State’s New Mass Vaccination Sites Help Seniors Get Access Quicker

County health departments are administering vaccinations to West Virginians who are 80 years or older across the state this week. Mercer County hosted one of several mass vaccination clinics on Thursday, January 7, 2021.

Eighty-nine year-old Dan Hall from Oakvale in Mercer County sat in his vehicle this week waiting to get his first dose of the COVID-19 vaccine. He says his wife got the vaccine on Monday.

He joined dozens of Southern West Virginia seniors who are eager to receive vaccinations at a host of new clinics now set up across the state.

“She was the last one,” Hall said. “She got it over at the health center so I thought I better go get my mine now.”

Jessica Lilly
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Eighty-nine year-old Dan Hall of Oakvale, WV waited to be vaccinated on January 7, 2021 in Mercer County.

Mercer County Sheriff’s Deputies directed traffic. People in white hazmat suits carrying clipboards took information before phlebotomy students and health officials administered the vaccine. Interim health department Administrator Brenda Donithan says the day went smoother than vaccination efforts on Monday when many folks got turned away after sitting in unorganized lines.

“We learned that we needed a bigger place to have these,” Donithan said. “Also, the traffic control was the biggest problem we had.”

Jessica Lilly
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Mercer County Sheriff Deputy directing traffic during vaccination clinic for 80 year-olds and older on January 7, 2021.

Counties are notified via a daily call with state health officials and updated on the amount of vaccines that they will receive. The vaccines are delivered by the National Guard. Residents are encouraged to look for more specific information from their county health departments about upcoming mass vaccinations events.

More information is available on the website of the West Virginia Department of Health and Human Resources COVID-19 vaccine web page.

Gov. Jim Justice announced the start Wednesday of a new vaccine rollout plan aimed at the state’s senior population called Save Our Wisdom, or SOW.

Jessica Lilly
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Mercer County Health Department set up a mass vaccination clinic at the Brushfork Armory on Thursday, January 7.

Morgantown Nursing Home Receives First Wave Of Vaccines

Sundale Nursing Home in Morgantown was the site of one of the first COVID-19 outbreaks in the state in March, where more than 50 residents and staff were infected in the early days of the pandemic.

West Virginia Governor Jim Justice this week reported that the Morgantown facility has been one of the first rehabilitation and long term care facilities in the state to receive doses of the Pfizer vaccine.

Michael Hicks, Sundale’s CEO, reports the facility held vaccinations Tuesday and again Friday.

“We’ve now vaccinated over 80 percent, I think it’s close to 85 percent of the residents we have here at Sundale.”

Had the state followed the federal government’s guidelines, the facility wouldn’t have started delivering vaccines until next week.

While the state continued its nursing home vaccine plan, U.S.Sen. Joe Manchin questioned why veterans were not included in the early roll out of people at risk. Justice said that the Veterans Administration is in the federal plan, but would be 100 percent supportive of including veterans in the vaccination rollout.

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