Coronavirus

COVID vaccine updates: Sacramento has given one dose for every 10 residents

California is eight weeks into a mass vaccination campaign to combat the COVID-19 pandemic, administering tens of thousands of shots a day.

The California Department of Public Health on its vaccine tracker reported Monday providers have administered 4,746,539 out of about 7.1 million doses that have been distributed to hospital systems and local health offices, an increase by 95,902 doses from Sunday’s total.

That daily increase is less than half the previous three days’ average of about 220,000 doses administered. Sundays tend to have the fewest vaccination appointments of any day of the week, and the Super Bowl likely drove the total even lower for this Sunday.

The state public health numbers don’t distinguish between first and second doses. According to U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention data updated Monday, about 81% of California’s shots given have been first doses: more than 3.8 million. This means nearly one in 10 Californians have received at least one vaccine dose.

The COVID-19 vaccines currently available require two shots. Pfizer’s shots are taken three weeks apart and Moderna’s four weeks apart.

The CDC on its tracking dashboard reported that California through Sunday administered 11,852 doses for every 100,000 residents. That ranks 32nd-lowest among the 50 states and Washington, D.C. Last Friday, California ranked 42nd.

Hospital systems and public health clinics have been expanding access. Sacramento County last week formally entered the first tier of Phase 1B of the rollout, giving shots to some people ages 65 and older as well as to law enforcement and emergency services workers while also continuing to vaccinate health workers in Phase 1A.

Sutter Health has begun vaccinating patients 65 and older, joining UC Davis Medical Center and Mercy Medical Group in opening up for that group.

The county’s other major health provider, Kaiser Permanente, continues to offer appointments only for those 75 and older, along with 1A health workers.

Here is the latest on vaccine distribution in the Sacramento area:

How many doses have been given across Sacramento area?

These are the totals for combined first and second doses, administered through Thursday, as reported by the state public health department, by recipient county of residence.

Sacramento: 157,052 (10,016 doses per 100,000 residents)

El Dorado: 21,982 (11,384 doses per 100,000)

Placer: 58,919 (14,714 doses per 100,000)

Yolo: 20,905 (12,159 doses per 100,000)

Sacramento remains about 15% below the statewide average, according to CDPH data, but has finally crossed the threshold of having administered one dose for every 10 residents.

It’s unclear to what extent reporting delays play a factor in county-to-county differences.

Local health offices, public clinics

Local health departments in the capital region are receiving several thousand doses of Pfizer and Moderna vaccines on a weekly basis, according to each county.

Most county health offices are splitting their direct allocations between their own county-run clinics, non-chain hospitals and other partners, including some Safeway pharmacies.

Counties in which multi-county hospital systems, such as Kaiser Permanente or Sutter Health, have little or no presence may be receiving larger direct allocations relative to their populations, which are then distributed to hospital systems that only operate in a single county.

Sacramento

Phase: 1A (front-line health workers; long-term care residents) and early stages of 1B (adults 65 and older; essential workers in some sectors)

Received directly: 138,225, updated last Friday.

Administered: 114,089 (83% of received).

Sacramento County health officials late last week shared a new online data tracker for vaccinations, which will be updated weekly on Fridays.

The county health office says the dashboard is a “work in progress” and not yet comprehensive. As of Monday, it does not include doses given prior to Jan. 1.

The county says it has administered about 81,000 doses to Sacramento County residents. Of those, about 65,000 have received one dose and about 15,800 have had both.

The county has started offering vaccine appointments at three clinics for those in eligible groups: one at the Sacramento State campus, one at California Northstate University in Elk Grove and one recently opened at Urgent Care Now in Carmichael.

Appointment information can be found via the Sacramento County website at dhs.saccounty.net.

Both the Sacramento State and Northstate sites are walk-thru clinics while Urgent Care Now is a drive-thru. All three offer only the Pfizer vaccine, which means a three-week wait for the second dose.

