That's great. Can't wait for it to be as convenient as the flu shot.
Trump will fix it.
Yep, 1B now has potentially 87K people that might want the vaccine.Goose61 said:
Still waiting to hear back (guess I must be pretty far down the list).
What is "Mature Well?"backinbcs said:
Went to Mature Well this morning for dose one.
Are the remaining residents all elementary & middle school kids?theNetSmith said:
There are ~87k 1B's in the Brazos Valley? That's a much bigger number than I would have guessed.
Quote:
COVID-19 Vaccine Allocation
Phase 1B Definition
Background
Mortality and morbidity data collected over the course of the COVID-19 pandemic clearly
demonstrates that COVID-19 has the most severe effects on people who are 65 years and older
and individuals with comorbidities. Protecting these higher-risk individuals is of the utmost
concern in addressing the COVID-19 pandemic.
According to Texas death certificate data, more than 70 percent of the deaths directly caused
by COVID-19 are among people 65 years and older. Additionally, a growing body of scientific
evidence shows that adults of any age with certain underlying medical conditions have an
increased risk of severe disease, defined as hospitalization, admission to the intensive care unit,
mechanical ventilation or death.
In Texas, Phase 1B of vaccination will focus on people for whom there is strong and consistent
evidence that COVID-19 makes them more likely to become very sick or die. Preventing the
disease among people who have these risk factors will dramatically reduce the number of
Texans who die from the disease and relieve pressure on the healthcare system by reducing
hospital and ICU admissions. Vaccination will also reduce absenteeism among the front-line
workers at the greatest risk of severe disease and protect individuals at risk for health
inequities.
Because Phase 1B provides vaccine to higher-risk people regardless of their work sector or
status, it will provide protection for a number of critical populations at an increased risk of
getting COVID-19: communities that are disproportionately affected by COVID-19 and other
chronic diseases; teachers and school staff who ensure that Texas children can learn in a safe
environment; social services workers who ensure that those in need receive care and support;
workers who maintain critical infrastructure to support the Texas economy; and other front-line
workers who are unable to work remotely and so are more likely to be exposed.
As Texas progresses into Phase 1B in the coming weeks, the state will work with vaccine
providers and local partners to ensure that people who are 65 and older or have the medical
conditions listed below and who also work in front-line and critical industries have access to the
vaccine so they will be protected from COVID-19 while on the job. Texas equally will strive to
ensure vaccine reaches communities with health disparities in accordance with Texas Vaccine
Allocation Guiding Principles. Communication and outreach will encourage vaccine uptake
among these populations during Phase 1B.
Texas Phase 1B Vaccine Priorities
People 65 years of age and older
People 16 years of age and older with at least one chronic medical condition that puts
them at increased risk for severe illness from the virus that causes COVID-19, such as
but not limited to:
Cancer
Chronic kidney disease
COPD (chronic obstructive pulmonary disease)
Heart conditions, such as heart failure, coronary artery disease or cardiomyopathies
Solid organ transplantation
Obesity and severe obesity (body mass index of 30 kg/m2 or higher)
Pregnancy
Sickle cell disease
Type 2 diabetes mellitus
"fumbled the ball" is a mighty generous characterization..... I'd start with screwed the pooch, but even that is probably not even close to describing the level of incompetence I've witnessed here.Slocum on a mobile said:Born&Raised said:
https://thehill.com/changing-america/well-being/prevention-cures/534524-federal-covid-19-vaccine-reserve-is-now-empty
We are out of vaccines... does this mean we are back to 100 a day here in Brazos County?
How long is this gonna take??
Forever, here in Brazos County. The feds are giving it to the states that give it out the fastest. The state (which is 47th) is giving it to metros who are giving it out faster. Smaller counties around us are starting next Tuesday.
We have a "dry run" on Monday, with no announcement of when they will actually begin in earnest. You can blame your elected officials, they really fumbled the ball here, and it's not like they didn't have months to plan.
They wait until it hits the ground, then appoint a guy to plan. Wheeee!
Quote:
"This list includes only first doses of vaccine."
Nosmo said:
https://tabexternal.dshs.texas.gov/t/THD/views/COVID-19VaccineinTexasDashboard/VaccineDosesAllocated?%3Aorigin=card_share_link&%3Aembed=y&%3AisGuestRedirectFromVizportal=y
The state vaccine website data presentation has had another change. They are showing the effect of second dose allocation.
Since states are now responsible for second doses, it appears they are now limiting what they "ship", and concentrate on "allocate".
Currently, I don't see this as an ability to vaccinate at the county level, but mostly lack of vaccine supply for first time shots.
The latest "allocation" has 3,900 doses reserved for second shot and 2,175 for first.
2000 - 2500 doses a week for first shot isn't enough.
Communication at the county level is still a big problem.
Nosmo said:
B&R,
I'm not disagreeing with your comments, but my post was an attempt to justify the "current" situation.
The system of vaccination (with all it's flaws) is currently able to vaccinate over 3500 people a week. And I am guessing they can do more.
I was trying to show that vaccine is being "held in reserve" (my words not theirs) so 2nd doses are available.
If you look at the state website, you can see that 1st time dose are not available because they are saving "allocation" for those that need a second dose.
The federal level is not "reserving", and the the two suppliers are maxed out.
If they say 150 million doses that's 75 million people vaccinated, and we have around 100K in this county in groups 1A & 1B alone. Your guess is a good as mine on how many will actually want a shot, but I'm thinking the 1A & 1B group is higher than those reports of doctors saying 50-60%. I only know of 1 or 2 people in 1A or 1B that currently say they are not getting the shot, or knows of people not going to get the shot. And I am guessing they will get it once they see everybody else "surviving" the shot.
I'm not saying what's happened to date is good. I think the county is letting the local media explain what's going on, and they seem to have an agenda, or don't dig deep enough, or explain the situation accurately.
it's not easy to keep up with all the moving parts and explain it to the pubic, but that's the county's and the local media's job. I think that part has sucked most of all.