WASHINGTON β A government watchdog agency says most states are concerned they wonβt have adequate supplies to administer COVID-19 vaccines, which are expected to start becoming available for high-priority groups in the next few weeks.
The congressional Government Accountability Office said in a report Monday that 17 states are βgreatlyβ or βcompletelyβ concerned about having adequate supplies to administer vaccines, while another 21 states said in an agency survey they were βmoderatelyβ concerned.
The federal governmentβs βOperation Warp Speedβ campaign aims to start shipping vaccines within 24 hours of an emergency use approval from the Food and Drug Administration. But thereβs concern about the final, local delivery links in getting vaccines finally into peopleβs arms, sometimes referred to as the βlast mileβ in the chain.
Initially vaccines are expected to go to health care workers, with nursing home staff and residents, and essential workers getting the next highest priority.
GAO said senior officials from six states stated they were specifically concerned about the federal governmentβs ability to supply needles given reports of shortages. Three of those states also said they were scrambling to maintain supplies of needles for flu vaccination.
The GAO report did not identify the states.