Hays County To Receive 1,950, Texas To Receive More Than 400,000 Doses Of Vaccine This Week

The state of Texas will receive 401,750 and Hays County will receive their unchanged 1,950 first doses of COVID-19 vaccine from the federal government for the week of Feb. 8.

Hays County has an estimated population of 230,191 with 16,474 (7.16 percent) that have received their first dose, 4,767 that have been fully vaccinated, and has an estimated 177,006 people between the ages of 16 years and older.

Texas has an estimated population of 29,0000 and has vaccinated at least 2,330,010 with their first dose and 733,287 that have been fully vaccinated.

COMPARISON – HAYS COUNTY VS. STATE OF TEXAS:
PERCENTAGE OF POPULATION VACCINATED

  POPULATION FIRST DOSE SECOND DOSE
HAYS COUNTY 230,191 OR 0.79%
16,474 OR 7.16% 4,767 OR 2.07%
STATE OF TEXAS 29,000,000 2,330,010 OR 8.03% 733,287 OR 2.53%

The Texas Department of State Health Services has instructed the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention to ship those doses to 358 providers in 135 counties across Texas.

That includes 85 hub providers that will focus on broader community vaccination efforts including the hardest hit populations and areas in exchange for a steady supply of vaccines from week to week.

An additional 273 providers will receive doses next week with a focus on those that serve older adults, such as health departments, pharmacies, federally qualified health centers, community and rural clinics, and some medical practices that specialize in care for older adults.

DSHS is encouraging providers to make accommodations for people 75 and older, who remain at the highest risk of severe disease, hospitalization, and death from COVID-19.

For example, providers could set aside a certain number of doses for older adults, serve them during special hours, help them move through vaccine clinics more quickly, or work with local partners to facilitate in-home vaccination. This does not change the groups eligible for vaccination.

In addition to the first doses mentioned above, the state is ordering 330,925 doses intended as the second dose for people first vaccinated a few weeks ago.

DSHS is working with providers to make sure that they order the number of second doses they need at the appropriate time. People should be able to return to the same provider to receive their second dose within six weeks of getting the first.

Texas providers have administered nearly 2.9 million doses of vaccine. More than 2.2 million people have received at least one dose, and nearly 670,000 have been fully vaccinated.

People are not required to be vaccinated in their county of residence, and vaccine has been administered to residents of all 254 counties.

Texas continues to vaccinate health care workers, residents of long-term care facilities, people 65 and older, and those with medical conditions that put them at greater risk of hospitalization and death from COVID-19.

The vaccine remains limited based on the capacity of the manufacturers to produce it, so it will take time for Texas to receive enough vaccine for all the people in the priority populations who want to be vaccinated.

Currently, there is not enough vaccine to supply every provider with vaccine every week. Johnson & Johnson yesterday filed with the Food and Drug Administration for emergency use authorization to distribute its single-dose vaccine. The FDA will consider that application over the next few weeks.

People can find more information on COVID-19 vaccine at dshs.texas.gov/coronavirus/immunize/vaccine.aspx.

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3 Comments

  1. How do I go about signing up to get my shots my vaccinations for the covid-19 I’m 62 years old with a lot of health issues hard problem diabetes fibromyalgia are a cholesterol hypertension

    1. If only there was a link in the story that takes you to get info on that very topic…

      I’m sorry to be “That Guy.” But at some point people need to take responsibility for themselves. If you need help navigating the links, ask family, a friend, or call the Hays County info center.

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