One-third of US adults have received first dose of Covid-19 vaccine

Residents receive the Moderna vaccine at a community Covid-19 vaccination clinic in Maryland on March 23, 2021. PHOTO: AFP

NEW YORK (NYTIMES) - The United States vaccination campaign is accelerating rapidly, with more than 91 million people - roughly one-third of the adult population - having received at least one shot of a Covid-19 vaccination by Saturday (March 27).

And nearly every state has announced that it will meet President Joe Biden's directive to make all adults eligible by May 1.

But as at Saturday afternoon, two states - Arkansas and New York - still had not declared a timeline for their residents, according to a New York Times vaccine roll-out tracker.

A third state, Wyoming, has also not said when all adults would be able to get the shot, but eligibility in the state expands on a county-by-county basis, a spokesman for the state's Department of Health said, and 20 of the state's 23 counties now allow all adults to get vaccinated. She said she expected full access "quite soon."

In Arkansas, where a Times database shows that about 13 per cent of the population of three million has been fully vaccinated, Governor Asa Hutchinson this past week extended eligibility to military veterans who are at least 18 years old.

That decision came soon after appointments opened up for additional essential workers and adults between 16 and 64 who have some health conditions.

The state has moved to Phase 1C of its expansion, making almost one million new people eligible for the vaccine, and the state department of health anticipates opening up eligibility to all adults by early May, "if not sooner", a spokesman said.

"I want to ask everyone, when it's your turn, get a shot," Mr Hutchinson said at a news briefing this past week. "Get that shot in your arm, because it helps our entire state to completely move out of this pandemic and so we need everybody to get vaccinated."

At the news conference, Mr Hutchinson said there were parts of the state where eligible residents are still unable to book an appointment, particularly in the north-west and several urban areas. Additionally, not all inmates, who are included in the list of those already eligible, have been vaccinated, he said.

"But stay tuned," Mr Hutchinson said, adding that he expected the state to expand eligibility to all adults "in the near future".

In New York, Governor Andrew Cuomo said at a news briefing this past week that other states were setting dates based on allocation projections coming from the federal government.

But Mr Cuomo said he wanted "to make sure that the allocation projections that we're getting from the feds are right" before setting a specific date for eligibility expansion.

"I would rather get the specific allocation number and then tell the people of the state," Mr Cuomo said, "so we don't have to change advice and we don't create pandemonium for the scheduling operation."

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