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WGLT's reporting on the coronavirus pandemic, which began in McLean County in March 2020.

With Potential Vaccine Approval Looming, Pritzker Warns Of Long Process

Gov. JB Pritzker standing while wearing a mask
Eric Stock
/
WGLT
Gov. JB Pritzker said the state still expects to get 109,000 doses to be initially distributed in the 50 counties with the highest per capita death rates.

Health officials gave an update on the state’s COVID-19 vaccine plan Friday with potential federal approval anticipated as early as next week.

Gov. JB Pritzker said the state still expects to get 109,000 doses to be initially distributed in the 50 counties with the highest per capita death rates, but it will be several months until there is an adequate number of vaccine doses available for the general population.

That means it’s just as important as ever to maintain social distance, wear face coverings, avoid large gatherings and get a flu shot, according to Pritzker and Illinois Department of Public Health Director Dr. Ngozi Ezike.

The first vaccine that could be approved by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration by Dec. 10 is manufactured by the drug company Pfizer. It requires an initial dose, then another three to four weeks later. Pritzker said the first shipment could arrive in two weeks. Another vaccine from the drug company Moderna could get approval one week following the Pfizer vaccine.

The initial recipients will be health care workers and long-term care residents. Pritzker said 655,000 people in Illinois qualify as frontline health care workers – 162,000 in Chicago and 493,000 outside of Chicago. Approximately 110,000 adults statewide live in congregate care settings, he said.

After that group will be “other essential workers and persons at higher risks of severe COVID-19 illness, including persons 65 years of age and older,” according to the state’s vaccine plan. Then it will be “critical populations” as defined by the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and its Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices, or ACIP. Then the general population can receive the vaccine.

“In other words, this will not be a quick process. With the two-dose timeline, no single person will be fully vaccinated even by Christmas, and it will likely be months before people with low risk factors for COVID-19 see their first dose,” Pritzker said. “But the very fact that we have this timeline is the result of incredible private sector innovation and long standing public investment in scientific research.”

Pritzker said the first shipment, if indeed it includes 109,000 doses, would be divided into 23,000 doses directly to Chicago and 86,000 to be distributed to the rest of the state. 

It also must be kept at 70 degrees below zero Celsius, so the state has purchased 20 ultra-cold freezers, according to Ezike. She said IDPH will receive the initial shipment directly from the CDC and will store it at the strategic national stockpile site.

IDPH has identified 10 hospitals to serve as regional distribution sites to local health departments in the first 50 counties to receive the vaccine. Those hospitals will work with local hospitals to identify and vaccinate the first recipients.

Ezike also noted there is a federal partnership between Walgreens and CVS pharmacies to vaccinate long-term care residents, and all but five of the state’s long-term care facilities have signed up to be part of the program thus far. The state will work to register the final five, she said.

The Illinois Comprehensive Automated Immunization Registry Exchange is the web-based immunization record sharing application that will log the vaccination records, Ezike said.

“(The system) allows both public and private health care providers to share immunization records of Illinois residents with other physicians and public health officials statewide,” she said.

Pritzker said ACIP is considering how to best distribute the vaccine in at-risk communities, and he noted, “we also know that for many reasons, Black and brown Americans have disproportionately suffered deaths from COVID-19 in their communities.”

“ACIP is currently considering specific allocations of the vaccine before expanding to the remainder of the population, and Illinois will account for their expert recommendation in the next tiers of distribution with a focused eye on equity,” he said.

The news came as hospitalizations for COVID-19 continued to trend downward, decreasing for the fifth straight day as 5,453 people with COVID-19 were hospitalized. That put about 16.7 percent of all hospital beds in use by COVID-19 patients and left 24.4 percent available statewide.

There were 1,152 intensive care beds in use by COVID-19 patients at the end of Thursday, a decrease of 17 from the day before. That meant approximately 34.7 percent of the state’s ICU beds were in use by COVID-19 patients with 19.5 percent available.

Approximately 69.6 percent of ventilators were available as of Thursday night, with 703 in use by COVID-19 patients, an increase of 10 from the day prior.

The number of available ICU beds per region ranged from 17 in southern Illinois’ Region 5 and 20 in the Springfield area’s Region 3 on the low end to 187 in Region 11, which includes only Chicago.

The state reported another 148 COVID-19-related deaths, bringing the death toll since the pandemic began to 12,974 among 770,088 confirmed or probable cases. More than 10.9 million test results have been reported.

Regional positivity rates ranged from 11.8 percent in Region 3 to 16.8 percent in Region 7, which includes Will and Kankakee counties. The statewide seven-day average case positivity rate was 10.3 percent Friday, the 12th straight day it has hovered between 10.1 and 10.9 percent.

Counties and hospitals

Initial shipments of the COVID-19 vaccine will be distributed to 10 Regional Hospital Coordinating Centers which will then coordinate distribution to the 50 counties with the highest per capita death rates for the virus. 

The medical centers include:

  1. Rockford Memorial Hospital in Rockford; 4,875 initial doses
  2. OSF St. Francis Medical Center in Peoria; 5,850 initial doses
  3. St. John’s Hospital in Springfield; 1,950 initial doses
  4. Memorial Hospital in Belleville; 6,825 initial doses
  5. SIH Memorial Hospital in Carbondale; 2,925 initial doses
  6. Carle Foundation Hospital in Urbana; 3,900 initial doses
  7. Advocate Christ Hospital and Medical Center in Oak Lawn; 8,775 initial doses
  8. Loyola University Medical Center in Maywood; 16,575 initial doses
  9. Advocate Sherman Hospital in Elgin; 7,800 initial doses
  10. Northshore-Highland Park Hospital in Highland Park; 27,300 initial doses

The counties include:

  1. Greene
  2. Wayne
  3. Carroll
  4. Ford
  5. Mason
  6. Union
  7. Pike
  8. Clay
  9. Jefferson
  10. Clinton
  11. Whiteside
  12. Fayette
  13. Marion
  14. Monroe
  15. Cass
  16. Bureau
  17. Clark
  18. Macon
  19. Warren
  20. La Salle
  21. Williamson
  22. Richland
  23. Coles
  24. Perry
  25. Morgan
  26. Knox
  27. McDonough
  28. Shelby
  29. Suburban Cook
  30. Jasper
  31. Jersey
  32. Saline
  33. Christian
  34. Iroquois
  35. Saint Clair
  36. Dewitt
  37. Kankakee
  38. Rock Island
  39. Madison
  40. Lake
  41. Winnebago
  42. Kane
  43. Randolph
  44. DuPage
  45. Will
  46. Ogle
  47. Jo Daviess
  48. Tazewell
  49. Cumberland
  50. Stark

Capitol News Illinois is a nonprofit, nonpartisan news service covering state government and distributed to more than 400 newspapers statewide. It is funded primarily by the Illinois Press Foundation and the Robert R. McCormick Foundation.

Ryan Denham is the digital content director for WGLT.
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