Nebraska Hospitals Receive First Shipments of Virus Vaccine
Lincoln – Nebraska received its first shipment of the new coronavirus vaccine on Monday and expects to get more than 100,000 doses this month to treat front-line health care workers, state officials said.
Dr. Gary Anthone, Nebraska’s chief medical officer, said the initial shipments had arrived at two hospitals as of mid-morning.
“We only know that we expect to receive ... 15,600 within the next 24 to 48 hours,” Anthone said at a news conference with Gov. Pete Ricketts.
Nebraska’s distribution plan calls for the first vaccine doses to go to front-line health workers and other key professions, including meatpacking workers and teachers. Ricketts said the general public likely won’t be eligible until April.
The vaccines are set to go to eight Nebraska hospitals, which state officials have refused to identify, citing security concerns.
CHI Health Vice President of Pharmacy Mike Tiesi said its group of 14 hospitals in eastern Nebraska and western Iowa received 3,900 doses of Pfizer’s coronavirus vaccine at one of its hospitals.
The first shipment of four boxes of the vaccine arrived at CHI Health Creighton University Medical Center - Bergan Mercy hospital in Omaha on Monday morning, Tiesi said. The hospital group is still finalizing its plan to distribute the vaccine, so it wasn’t immediately clear when this week it would administer the first shots.
CHI expects to receive additional doses of the vaccine soon at its St. Elizabeth hospital in Lincoln, Tiesi said, and its St. Francis hospital in Grand Island expects to receive a shipment Tuesday.
“This is the hope we have been looking for, waiting for,” Tiesi said Monday. “I can’t wait until this gets into the hands – or the arms – of the general public later this spring.”
Officials at Bryan Health in Lincoln said they also received their first shipment and planned to start vaccinating employees later in the day.
The eight hospitals were chosen based on their ability to store Pfizer’s vaccine in extreme cold, Anthone said. They will distribute doses to nine other hospitals. Another vaccine produced by Moderna, which is expected next week pending federal approval, will go to hospitals in rural areas that don’t have that storage capability.
Shipments expected later this month have faced some delays, but Anthone said he still expects Nebraska to get 104,000 by month’s end.
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