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Analysis: Some Said the Vaccine Rollout Would Be a 鈥楴ightmare.鈥 They Were Right.

WASHINGTON 鈥 Even before there was a vaccine, some seasoned doctors and public health experts warned, Cassandra-like, that its distribution would be 鈥溾

After Week 1 of the rollout, 鈥渘ightmare鈥 sounds like an apt description.

Dozens of states say they didn鈥檛 receive nearly the number of promised doses. Pfizer says millions of doses sat in its storerooms,聽聽task force told them where to ship them.听A number of states聽have few sites that can handle the ultra-cold storage required for the Pfizer product, so, for example, front-line workers in Georgia have had to travel 40 minutes to get a shot. At some hospitals, residents treating COVID patients protested that聽聽while administrators did, even though they work from home and don鈥檛 treat patients.

The potential for more chaos is high. Dr. Vivek Murthy, named as the next surgeon general under President-elect Joe Biden, said this week that the Trump administration鈥檚 prediction 鈥 that the general population would get the vaccine in April 鈥 was realistic only if everything went smoothly. He instead predicted wide distribution by summer or fall.

The Trump administration had expressed confidence that the rollout would be smooth,聽, an expert in logistics. But it turns out that getting fuel, tanks and tents into war-torn mountainous Afghanistan is in many ways simpler than passing out a vaccine in our privatized, profit-focused and highly fragmented medical system. Gen. Perna apologized this week, saying he wanted to 鈥.鈥 It鈥檚 really mostly not his fault.

Throughout the COVID pandemic, the U.S. health care system has shown that it is not built for a coordinated pandemic response (among many other things). States took wildly different COVID prevention measures; individual hospitals varied in their ability to face this kind of national disaster; and there were huge regional disparities in test availability 鈥 with a slow ramp-up in availability due, at least in some part, because no payment or billing mechanism was established.

Why should vaccine distribution be any different?

In World War II, toymakers were conscripted to make needed military hardware airplane parts, and commercial shipyards to make military transport vessels. The Trump administration has been averse to invoking the Defense Production Act, which could help speed and coordinate the process of vaccine manufacture and distribution. On Tuesday, it indicated it might do so, but only to help Pfizer obtain raw materials that are in short supply, so that the drugmaker could produce 鈥 and sell 鈥 more vaccines in the United States.

Instead of a central health-directed strategy, we have multiple companies competing to capture their financial piece of the pandemic health care pie, each with its patent-protected product as well as its own supply chain and shipping methods.

Add to this bedlam the current decision-tree governing distribution: The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention has made official recommendations about who should get the vaccine first 鈥 but throughout the pandemic, many states have felt free to ignore the agency鈥檚 suggestions.

Instead, Operation Warp Speed allocated initial doses to the states, depending聽. From there, an inscrutable mix of state officials, public health agencies and lobbyists seem to be determining where the vaccine should go. In some states, counties requested an allotment from the state, and then they tried to accommodate requests from hospitals, which made their individual algorithms for how to dole out the precious cargo. Once it became clear there wasn鈥檛 enough vaccine to go around, each entity made its own adjustments.

Some doses are being shipped by FedEx or UPS. But Pfizer 鈥 which did not fully participate in Operation Warp Speed 鈥 is shipping much of the vaccine itself. In nursing homes, some vaccines will be delivered and administered by employees of CVS and Walgreens, though聽聽remain there.

The Moderna vaccine, rolling out this week, will be聽聽the 鈥減harmaceutical services provider鈥 Catalent in Bloomington, Indiana, and then sent to McKesson, a large pharmaceutical logistics and distribution outfit. It has offices in places like Memphis, Tennessee, and Louisville, which are near air hubs for FedEx and UPS, which will ship them out.

Is your head spinning yet?

Looking forward, basic questions remain for 2021: How will essential workers at some risk (transit workers, teachers, grocery store employees) know when it鈥檚 their turn? (And it will matter which city you work in.) What about people with chronic illness 鈥 and then everyone else? And who administers the vaccine 鈥 doctors or the local drugstore?

In Belgium, where many hospitals and doctors are private but work within a significant central organization, residents will get an invitation letter 鈥渨hen it鈥檚 their turn.鈥 In Britain, the National Joint Committee on Vaccination has settled on a priority list for vaccinations 鈥 those over 80, those who live or work in nursing homes, and health care workers at high risk. The National Health Service will let everyone else 鈥渒now when it鈥檚 your turn to get the vaccine 鈥 from the government-run health system.

In the United States, I dread a mad scramble 鈥 as in, 鈥淒id you hear the CVS on P Street got a shipment?鈥 But this time, it鈥檚 not toilet paper.

Combine this vision of disorder with the nation鈥檚 high death toll, and it鈥檚 not surprising that there is intense jockeying and lobbying 鈥 by schools, unions, even people with different types of preexisting diseases 鈥 over who should get the vaccine first, second and third. It鈥檚 hard to 鈥渨ait your turn鈥 in a country聽聽鈥 a tragic per capita order of magnitude higher than in many other developed countries.

So kudos and thanks to the science and the scientists who made the vaccine in record time. I鈥檒l eagerly hold out my arm 鈥 so I can see the family and friends and colleagues I鈥檝e missed all these months. If only I can figure out when I鈥檓 eligible, and where to go to get it.

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