Tag Archives: scarcity

Alaskans are getting COVID-19 in record numbers as some treatments’ scarcity prioritizes those most at risk

Alaska is so low on its supply of certain COVID-19 treatments that only the most severely at-risk people will likely have access to them — all while unprecedented numbers of Alaskans are testing positive during the current omicron surge.

The state on Friday reported 5,508 new cases among residents and nonresidents over the previous two days. That breaks down to 2,598 cases Wednesday and 2,910 on Thursday, once again shattering records reported earlier this week.

The number of patients hospitalized with the virus rose slightly to 87, up from 80 as of Wednesday. While that’s a fraction of the record hospitalizations reported last fall, hospital administrators this week say facilities are again feeling strained by rising patient counts and staffing shortages.

[Alaska shatters COVID-19 case record as omicron adds to growing strain on hospitals]

In Anchorage, Alaska’s largest city, the case rate has more than doubled since last week, and municipal residents accounted for more than half of the new cases reported by the state health department. The Anchorage School District was reporting 1,171 currently active cases as of Friday afternoon among more than 49,000 students and employees, though the district’s dashboard doesn’t include every case tracked by the state.

Alaska reported two additional virus-related deaths Friday, involving two Anchorage residents in their 60s. Since the start of the pandemic, 955 Alaskans and 32 nonresidents in the state have died from the virus.

September and October 2021 were the deadliest months of the pandemic so far. While recent case counts have exceeded prior records, officials say there are some signs that the omicron surge may not be as severe as the delta wave in terms of hospitalizations or deaths.

Still, the omicron variant is bringing with it new challenges.

Monoclonal antibody treatments have been important in treating COVID-19 patients early, particularly those who are at high risk of severe illness, like people who are immunocompromised. But two of the three types of monoclonal antibody treatments available aren’t effective against omicron, which is putting pressure on the supply of treatments that are.

Meanwhile, a newer oral antiviral treatment is also scarce, though for different reasons, according to state pharmacist Coleman Cutchins. The oral medicine was only recently authorized as a COVID-19 treatment and there isn’t a large amount manufactured yet, he said.

Both the newness of the drug and the high demand amid surging case counts has led to its scarcity. But that likely won’t be the case for long, Cutchins said: It’s easier to ramp up production of the oral medication compared to monoclonal antibodies, which must be refrigerated when shipped and take more time to produce.

The scarcity of some treatments prompted Alaska’s crisis care committee to recommend that therapeutic treatment providers prioritize people with certain medical conditions into tiers, with those who are most at risk for getting severely ill from COVID-19 at the top.

The state’s chief medical officer, Dr. Anne Zink, said this week that it’s likely there’s only enough of both the monoclonal antibodies and the newer oral antiviral treatments for people in the first tier.

That group includes those whose immune systems won’t respond adequately to the vaccine or past infection because of underlying conditions, as well as people who aren’t current on their vaccine and are either age 75 and older, age 65 and older with risk factors or pregnant, according to the recommendations.

[Americans will be able to order free COVID-19 rapid tests starting Wednesday]

The monoclonal antibody shipments arrive in one-week cycles, with enough to supply 13 therapy sites with six doses each, a total of 78 doses, Cutchins said. Most states are getting a small allocation, given that the treatments are hard to manufacture and take a while to ramp up production.

He said the situation around treatment isn’t entirely negative: It’s likely that most vaccinated and boosted people do not need monoclonal antibodies, plus there are two new oral drugs that work against COVID-19 as well, including the omicron variant, though data is limited, according to the National Institutes of Health.

“Oral drugs are really a game changer,” he said.

The antibody infusions, which require an IV and a sterile environment, are far less convenient compared with the ease of taking an oral drug. But oral drugs currently remain scarce, though Cutchins said he expected to see more of them quickly, even in the next two weeks and even more a month from mid-January.

“As the orals become more and more available, we actually have a lot less need for monoclonals,” he said.

