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Everyone 65 And Older Next In Line For Vaccine In Wisconsin

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Wisconsinites over 65 will now be eligible to get the COVID-19 vaccine, joining health care workers, those in long-term care facilities, and police and fire personnel.

Updated 5:29 p.m.

Everyone over age 65 in Wisconsin will be eligible for the COVID-19 vaccine starting Monday but it could take a couple of months to inoculate the entire group of 700,000 people, state health officials said.

The department cautioned that the speed of vaccinations depends on how much vaccine the federal government sends. Wisconsin receives about 70,000 doses of first-dose vaccine each week; at that pace, it could take two months to vaccinate the next group.

READ: Wisconsin Vaccine Plan Excludes Grocery Workers

“That’s going to pose a real scale-up challenge to those of us administering the vaccine," said Dr. John Raymond, head of the Medical College of Wisconsin.

Julie Willems Van Dijk, deputy secretary of the state Department of Health Services, urged people over age 65 to be patient and check the websites of the clinics where they typically get the flu vaccine to see when they can be vaccinated against COVID-19. They may also be contacted by a health care provider to schedule an appointment.

“It’s going to take a week or two to really get rolling on this," Van Dijk said. "People will get their vaccine. Not tomorrow, but sometime in the next month or two.”

Beginning next week, the Milwaukee Health Department is increasing vaccinations at its Wisconsin Center hub to 7 days a week, and may have availability for older adults. In a media briefing Tuesday, Interim Health Commissioner Marlaina Jackson said city residents 65 and up can go to healthyMKE.com to register. 

"We plan to request close to 5,000 doses for next week, so our goal is to continue to ramp up and expand," Jackson said. 

There are more than 1,200 vaccination providers registered to deliver the vaccine in Wisconsin, including nine mobile clinics staffed by the Wisconsin National Guard. Leaders of the Wisconsin Hospital Association and Pharmacy Society of Wisconsin on Tuesday praised making the vaccine eligible to everyone over 65 and pledged to do all they can to vaccinate people quickly.

Also eligible for vaccinations are front-line health care workers, those in long-term care facilities, police and fire personnel. People over 65 may get vaccinated sooner if their provider has already inoculated those in the previously eligible population, the health department said.

Vaccinating everyone over 65 is in line with federal guidelines, but breaks with a state panel's recommendations last week that the next group include those over age 70 along with teachers, child care workers, mink farmers, prisoners and others who live in congregate settings. The state health department said the full scope of those included in the next round of vaccinations will be determined this week.

“Older adults have been hardest hit by the COVID-19 pandemic, and prioritizing this population will help save lives,” said Wisconsin's top health official Andrea Palm, who was resigning Wednesday to become the deputy secretary at the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services.

Palm and Gov. Tony Evers' administration has been criticized by Republican lawmakers, who say the rollout is unorganized, slow and too bureaucratic.

As of Tuesday, the vaccine had been administered to 248,185 people in Wisconsin, the state health department reported.

Raymond, the head of the Medical College of Wisconsin, said he believes the state is “doing fine” with its vaccine rollout. Speaking at a virtual meeting of the Rotary Club of Milwaukee, Raymond said the difference between Wisconsin’s vaccination rate (2.6%) and the national rate (3.2%) is “immaterial.”

Evers has repeatedly argued that the state is limited by its supply of vaccine from the federal government, while urging President Donald Trump's administration to send more doses.

President-elect Joe Biden has pledged to send 100 million doses of the vaccine in his first 100 days in office.

To date, the coronavirus has killed 5,512 people in Wisconsin and more than 524,000 have tested positive. The seven-day average of new cases was 1,895, continuing a generally downward trend since a peak in mid-November.

Evers on Tuesday also extended the statewide mask mandate — which took effect in August — for an additional two months until March 20. The Wisconsin Supreme Court is weighing a challenge to the mask order brought by Jere Fabick, a major Republican donor.

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