TheΒ Pima County Health DepartmentΒ released a plan Tuesday that will eventually include vaccinating up to 12,200 people per day against COVID-19 and could be expanded to more than 16,000 per day in the near future.
Near the end of this week, the county plans to begin vaccinating the first portion of the β1Bβ population, which includes people ages 75 and up who are living at home, as well as law enforcement officers and firefighters, and teachers and child-care workers.
The number of people being targeted in this next phase ranges from 275,000 to 325,000.
Pima County healthcare workers get the COVID-19 vaccine at a drive-through clinic at Banner University Medicine in Tucson on Dec. 17, 2020. The other vaccination site is Tucson Medical Center. Video by Rebecca Sasnett / Arizona Daily Star
Pima County residents who want to get vaccinated here need to register through a site administered by the county Health Department, not through the stateβsΒ Department of Health ServicesΒ site.
The county is testing its registration system now and plans to activate parts of it by the end of the day Wednesday, Jan. 13. Registration for the countyβs system can be found atΒ www.pima.gov/covid19vaccine,Β including three registration links that will be made live today, likely toward the end of the day.
βIf you want to get vaccinated for COVID-19, you will be. It will take time to work through the prioritization plan, and there have been and will be frustrations with the system,β said Mark Evans, director of communications for the county.
βBut we are confident that by the end of June, everyone who wants a COVID-19 vaccination will have received one,β he said.
In the meantime, there are several problems the county is trying to address.
One is that there isnβt enough vaccine currently available to meet the countyβs long-range goals,Β County Administrator Chuck HuckelberryΒ wrote Tuesday, Jan. 12, in a memo to the Board of Supervisors.
However, the county is supposed to start getting a weekly allotment, currently 12,000 doses a week, and that amount is expected to increase over time, Evans said.
Another challenge is getting people registered without having systems crash.
Registration in other parts of the state and country have been delayed when too many people try to register at once, and so Evans said officials are working on building durability into the systems here to avoid crashes.
βItβs difficult to duplicate having hundreds or perhaps thousands of people try to access the system at the same time,β he said. βWeβre doing everything we can to make sure the registration systems can handle the demand.β
Another issue is funding. The county will need to pay upfront for the vaccination effort out of its general funds, saidΒ Supervisor Sharon Bronson.Β There is currently no federal or state money thatβs been made available even though there is money earmarked for these efforts, Bronson said.
The federalΒ Consolidated Appropriation ActΒ of 2021 recently allocated $66 million to Arizona for the vaccination process and $419 million has been sent to Arizona for testing.
βThese amounts should be appropriately and proportionately passed through the state to local county public health agencies who are incurring both vaccination and testing costs at a pace that is now the highest since the COVID-19 pandemic began,β Huckelberry wrote. βWhen and how these funds will be distributed remains a mystery at this point in time.β
C.J. Karamargin, director of communication forΒ Gov. Doug Ducey,Β did not specify when the money will be released to the stateβs 15 counties.
βVaccination is our top priority and requires the efforts of both the state and counties,β Karamargin said. βWe will be assessing vaccination efforts across the state and ways to support and expand vaccination options using the new funding.β
Without the funds disbursed, and with βno plan at the state or federal level,β Bronson said, βthat makes it very difficult for us in the 15 counties in Arizona tasked with delivering this (vaccine).β
Currently, the focus is still on immunizations for health-care workers and assisted-living facilities as part of phase β1A.β
βThe most immediate way to reduce the present overtaxing of hospital capacity is to quickly vaccinate those individuals 75 years of age or older since they are the ones most likely to require hospitalization and intensive care if infected,β Huckelberry wrote.
People in that age group will be prioritized, he wrote, and ideally they will receive their vaccine at sites that are within, near or adjacent to full service medical facilities so they can get help quickly if they have a reaction.
With this in mind, Huckelberry wrote,Β Banner-University Medical Center Tucson,Β Tucson Medical CenterΒ andΒ Kino Sports ComplexΒ will prioritize vaccinating those 75 and older.
The plan so far also includes teachers and child-care workers getting their vaccinations at theΒ University of ArizonaΒ site thatβs being established, and theΒ Tucson Convention CenterΒ will be used for people who work in law enforcement and as firefighters.
TheΒ Rillito RacetrackΒ site, which has also been discussed by the county as a mass vaccination site, will likely be used for the balance of the 1B rollout, including essential workers.
Evans said it doesnβt matter how far in advance people sign up, and that in a few weeks county officials hope to have same-day appointments available. None of the vaccination sites will be open for 24 hours a day. There will be specific hours at each of the sites, Evans said.
Photos: Pima County health-care workers get COVID-19 vaccine
TMC workers get COVID-19 vaccine
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Clifford Daigler, registered nurse, receives a Pfizer COVID-19 vaccine at Tucson Medical Center, 5301 E. Grant Rd., in Tucson, Ariz. on Dec. 17, 2020. TMC administered 1,100 total vaccines between their two clinic sites in the first day of vaccinations, said Claudia Koreny, director of pharmacy for TMC.Β
TMC workers get COVID-19 vaccine
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Carolyn Salazar, registered nurse and certified COVID-19 vaccinator, prepares a COVID-19 vaccine at Tucson Medical Center, 5301 E. Grant Rd., in Tucson, Ariz. on Dec. 17, 2020.Β
UMC workers get COVID-19 vaccine
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Melissa Zukowski, medical director of emergency department at Banner-University Medicine Tucson, receives the Pfizer COVID-19 vaccine at Banner-University Medicine North, 3838 N. Campbell Ave., in Tucson, Ariz. on Dec. 17, 2020.