The county has also shared a list of partnering Safeway pharmacies that are offering clinics. Those are open for both health workers in Phase 1A and county residents at least 65 years old.

Local health officials said last week that they believe Sacramento County will be able to begin vaccinating teachers by about the end of this week.

El Dorado

Phase: 1A and first tier of 1B “with an emphasis on residents 75 and older”

Received: 24,325 doses as of Friday

Administered: “Nearly 18,000” (74% of received) as of Thursday, according to the county website.

The county is offering assistance at its libraries for seniors 75 and older who do not have internet access or who are having trouble navigating the online registration system. A flyer with details can be found here, at www.edcgov/us.

Placer

Phase: 1A; first tier of 1B “partially in progress”

Received: 26,975 first doses and 11,625 second doses, for 38,600 total, as of Jan. 31.

Administered: 11,302 total first and second doses administered as of Jan. 29, plus an estimated 4,200 last week for an estimated 40% of the received total, according to a monthly COVID-19 update.

Placer notes that it re-allocated 14,225 first doses and 6,250 second doses to numerous recipients including Tahoe Forest Hospital, Safeway pharmacies, and, during Phase 1A health worker inoculations, to Sutter Health and Kaiser Permanente. Of those not re-allocated, Placer officials say they’ve administered about 86% through last week.

Placer County recently expanded eligibility at its public health office clinic in Roseville to include “education, childcare and emergency services workers employed in Placer County,” but supply remains scarce and first-come, first-serve appointment spots fill extremely fast.

Information on county-run clinics in Placer is available at placer.ca.gov/vaccineclinics.

Yolo

Phase: 1A and early 1B, for adults 65 and older

Received: “About 14,025” total first and second doses, county spokeswoman Jenny Tan said Monday.

Administered: 7,603 first doses and 2,796 second doses for a total of 10,399 (74% of received) through last Friday, according to the county website.

Yolo on Friday formally entered Phase 1B and is offering clinics for those ages 65 and up who reside in the county.

The county is holding two public clinics later this week for Yolo residents over age 65 — one in Woodland and one in Davis — but both have had all their appointment slots filled.

More details regarding county-run clinics are available on the county website at yolocounty.org.

Hospital systems

Hospital systems operating in multiple counties receive their own allocations from the state.

Most of the earliest of these shots went to health workers, but priority is being expanded to patients in the 65-plus and 75-plus age groups.

Sutter Health has opened its appointments to those 65 or older. Patients of the health system who meet the age criteria can find booking information through Sutter’s My Health Online portal.

Sutter last week opened centers in Sacramento and Roseville to vaccinate its patients.

UC Davis Health officials told The Bee early last week that the system had vaccinated more than 22,000 people so far, including more than 11,000 employees and students plus more than 10,000 patients.

It started vaccinations for adults ages 75 and older in mid-January and according to its website is now vaccinating patients 65 and older.

Dignity Health’s Mercy Medical Group in an update on its website said it has “rapidly scaled” its vaccinations since opening pilot clinics in the Sacramento area early January, and will be giving 2,400 shots this week to patients ages 65 and older.

The provider says it will be proactively contacting patients who meet the eligibility criteria.

Kaiser Permanente continues to focus initial inoculations on those ages 75 and older due to limited supply, according to its patient website.

The provider recently began posting daily updates for Northern California including its total allocation. As of a Sunday update, Kaiser Permanente says it has received 269,500 doses from the state and given 238,911 — 89% of them — to patients.

Kaiser Permanente says it has about 693,000 members ages 65 and older living in Northern California.

“We’re starting with adults 75 and older,” the vaccination page on the provider’s website reads.

This story was originally published February 8, 2021 at 1:25 PM.

Follow More of Our Reporting on Coronavirus & Vaccines: What You Need To Know

Michael McGough
The Sacramento Bee
Michael McGough is a sports and local editor for The Sacramento Bee. He previously covered breaking news and COVID-19 for The Bee, which he joined in 2016. He is a Sacramento native and graduate of Sacramento State. 
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