WV: 81% of Available Vaccines Distributed, Decade of Bad Luck Helped Steel It To Fight Covid
- 'How West Virginia's decade of bad luck steeled it to fight Covid.' By Zack Harold in Charleston, The Guardian, Feb. 10, 2021. From a 100-year flood to a chemical leak, the state has approached its challenges the same way and now that method has helped to distribute 81% of available vaccines
Its usually bad when West Virginia makes headlines. The state has a long, sad history of severe poverty, bad health outcomes, political corruption and disasters both natural and manmade. But by mid-January, some very good news started coming from West Virginia: somehow the Mountain state was putting 81% of its available vaccines into the biceps of its citizens while bigger states struggled to distribute even half of their available vaccines.
As national media descended on the state to figure out why, much of the reporting focused on the states decision to distribute vaccines through local pharmacies, bucking the federal plan to use the national chains CVS and Walgreens. That isnt the whole story of West Virginias vaccine triumph, however. The states path to success started long before there was a thing called Covid-19, much less a vaccine to fight it, and was grounded in the states unique response to a series of tragic disasters. One that may be hard to replicate.
In March 2020, as Covid-19 cases crept higher, West Virginias governor, Jim Justice, established a joint interagency taskforce to oversee the states pandemic response. Its a simple idea borrowed from the world of military strategy: bring anyone involved in an operation to the same table, so everyone can share information and coordinate their efforts. This particular taskforce would be made up of federal, state and local government agencies, the West Virginia national guard, and groups representing hospitals, pharmacies and nursing homes. We took the construct of what the military does in operations, mission planning, and we applied it with our public health partners. We operationalized a public health emergency, said Maj Gen James Hoyer, who serves as director of the Covid taskforce.
Hoyer, who recently retired from the military after 40 years in uniform, has participated in several joint interagency taskforces during that time, because West Virginia has suffered an extraordinary run of bad luck over the last decade. In June 2012, a violent windstorm ripped through the state, cutting off electricity to more than 680,000 residents almost a third of the states population and killing three people. In October of the same year, an Arctic cold front collided with remnants of Hurricane Sandy, dumping feet of heavy, wet snow on West Virginia, again knocking out power to thousands of residents and killing seven West Virginians...
More, https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2021/feb/10/west-virginia-covid-vaccines-taskforce
- Vaccination center in West Virginia.