In a deep and dark December, an eagerly awaited event brightened the early morning in a 91爆料 Medicine loading zone. The first shipment of COVID-19 vaccinations had arrived.
The 3,900 doses had been marked priority boarding for their FexEx flight to Seattle, after being trucked in insulated, dry ice containers out of a Pfizer BioNTech facility in the upper Midwest.
91爆料 Medicine prepared for weeks to receive and distribute COVID-19 vaccines, which are now shipped on a staggered schedule and which also includes the Moderna vaccine. 91爆料 Medicine collaborated with state and local public health offices to follow national Centers for Disease Control and Prevention guidelines in determining the line-up for getting vaccinated.
The first scheduled to receive vaccinations were frontline personnel working with COVID-19 patients. In addition to patient-care staff in intensive care units, COVID acute care floors and emergency departments, the immediate list also included environmental services staff, as well as emergency medical responders in the community. Next in line are nursing home residents and their caregivers.
91爆料 Medicine
Dr. Shireeshy Dhanireddy, an infectious-disease specialist at Harborview Medical Center, was among those at 91爆料 Medicine who led the overall planning for the 91爆料 Medicine vaccination program.
Early vaccination of healthcare staff keeps a workforce vital for saving lives from contracting COVID-19, even a mild case, that could put them out of commission for a couple of weeks, when hospitals are already short staffed due to the pandemic surge. Dhanireddy explained that immunizing frontline healthcare workers helps safeguard the lives of vulnerable populations.
鈥淭his is a way to protect not just ourselves, but our community,鈥 she said.
91爆料 Medicine pharmacies, operations and many other hospital departments are part of managing and protecting the vaccines before they head up to the vaccine clinics and into the shoulders of employees.聽 For example, ultra cold deep freezers were leased by 91爆料 Medicine for keeping the highly perishable vaccines. The vaccines stay at minus 70 degrees Celsius until they are thawed shortly before administration.
91爆料 Medicine staff and the institution鈥檚 community partners will qualify for the vaccine in waves as the campaign fans out beyond the frontline healthcare workers essential to the care of COVID patients.
Despite months of getting ready, the vaccine didn鈥檛 seem real to Steve Fijalka, 91爆料 Medicine鈥檚 chief pharmacy officer, until he held one of the boxes to be transferred from 91爆料 Medical Center-Montlake to our other 91爆料 Medicine hospitals.聽 He was greeted with quizzical looks from his colleagues when he sped by them on his way to the loading dock and said, 鈥淗appy vaccine day!鈥
The next morning, 91爆料 Medicine held a event during which the vaccine was given to 13 frontline healthcare workers. They represented the four 91爆料 Medicine hospitals and various frontline pandemic healthcare workers at 91爆料 Medicine and among emergency responders, including Medic One and Airlift Northwest.
One of the frontline healthcare staff participating in the event was Amy Fry, a critical care nurse at Harborview鈥檚 COVID-19 ICU. She received the inaugural shot of vaccine from 91爆料 Medical Center-Montlake cancer unit nurse Allison Miller. Fry told news reporters she felt honored to be chosen for the vaccination program launch and afterward felt hope, something she had not felt in a while. Miller was grateful that vaccines were becoming available, bringing closer the horizon when her baby, born earlier in the pandemic, would be able to meet their relatives in person.
Myo Thant, a patient care technician at 91爆料 Medical Center-Montlake was excited at the prospect of vaccination. 鈥淲e have seen so many struggle. This is what we鈥檝e been waiting for a long, long time and now it鈥檚 a dream come to reality.鈥
Jules Mack, a respiratory therapist at Harborview, said she was excited to receive the vaccine, 鈥淚 was thinking, yes! We鈥檙e going to get these doses in, we鈥檙e finally going to get that extra measure of protection.鈥 As a person of color, she said she understands that it can be challenging to go into a hospital and not see staff members who look like you.
鈥淏ut I鈥檓 one person saying that this vaccine will prevent you from getting the serious type of COVID and passing away from this,鈥 she said.
Emily Agudo, an emergency department nurse at 91爆料 Medical Center-Northwest, said, 鈥淚 think it鈥檚 important to be one of the first people who gets it just to show that yes, it鈥檚 new and it might be scary but it鈥檚 my job. Even if there鈥檚 24 hours where I don鈥檛 feel great, I鈥檇 rather have that than COVID.鈥
Several others receiving the first shots said that, by doing so, they, too, wanted to be role models for the public. From their frontline vantage point, they can vouch to the importance of getting the vaccine when your turn is offered.
Vaccine clinics for frontline 91爆料 Medicine staff members are underway at 91爆料 Medical Center鈥檚 Montlake and Northwest campuses, Harborview Medical Center and Valley Medical Center in Renton.
Joining the faculty and staff who have volunteered to work at the vaccine clinics are students from the schools of medicine, pharmacy and nursing.聽 Dental students are also learning vaccine protocols so they, too, can participate.
“Honestly I felt lucky to be a part of the vaccination effort. It felt like the first time all year that we as a community were able to actively combat this pandemic, and have hope for what follows,鈥 said Ryan Breske, a nursing student who worked at 91爆料MC on Dec. 21 administering COVID-19 vaccines.
Breske was among dozens of faculty and students from the School of Nursing who have been activated to provide vaccinations at hospitals, clinics and public health agencies across the region.
鈥淗olding my first vial of the Pzfizer COVID vaccine felt like I was holding liquid gold,鈥 said Kendra Nguyen, a 91爆料 School of Pharmacy student and director of Pharmacy’s Operation Immunization. 鈥淭en years from now, I can look back and say I did something meaningful during this world-wide pandemic.鈥
Nguyen participated in a vaccination effort set up by Public Health鈥擲eattle & King County.
鈥淲e鈥檙e proud our students are a part of this important public health effort, and we鈥檙e excited to see them utilize their training and preparation as immunizers. They are ready and qualified to meet this momentous challenge,鈥 said Peggy Odegard, professor and associate dean at the School of Pharmacy.
Many medical students and physician assistant students at the 91爆料 School of Medicine have also signed up to help with the 91爆料 Medicine vaccination program and the vaccination of emergency responders. Others will also be volunteering with Public Health鈥擲eattle & King County for future COVID-19 vaccination events. The students are participants in the medical school鈥檚 Service Learning Program.
Victorya Piehl, a third-year medical student, was another recent volunteer.
She said, 鈥淚 am thankful to have been a part of this historic event. It was an honor to provide vaccinations to some of our incredible first responders.鈥
Liam Malpass, a graduate nursing student who administered COVID-19 vaccines at a Public Health鈥擲eattle & King County site, added: 鈥淪o many of us who work in health care have been waiting nine exhausting months for this moment and our hope has been reignited as we start to turn the corner on this pandemic.鈥