A pill pusher helps a customer at a Walgreens pharmacy in Wheeling, Illinois.
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Walgreens said it expects to get its first measures of the Covid-19 vaccine on Dec. 21 and start giving shots to nursing home residents and staff members in the days foremost up to Christmas.
The national drugstore chain will play an instrumental role in the early rollout of the much-anticipated vaccination. Walgreens and CVS Healthfulness struck deals with the federal government to vaccinate staff and residents at long-term care facilities, which most officials have put at the top of the priority list along with health-care workers for receiving Pfizer’s and Moderna’s Covid-19 vaccines.
Pfizer’s vaccine is calculated to win emergency clearance from the Food and Drug Administration imminently, while Moderna’s approval is expected to soon arise.
The start of vaccinations at nursing homes will represent a significant milestone in the coronavirus pandemic, because long-term custody facilities have been particularly hard hit with Covid-19 outbreaks and deaths. They are typically home to older Americans who take underlying health conditions, making them more vulnerable to develop severe cases of the disease and potentially to die from it.
Rick Attendances, senior vice president of pharmacy and healthcare at Walgreens, shared the timing and more details about the rollout in an talk with with CNBC. He said he hopes the vaccinations at long-term care facilities give Americans more comfort and belief in the vaccine. For example, he said, Walgreens’ staff can learn more about the typical side effects, such as soreness closer the injection site, so they can better counsel patients and reduce anxiety or alarm.
Public education
“It’s going to also serve us from an education perspective because there are a lot saying that they may not get the vaccine,” he said. “The more we have from a hard-headed application perspective, then we can educate more broadly on the safety protocols that we’re seeing with the vaccines as effectively as we expand into larger populations.”
The vaccine’s distribution could become a hopeful inflection point during a especially dark stretch of the coronavirus pandemic. The single-day death toll from the coronavirus in the U.S. hit an all-time high on Wednesday with 3,124 cataclysms, according to CNBC’s analysis of Johns Hopkins University data. The daily death toll surpassed the number of people defeated on 9/11 and the total killed in the Pearl Harbor attack.
The Food and Drug Administration has yet to officially approve a Covid-19 vaccine, but Commissioner Stephen Hahn earlier Friday utter the agency was working “rapidly” to grant emergency use authorization for Pfizer’s vaccine, which the pharma company developed with BioNTech. On Thursday, a panel of freelance advisors recommended that the FDA grant limited clearance to the vaccine, which has proven to be 95% effective in large-scale clinical inquisitions.
That is the final hurdle before the multistep process of Covid-19 vaccines’ distribution to nursing homes can be finalized at the nation level and the vaccinations begin.
“We’re ready and certainly excited to get vaccines to start to help America pivot past this challenging control,” Gates said.
The process
States will determine how much of their initial vaccine allocation will go to health-care labourers at hospitals and how much will go to long-term care facilities.
Walgreens, which is working with FedEx to receive vaccine shipments, has delineated some of its drugstores as hubs that will keep doses in special freezers and have dry ice on hand, Gates turned. Pfizer’s vaccine, in particular, Side effects
They worry that if their entire staff is vaccinated on the anyhow day, side effects from the shot may result in numerous staff members having to take off a day or two off work, leaving the efficiency short on nurses and other workers.
Gates acknowledged those concerns and said Walgreens would adapt its charge plans if the side effects are seen in the broader population.
“Obviously, we’ll have to be flexible in how we’re going to support long-term control facilities, because they still need to service and take care of the residents of those long-term care facilities as likely,” he said.
For many other Americans, however, the wait for a vaccine will be longer.
Walgreens is not yet sure when it drive have vaccines at its drugstores to give to the general public, Gates said. He said it’s working with state stiffs to hear which people will get priority, such as essential workers and those who are immunocompromised, and identify those people during deployment.
And he knows from personal experience that some Americans are eager to claim their spot in the line. “Even-handed my mom knows what number she is in the state of Iowa right now,” he said.