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San Diego's Petco Park vaccine superstation to close yet again starting Saturday - The San Diego Union-Tribune

The COVID-19 vaccine superstation near Petco Park will close yet again on Saturday due to a severe shortage of doses.

UC San Diego Health operates the superstation, and CEO Patty Maysent told The San Diego Union-Tribune that the closure will last through the weekend and into Tuesday, meaning the site will reopen on Wednesday at the earliest.

Anyone with an appointment during that time will get a message through MyChart, the health system’s electronic notification system, and will be automatically rescheduled as soon as UCSD knows more vaccine is on the way. For now, Maysent says, the plan is to shift all appointments back by four days, but the actual delay could be longer (or a bit shorter) depending on supply.

“It’s really tough,” she said. “Giving vaccine is the antidote to the worst burnout you can imagine. It’s been hard on everybody. In particular, it’s hard on patients.”

The health system has been in contact with state and county officials, searching for any doses it can get — including doses in other counties that aren’t quickly going into arms. Maysent added that on Friday, UCSD moved more than 6,000 doses from its own supply to the Petco Park site and has used more than 10,000 of its own doses to run the superstation over the past few weeks.

It will be the third closure for the superstation, which has immunized more than 119,000 San Diegans — about two out of every nine people who’ve been vaccinated in the county.

Other superstations and smaller sites scattered throughout the region will continue to operate, according to county spokesperson Mike Workman.

The closure marks an abrupt reversal from the optimism county officials projected during the weekly coronavirus briefing. COVID-19 cases and hospitalizations have continued to fall, with the county drawing closer to the return of outdoor high school sports — and, soon after, limited indoor dining and gym use.

“This is one of the first times I feel like we’re coming to you with a series of things that are generally good news,” said Supervisor Fletcher at the start of the Wednesday briefing.

That good news included an announcement that San Diegans working in emergency services; childcare and education; and food and agriculture would be eligible for a coronavirus vaccine starting Saturday.

About 500,000 people fall into these groups, from farm workers to security staff to day care providers. And while many of them will be inoculated through targeted outreach programs, the county confirmed on Thursday that soon-to-be eligible San Diegans can schedule appointments at the more than 20 vaccine sites scattered throughout the county.

But finding an appointment won’t be easy, as the closure of the Petco Park superstation underscores a frustrating fact: Vaccine demand continues to outpace supply.

The county’s current supply is prioritized for San Diegans who need their second doses, as it takes two shots of the Moderna and Pfizer vaccines to maximize immunity against the coronavirus.

According to the county’s vaccine dashboard, as of midday Friday, around 321,000 San Diegans have gotten their first shot but still need their second dose. Until they’ve gotten both shots, many of those in the newly eligible groups will have a tough time booking appointments.

The timeline for completing second doses, of course, depends on vaccine supply. It’s unclear when the county’s next batch of Moderna vaccine will arrive. On Wednesday, Fletcher said the county is lucky to know how much vaccine is coming in three days — let alone the three-week projections that President Joe Biden promised states and territories.

There’s been considerable confusion around precisely how many doses the county has on hand. On Friday, Times of San Diego reported that the county has nearly 100,000 doses available to administer and had recently received a sizable shipment of new doses. But Workman told The San Diego Union-Tribune that the county received no such shipment, and that there are already appointments for all the ‘available’ doses noted on the county’s dashboard.

In other words, that supply is spoken for.

Other local health systems are struggling, too. Scripps Health operates vaccine clinics for its own patients and operates the Del Mar Fairgrounds superstation. But it’s hard to sustain those efforts without a steady flow of vaccine, says Dr. Ghazala Sharieff, the health system’s chief medical officer for clinical excellence and experience.

“How do you plan for something when you’re not allowed to have any leftover (doses) but then you don’t know what you’re going to get the next week?” Sharieff said. “I don’t care what you’re going to give me — just give it to me ahead of time, then I can plan every day and be a little more logical.”

U-T staff writer Paul Sisson contributed reporting.

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