer every dose we receive as quickly as we can.”
He added: “The state will continue to be open and transparent about our progress.”
Saunders did not identify the local health departments that are getting vaccine that had gone unused for more than a week. The state plans to provide more information about who in the state gets vaccine “shortly,” Saunders said, but it will describe recipients by type, not by name.
“We currently do not report on our public dashboard how many doses each provider receives. We displayed this information online briefly, removed it while we went through a data quality assurance process, and are working to bring back this information by provider type shortly,” he said.
He added: “The state is currently reporting the total number of residents in each health district who have received their first and second doses, not how many each local health department has administered.”
Unless the state discloses how many doses each local health department has received and how many of each shipment it has administered, it is impossible for Utahns to know whether a county or regional health department is taking longer than others to use its supply, The Tribune noted.
State officials have said they are tracking the vaccine’s arrival closely in order to enforce Cox’s order for the state to collect doses unused more than a week after delivery. The state also is requiring sites to report daily how many doses they have administered.

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