Jyll Green, operations manager at a state-contracted monoclonal treatment facility in Anchorage, characterized the lack of supply Thursday morning as “a pretty dire situation.”

It started the day after Christmas, when her phone’s voicemail was full by 4 p.m. They were back doing roughly 50 infusions each day, six days a week. By Thursday, Green only had 24 doses available, with six already accounted for and only a light shipment expected for the following week.

“It’s been a big ship to turn — people are used to having that safety net and something that will help them to get better and more quickly,” Green said.

As the treatment center implemented crisis standards around prioritization, Green said she’s had hundreds of conversations with people letting them know she can’t give them the treatment.

“If we had it, we would gladly give it to you,” Green said. “We’re not trying to be rude, we’d love to help everybody, but we still have to protect that highest-risk group right now.”

So far, the facility has not had to turn anyone away in the highest-risk category yet, Green said.

Daily News reporter Annie Berman contributed to this article.



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2% of Elon Musk’s wealth could solve world hunger, says director of UN food scarcity organization

Billionaires need to “step up now, on a one-time basis”, said David Beasley in an interview on CNN’s Connect the World that aired Tuesday — citing specifically the world’s two richest men, Jeff Bezos and Elon Musk.

“$6 billion to help 42 million people that are literally going to die if we don’t reach them. It’s not complicated,” he added.

A “perfect storm” of several crises, such as climate change and the Covid-19 pandemic, mean many nations are “knocking on famine’s door,” Beasley said.
Half of the population of Afghanistan — 22.8 million people — face an acute hunger crisis, according to a WFP report released Monday. Rampant unemployment and a liquidity crisis means the country is teetering on the edge of a humanitarian crisis and 3.2 million children under the age of five are at risk, the report concluded.
A series of new reports from the Biden administration issued a stark warning last week: The effects of climate change will be wide-reaching and will pose problems for every government.

Among the reports, the administration details how climate change is driving migration, the first time the US government is officially recognizing the link between climate change and migration. The WFP has warned about this swell of movement in the past, particularly in the “Dry Corridor” region in Central America.

“For example, take the United States and the region in Central America, the Dry Corridor, Guatemala, Honduras, El Salvador and Nicaragua — just down in that area alone,” said Beasley Tuesday. “We’re feeding a lot of people down there and the climate is just changing with hurricanes and flash flooding; it’s just devastating.”

In Ethiopia, the WFP estimates that 5.2 million people are in urgent need of food assistance in the Tigray region, where Prime Minister Abiy Ahmed has led a major offensive against the Tigray People’s Liberation Front (TPLF) since last year. Thousands of civilians have since been killed, while more than 2 million have been displaced.

Humanitarian organizations like the WFP have struggled to get supplies to those in need in the region, compounding the crisis.

“I don’t know where they’re getting the food from,” said Beasley in the wide-ranging interview. “We’re out of fuel. We’re out of cash, in terms of paying our people and we are running out of money and we can’t get our trucks in.”



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Global PS5, Xbox & GPU Shortage Partially Blamed On $1 Parts

Image: Sony

As we talked about last week, the global supply shortage affecting all kinds of products, from consoles to phones to cars, is down to a lack of semiconductors. More specifically, though, some of the biggest culprits is a shortage tiny parts that costs around $1.

As this Bloomberg report points out, a global shortage of display drivers and the similarly tiny and previously anonymous power management chip are two of the most specific parts in the supply chain that are holding up global production of pretty much everything that has a computer in it.

The same report also gives a pretty interesting update on just why we’re having this shortage, from a snap-back in production orders (companies thought lockdowns would create less demand for computer-related products, not more) to the fact some of these components are being made using outdated production methods to an explosion in the variety and volume of devices needing chips that previously didn’t.

While we’d expect this massive increase in demand would mean a rush of new factories and improved production capabilities, the real downer here for anyone looking for a PS5 or with a new car stuck on a dock somewhere is that the companies responsible for making components like the display driver aren’t interested in changing anything any time soon, since “existing lines are fully depreciated and fine-tuned for almost perfect yields, meaning basic display drivers can be made for less than a dollar and more advanced versions for not much more.”

