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A national system to prioritize COVID-19 vaccines has largely failed as states rely on their own systems


A national system to prioritize COVID-19 vaccines has largely failed as states rely on their own systems
Aleszu Bajak and David Heath, USA TODAY
Biden says US will have enough vaccines for all adults by end of May
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Operation Warp Speed thought it had a futuristic solution to help ration COVID-19 vaccines so those most at risk would get doses first. It spent $16 million on Tiberius, a high-tech system meant to not only track the shipments of the vaccines but guide local decisions of where to send them.
Tiberius, which took Star Trek Capt. James T. Kirk s middle name, would allow “granular planning” all the way down to the doctor’s office, provide “a ZIP code-by-ZIP code view of priority populations,” and “ease the burden” on public health officials, the federal government said. ....

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COVID-19 vaccine: Distribution system fails to live up to promise


USA TODAY
Operation Warp Speed thought it had a futuristic solution to help ration COVID-19 vaccines so those most at risk would get doses first. It spent $16 million on Tiberius, a high-tech system meant to not only track the shipments of the vaccines but guide local decisions of where to send them.
Tiberius, which took Star Trek Capt. James T. Kirk s middle name, would allow “granular planning” all the way down to the doctor’s office, provide “a ZIP code-by-ZIP code view of priority populations,” and “ease the burden” on public health officials, the federal government said.
But the system hasn’t lived up to that promise. For many states, Tiberius proved either so irrelevant or so complicated that the only incentive for them to log on each week is to check the most basic of numbers: how many doses of vaccine they re getting. That has contributed to a patchy rollout, where access depends more on where you live and how internet savvy you are. ....

New York , United States , Solano County , North Carolina , San Francisco , North Carolina State University , South Carolina , Dallas County , Georgetown University , District Of Columbia , Donald Trump , Ashley Newmyer , Anthony Fauci , Los Angeles , Bela Matyas , Alex Karp , Jesse Goodman , Philip Huang , Rebecca Weintraub , Niall Brennan , Joneighs Khaldun , Jamest Kirk , Peter Thiel , Julie Swann , Bill Foster , Cory Portner ,

A national system to prioritize COVID-19 vaccines has largely failed as states rely on their own systems

A national system to prioritize COVID-19 vaccines has largely failed as states rely on their own systems
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New York , United States , Solano County , North Carolina , North Carolina State University , South Carolina , Dallas County , Georgetown University , District Of Columbia , Donald Trump , Ashley Newmyer , Anthony Fauci , Los Angeles , Jaec Hong , Bela Matyas , Alex Karp , Jesse Goodman , Philip Huang , Rebecca Weintraub , Niall Brennan , Joneighs Khaldun , Jamest Kirk , Peter Thiel , Julie Swann , Bill Foster , Cory Portner ,

Pfizer spent months working to extract sixth dose from vials as vaccine production shortfalls loomed


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Beginning in August, a half-dozen researchers at a Pfizer lab in Massachusetts sat down with vials of experimental coronavirus vaccine to learn how to transform the overfill in every vial an extra amount of liquid that is standard for injectable pharmaceuticals into a precious sixth dose.
Over the next few months, they tested dozens of different combinations of syringes and needles, drawing out vaccine and squirting it into a beaker resting on a digital scale,repeating the experiments 5 to 10 times for each.
By Jan. 6, the work paid off.
Pfizer won approval from the Food and Drug Administration to say its vials contained six doses, instead of the five the agency had approved less than a month earlier with its Dec. 11 emergency authorization of the vaccine. ....

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