Health

Oregon misses Gov. Brown’s million-booster deadline for January

By Rob Manning (OPB)
Feb. 1, 2022 2:16 p.m.

The Oregon Health Authority says the state fell well short of its January goal for booster shots.

Back in December, as the omicron variant of the coronavirus started to sweep through Oregon, Gov. Kate Brown set a goal to get COVID-19 booster shots in the arms of 1 million more people in the state by the end of January.

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That was in addition to more than 945,000 people who had already gotten boosters before Brown’s Dec. 17 announcement.

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But the state only got to 504,000 more – barely halfway to that million-booster target.

Gov. Kate Brown announces the availability of COVID-19 booster vaccines to specific populations of qualifying people in Oregon, during an online press conference, Sept. 28, 2021. In mid-December, after the omicron variant arrived in Oregon, Brown called on Oregonians to go get booster shots, with a statewide goal of a million shots given over the following month and a half. That goal was not met.

Gov. Kate Brown announces the availability of COVID-19 booster vaccines to specific populations of qualifying people in Oregon, during an online press conference, Sept. 28, 2021. In mid-December, after the omicron variant arrived in Oregon, Brown called on Oregonians to go get booster shots, with a statewide goal of a million shots given over the following month and a half. That goal was not met.

Screenshot via YouTube / OPB

Oregon’s vaccination and booster rates are higher than a lot of states. The state ranked 8th in the country for the highest rate of boosters, according to a health care website that analyzes federal data. Among fully vaccinated Oregonians, more than 48% have gotten boosters.

State health officials say that Oregonians are also “more faithful” to following COVID-19 protective measures, such as wearing masks. Officials say those steps mean the omicron peak for hospitalizations is likely to not be as bad as initially forecast.

The projected peak of COVID-19-related hospitalizations amid the current surge is now estimated to be around 1,200. Just a week ago, forecast models showed that peak could be around 1,500 hospitalizations.

State health officials say without such widespread adherence to the safety protocols, the peak could have been as high as 1,900 COVID-19-related hospitalizations.

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