State to open COVID-19 vaccines to all residents 16 and older April 19
Pennsylvania expects to meet the April 19 federal deadline to make all residents 16 and older eligible to register for a COVID-19 vaccine, the state Health Department said Wednesday.
Acting Health Secretary Alison Beam also said more people from the stateĢƵ 1B eligibility list, including police, firefighters and grocery store workers, were to be immediately able to schedule an appointment for a vaccine.
“We are making progress,” Beam said Wednesday during a virtual briefing on the stateĢƵ response to the virus.
The state will move April 12 into the 1C eligibility list, which includes members of the media and elected officials.
State Rep. Tim O’Neal, R-South Strabane Township, said Washington County will meet the challenge to make vaccination clinics available within five miles of all residents, as was promised Monday by President Joe Biden.
O’Neal, a member of the stateĢƵ Vaccine Task Force, said the existing vaccine providers will spread the clinics out as more vaccine doses are supplied to the state.
The providers include Centerville Clinics, Washington Health System, Mon Valley Hospital, Cornerstone Care and Canonsburg Hospital.
“I think we’ve done a ton of improvements,” O’Neal said Wednesday. “I’m honored to be part of the solution.”
Another major challenge in the vaccine effort involves convincing some people that they are safe and a vital piece of efforts to contain COVID-19, Beam said.
Washington County Commission Chairwoman Diana Irey Vaughan said about 20% of the residents of senior high rises in the county didn’t want a vaccine.
The county also offered a half-day off to its employees if they showed proof of a vaccination as an incentive to get the shots, Irey Vaughan said.
“ItĢƵ working,” she said.
The increase in vaccines comes at a time when new cases of the virus and related hospitalizations continued to rise in Pennsylvania and many other states.
Allegheny County Health Director Dr. Debra Bogen reported a new surge in cases Wednesday, averaging about 400 a day, numbers that were similar to mid-January.
Bogen said many people have recently been ignoring mask-wearing and social-distancing orders. One spike linked to a large party for young children unrelated to their school resulted in the closing of an elementary school, Bogen said.
Pennsylvania announced 4,557 new cases of the virus Wednesday, taking the statewide total since March 2020 to 1,024,857.
The virus has killed 25,093 Pennsylvanians after 44 new deaths were reported, including two in Fayette County and one in Washington County.
Washington County reported 84 new cases, taking its cumulative total to 15,114. Fayette added 42 new cases to its total of 11,216. GreeneĢƵ case-count grew by 11 to 2,865.