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Vaccine scarcity forces Sonoma County to cancel appointments

Faced with lingering shortages of the coronavirus vaccine, Sonoma County canceled vaccinations next week for people who had signed up to get their first shots and shut down clinics scheduled to immunize teachers and others who work with children.

Instead, the county will reserve its inadequate supply of the Moderna and Pfizer-BioNTech vaccines to prioritize second doses for people who received their first shot earlier this month, a vital step that boosts immunity to the virus to roughly 95%.

The erasure of the planned clinics at Rancho Cotate High School in Rohnert Park, which were organized in conjunction with the Sonoma County Office of Education, threatens to reset the clock on the long-delayed return to school for most students in the county.

“It’s very frustrating,” said Dr. Urmila Shende, the county’s vaccine chief. “There’s nothing we can do about it.”

While the county has the infrastructure to deliver upward of 40,000 doses a week, it expects to receive only enough vaccine to administer 7,680 doses next week, roughly the same it got this week but a bit less than the 8,025 doses it received last week, Shende said.

Vaccine supplies could begin to swell next week if federal regulators approve the new Johnson & Johnson vaccine, which requires only a single shot to be effective. The Biden administration has told California it can expect to receive 380,000 Johnson & Johnson vaccines next week and Gov. Gavin Newsom said he expects the same amount each week for three weeks.

Distribution of the J&J vaccine still is contingent upon federal Food and Drug Administration and Centers for Disease Control and Prevention action, though Newsom said he is confident of the quick approval and availability.

The state, which is currently administering about 1.4 million shots a week due to constrained supplies, announced it would have the capacity to administer 3 million doses a week starting Monday.

Starting Monday, the county-by-county system used to determine eligibility for the vaccine will be replaced with a single statewide standard, the state Department of Health Services announced. All health care providers and local health jurisdictions will move to a uniform, state-directed eligibility criteria, eliminating confusion on who is eligible to receive the vaccine.

Confusion over eligibility has plagued the vaccination campaign in Sonoma County, leading to the cancellation of thousands of appointments in late January scheduled by people who qualified under the state standard but did not meet county guidelines.

But the biggest problem today is the supply of vaccine, which simply isn’t meeting public demand for immunizations or even the county’s capacity to deliver shots.

Last week, the national vaccine supply chain was disrupted by severe winter storms blanketing much of the country. Sonoma County health officials confirmed that is no longer an issue. Yet the county’s allocation from the state is stagnant at best lately. And the same is true of other counties, county vaccine site coordinator Ken Tasseff said.

Asked why the allocations are moving backward, Sonoma County Supervisor Lynda Hopkins said, “I think we really need to ask that question of the state of California.”

Representatives of the California Department of Public Health did not respond to a request for comment Friday afternoon.

Frustrated with the county’s dwindling supply of doses, Hopkins wondered aloud if the county had been diminished by Blue Shield, which has been hired by the state as the third-party administrator, or TPA, overseeing its new centralized vaccination appointment and delivery system. Blue Shield is expanding the system in three waves, initially focusing on 10 counties in Central and Southern California. Sonoma and Lake counties are in the second wave of 28 counties that will start transitioning to the new network on Monday, while Marin, Napa and Mendocino counties are in the third wave that will begin merging into the system March 7.

“For a while, we were on a very hopeful trajectory,” Hopkins said. “Then the TPA process began at the state level, the first wave rolled out, it became very clear there was a large focus on those first-wave TPA counties and suddenly our supply was either flat or declining.”

As the Blue Shield program expands, MyTurn.ca.gov will become the main source for Californians to sign up for appointments. Sonoma County residents can currently register to be notified when they become eligible or when appointments open up.

For now, Tasseff said the flow of vaccine is so tight that the county is able to fulfill its existing second-dose appointments only because Kaiser Permanente is “helping us out” with 250 doses.

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