Health

OHA looks to distribute surplus COVID-19 vaccine doses before it’s too late

By Tiffany Eckert (KLCC)
March 10, 2022 5:25 p.m.

The Oregon Health Authority said the state currently has over 700,000 viable doses which they hope to get to vaccine providers around the state and into people’s arms.

With demand for COVID-19 vaccine beginning to wane across the state, the Oregon Health Authority is working to distribute the significant amount of vaccine still on hand—before it goes to waste.

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A row of vials containing doses of a COVID-19 vaccine.

The Oregon Health Authority says it currently has over 700,000 viable doses which they hope to get to vaccine providers around the state.

Courtesy of CDC / KLCC

Remember when people were cutting in line, desperate to get vaccinated? Now, a drop in demand for the shot has led to a surplus in inventory. OHA spokesman Johnathan Modie said the agency hopes to get the roughly 700,000 viable doses to vaccine providers around the state.

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“We anticipate Oregon will be left with excess inventory,” he said, “but we believe we have done everything we can to minimize waste.”

Modie said the total number of doses wasted, spoiled or expired since vaccine rollout began is under 700,000. He insists demand for vaccine is not over. With the lifting of masking requirements on March 14, there are many who will be interested in the protection against serious illness that the vaccination affords.

At this point in the pandemic, 68% of Oregonians are fully vaccinated against COVID-19. That’s slightly higher than the national average of 65%.

Modie said there are many explanations for vaccine “wastage” including shipping mishaps, refrigeration fluctuations, breakage along with expiration. And, he added Johnson & Johnson and Pfizer vaccines have had their expiration dates extended which cuts down on waste.

The percentage of wasted doses in neighboring California is only about 1.8%, but in a state that has received 84 million doses and administered more than 71 million of them, that equates to roughly 1.4 million doses. Providers there are asked to keep doses until they expire, then properly dispose of them, the California Department of Public Health said.

The problem is not unique to the U.S. More than a million doses of the Russian Sputnik vaccine expired this week in Guatemala, because nobody wanted to take the shot.

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