COVID-19 vaccine distribution update from the Washington State Department of Health

For immediate release: December 23, 2020    (20-258)Spanish

Contact:   Danielle Koenig, Center for Public Affairs, 360-236-3529
Public inquiries: State COVID-19 Assistance Hotline, 1-800-525-0127 then press #

COVID-19 vaccine distribution update from the Washington State Department of Health

OLYMPIA – The Washington State Department of Health (DOH) continues to make progress with our COVID-19 vaccine distribution and administration efforts.

Last week, providers across the state began administering initial doses of COVID-19 vaccine to high-risk health workers, and now, more than 30,000 doses of the Pfizer vaccine have been administered. We are thrilled with this progress in such a short time.

This week, we allocated 44,850 Pfizer doses and 127,900 Moderna doses. That includes:

  • 153,925 doses distributed to more than 220 sites in 37 counties
  • 18,825 doses distributed to support long-term care facilities as well as 14 Tribes and Urban Indian Health Programs

Many of this week’s shipments are arriving today by 4:30 p.m.

Here’s how the allocation breaks down by county this week:

County

Pfizer

Moderna

Adams

 

200

Asotin

 

 

Benton

 

4700

Chelan

975

800

Clallam

975

1700

Clark

1950

8100

Columbia

 

200

Cowlitz

 

1400

Douglas

 

200

Ferry

 

400

Franklin

975

100

Garfield

 

 

Grant

975

1300

Grays Harbor

 

1100

Island

975

1000

Jefferson

975

 

King

14,625

34,000

Kitsap

 

3000

Kittitas

 

300

Klickitat

 

500

Lewis

 

700

Lincoln

 

200

Mason

 

4500

Okanogan

 

200

Pacific

 

500

Pend Oreille

 

100

Pierce

4875

14,100

San Juan

 

600

Skagit

 

400

Skamania

 

600

Snohomish

 

14,200

Spokane

 

15,800

Stevens

 

1300

Thurston

 

5300

Wahkiakum

 

300

Walla Walla

975

200

Whatcom

975

4200

Whitman

975

 

Yakima

 

1500

 County subtotal

30,225

123,700

 Other subtotal

14,625

4200

Total

44,850

127,900


Over the next several weeks, there will continue to be a limited supply of vaccine. Additionally, vaccine will not be delivered on Christmas or New Year’s Day. In early 2021, we hope to move to a consistent pattern of ordering and delivery, to continue the growth of COVID-19 vaccine availability in Washington state.

Vaccine prioritization

Last weekend a key CDC advisory committee voted on vaccine prioritization for later phases. This will help shape who gets the vaccine in the coming months. The federal guidance is the framework for Washington state to make decisions about who will be eligible for vaccine next.  Those prioritization decisions have not been finalized yet here in Washington state. Once we make these decisions at a state level, we will share that information.

Moderna vaccine

Last weekend, a second COVID-19 vaccine, manufactured by Moderna, was authorized for emergency use in individuals aged 18 and older, by the U.S. Food & Drug Administration (FDA). The vaccine also passed independent review by medical experts in the Scientific Safety Review Workgroup, as part of the Western States Pact. This is a two-dose vaccine, given 28 days apart. Clinical trial data show the vaccine is about 94 percent effective after two doses.

Washington state placed an order for 128,000 doses of the Moderna vaccine the morning of December 21. We do not have confirmation yet specifying when these orders will be delivered. Next week’s allocation of the Moderna vaccine is 44,300 doses.

The Moderna vaccine will be delivered in a staggered fashion throughout each week, and unlike the Pfizer-BioNTech vaccine, cold storage and handling is similar to other routinely used vaccines. This will help to distribute vaccine to many more providers across the state.

Reduced Pfizer vaccine allocation

Regarding our state’s reduced allocation of the Pfizer vaccine: We’ve learned since last week that prior allocations were inadvertently based on vaccine doses produced — not all of which had yet completed the quality control process. Vaccine cannot be released before quality control is complete. This discrepancy was the source of the change in allocations.

For the foreseeable future we will get our allocation on a week-by-week basis. The federal government has shared that vaccine supply will increase each month. Our allocation of the Pfizer vaccine is 57,525 doses for next week.

Long-term care facility vaccination program update

One long-term care pharmacy, registered through the Department of Health’s COVID-19 vaccine provider program, began vaccinations at several facilities December 21. We expect that facilities registered through the CDC’s long-term care program will begin vaccinations on the date previously communicated, December 28. This is the first date the national partnership for the long-term care program could be activated due to the large volume of vaccine needed for the program.

We are exploring a dashboard to share vaccine administration data, and until that launches, we will continue to provide vaccine administration updates in our weekly updates.

The DOH website is your source for a healthy dose of information. Find us on Facebook and follow us on Twitter. Sign up for the DOH blog, Public Health Connection

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