UMC workers get COVID-19 vaccine
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After receiving the COVID-19 vaccine, Melissa Zukowski, medical director of emergency department at Banner-University Medicine Tucson, gives a thumbs-ups to her daughter Sophia Smallwood, left, at Banner-University Medicine North, 3838 N. Campbell Ave., in Tucson, Ariz. on Dec. 17, 2020.
TMC workers get COVID-19 vaccine
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Pamela Aronson, registered nurse and certified COVID-19 vaccinator, administers a COVID-19 vaccine at Tucson Medical Center, 5301 E. Grant Rd., in Tucson, Ariz. on Dec. 17, 2020.Β
UMC workers get COVID-19 vaccine
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Iris Delfakis, oncology nurse navigator for Arizona Cancer Center, looks to other nurses as she waits to receive the Pfizer COVID-19 vaccine by registered nurse Cristina Torres at Banner-University Medicine North, 3838 N. Campbell Ave., in Tucson, Ariz. on Dec. 17, 2020. The first round of Pfizer's COVID-19 vaccines are given in Pima County to healthcare workers at Banner-University Medical Center and Tucson Medical Center. "I am way excited and I really believe in the science," said Delfakis. It was like a poke and that was it, added Delfakis.
UMC workers get COVID-19 vaccine
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Amy DeCamp, center, pediatric nurse navigator, talks to Iris Delfakis, oncology nurse navigator for Arizona Cancer Center, about Delfakis's COVID-19 vaccine card after Delfakis received the first Pfizer COVID-19 vaccine in Pima County at Banner-University Medicine North, 3838 N. Campbell Ave., in Tucson, Ariz. on Dec. 17, 2020.
TMC workers get COVID-19 vaccine
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Pamela Aronson, right, registered nurse and certified COVID-19 vaccinator, administers a COVID-19 vaccine to Kurt Drezdon, registered nurse, at Tucson Medical Center, 5301 E. Grant Rd., in Tucson, Ariz. on Dec. 17, 2020.Β
UMC workers get COVID-19 vaccine
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Registered nurse Cristina Torres, prepares critical care doctor and ICU medical director of Banner-University Medical Christian Bime's arm before administering the Pfizer COVID-19 vaccine in Pima County at Banner-University Medicine North, 3838 N. Campbell Ave., in Tucson, Ariz. on Dec. 17, 2020.
UMC workers get COVID-19 vaccine
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Amy DeCamp, pediatric nurse navigator, shows the Pfizer COVID-19 vaccine at Banner-University Medicine North, 3838 N. Campbell Ave., in Tucson, Ariz. on Dec. 17, 2020.
UMC workers get COVID-19 vaccine
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Steve Patalsky, left, associate director of pediatric bone-marrow transplant, goes over information about the COVID-19 vaccine with Sayea Jenabzadeh, nurse anesthetist, inside the COVID-19 vaccine observation stage at Banner-University Medicine North, 3838 N. Campbell Ave., in Tucson, Ariz. on Dec. 17, 2020.
TMC workers get COVID-19 vaccine
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Mary Couzens, left, registered nurse in the outpatient hospice unit, gets instructions about where to go for her vaccine from Flo Personeus, registered nurse, at Tucson Medical Center, 5301 E. Grant Rd., in Tucson, Ariz. on Dec. 17, 2020.Β "I was nervous at first but I did some research and the benefits out way the risks," said Mary Couzens, outpatient hospice unit registered nurse.
TMC workers get COVID-19 vaccine
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Amy Lopez, left, registered nurse in peri-operative service, and her husband Dr. Mike Lopez, anesthesiologist, talk while waiting for their 15 minutes observation period after receiving their COVID-19 vaccine at Tucson Medical Center, 5301 E. Grant Rd., in Tucson, Ariz. on Dec. 17, 2020. "It felt like a normal shot," said Amy Lopez. When asked if they were nervous, Dr. Mike Lopez answered "I was ready to be patient one."
TMC workers get COVID-19 vaccine
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Tucson Medical Center healthcare workers wait for 15 minutes after receiving their COVID-19 vaccine at Tucson Medical Center, 5301 E. Grant Rd., in Tucson, Ariz. on Dec. 17, 2020. After receiving the vaccine, healthcare workers were required to wait 15 minutes to make sure they didn't have any reactions to the vaccine.
TMC workers get COVID-19 vaccine
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Clifford Daigler, left, registered nurse, laughs behind his mask with Pamela Aronson, registered nurse and certified COVID-19 vaccinator, after receiving a Pfizer COVID-19 vaccine at Tucson Medical Center, 5301 E. Grant Rd., in Tucson, Ariz. on Dec. 17, 2020.Β
TMC workers get COVID-19 vaccine
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Samantha Penn, pharmacist, waits in line with other healthcare workers while people get checked-in for their COVID-19 vaccination appointments at Tucson Medical Center, 5301 E. Grant Rd., in Tucson, Ariz. on Dec. 17, 2020.Β



