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Prince William lagging other area localities in COVID-19 vaccine administration

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This article was written 草莓传媒鈥檚 news partner聽聽and republished with permission. Sign up for聽听迟辞诲补测.

Prince William County is lagging behind nearly all other Northern Virginia localities in vaccinating residents against COVID-19, and nearly 50,000 people are on the local waitlist for their first dose.

As a result, County Executive Chris Martino told the Board of County Supervisors on Tuesday, it could be months before many area residents are vaccinated.

鈥淲e鈥檝e got quite a backlog that鈥檚 going to take us some time to work through,鈥 Martino said.

The local vaccinations are managed by the Virginia Department of Health鈥檚 Prince William Health District, which also includes the cities of Manassas and Manassas Park.聽 Citing complaints and confusion from residents regarding the vaccine process, county supervisors have peppered health district and county officials with questions and demands for additional details during their meetings both last week and this week.

As of Wednesday,聽, 42,345 doses of vaccine had been administered to residents in the health district, with 8,314 people having received the two doses that are required for the Pfizer and Moderna vaccines to be fully effective.

That translates to 9,003 doses per 100,000 residents in the health district, the next-to-lowest rate among all Northern Virginia localities, just ahead of Arlington at 8,970 doses per 100,000 residents. 聽 Prince William鈥檚 population is about 470,000, according to the U.S. Census Bureau鈥檚 2019 estimate.

Among other area localities, Fauquier County leads in per-capita vaccinations at 11,633 per 100,000 people, with Fairfax County just behind at 11,457 per 100,000. Fairfax is the state鈥檚 most populous locality, with over 1.1 million residents.

In a news briefing last month, Dr. Danny Avula, the state鈥檚 vaccination coordinator, said that localities with large health-care systems, such as Inova, could have more residents vaccinated on a per capita basis due to the number of residents who work at the facility and were vaccinated in the first phase.

Brain Misner, Prince William鈥檚 emergency management coordinator, told the supervisors Tuesday that the numbers are based on where people live, not where they received their shots.

Misner said the Prince William Health District, which has established three vaccination clinics, had聽. 聽 The remainder of the vaccines administered to residents of the health district have come primarily from health-care providers, such as Inova, Novant and Sentara, or at long-term care facilities.

Misner said that as of Monday, 48,899 people were on the waitlist for a first dose. Of those, 1,232 have been scheduled for appointments.聽 Residents age 65 and older and those under age 65 with significant underlying health conditions are eligible to聽

Misner said 8,839 people are pre-registered for their second dose, with 423 appointments scheduled.

The vaccination process became more complicated this week as CVS Pharmacy started taking appointments to administer vaccines beginning Friday. CVS selected only one location for vaccines in Prince William, Virginia鈥檚 second-most populous locality.

Misner said that decision was made at either the state or federal level with no input from local health officials.

鈥淲hat I know is that none of us chose this location and [having] only one location in the county,鈥 said Supervisor Jeanine Lawson, R-Brentsville.

About the time of Misner鈥檚 presentation to the Prince William board,聽聽that CVS鈥 original plan for Virginia consisted of just 28 locations 鈥 none of which was in Northern Virginia. The state worked with CVS to add some additional locations, targeting lower-income communities or areas where COVID-19 had been more prevalent.

However, CVS is using a different registration system than the local health department, so residents who want to try to obtain a vaccine through CVS need to聽, Avula said.聽 CVS vaccines are available only to residents age 65 and older.聽 The pharmacy plans to administer 26,000 doses a week statewide.

Supervisors Andrea Bailey, D-Potomac, and Pete Candland, R-Gainesville, asked Misner whether local organizations or houses of worship could be leveraged to better reach minority communities.

鈥淚 think as we look to expand our efforts to provide vaccines, we need to do a much better job of partnering with minority communities to identify where are those places of trust we can target to make sure we can get those vaccines out to the communities who need it,鈥 Candland said.

Misner said the problem is that the Virginia Department of Health doesn鈥檛 want to constantly move locations because of logistics.

鈥淭hey are telling us at this time in their response that they need to hold to one or two fixed sites maximum,鈥 Misner said.

The health department has operated a vaccine clinic at George Mason University鈥檚 Manassas campus since mid-January and opened clinics at Potomac Middle School in Dumfries and the Prince William school system鈥檚 Kelly Leadership Center in Independent Hill last week.

Supervisor Margaret Franklin, D-Woodbridge, said the state needs better coordination with local governments.

鈥淲e need to make sure that our state understands what鈥檚 actually happening on the ground,鈥 she said. 鈥淲e are the people on the ground actually seeing where these gaps are.鈥

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