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How many Covid vaccines will each US state have?

Pfizer is set to receive emergency authorisation from the FDA 

Danielle Zoellner
New York
Wednesday 09 December 2020 13:09 EST
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Biden vows 100m vaccines in first 100 days as president

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Emergency authorisation for one, or multiple, coronavirus vaccines by the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) is on the horizon, which will then launch the largest distribution initiative in US history to get all Americans vaccinated.

The vaccines that will likely be available to the public in the near future – Pfizer, Moderna, and AstraZeneca – will have a specific allotment of doses available for the first wave of distribution. It will be up to the states on how they distribute their vaccine doses, but the Centres for Disease Control and Prevention’s (CDC) initial guidance recommends for healthcare professionals and long-term care facility residents to receive the jab first.

Determining how much to distribute to each state, and then who will receive the vaccinations, will be the next challenge for officials during the pandemic.

The Trump administration created Operation Warp Speed earlier this year to assist in the manufacturing and distribution of a coronavirus vaccine to states.

Operation Warp Speed anticipated about 40 million vaccine doses will be divided out by the end of the year between Pfizer and Moderna. Initially, 6.4 million doses of the Pfizer vaccine will be made available to distribute once the company receives emergency authorisation.

States were asked to request how many initial doses they would need from Pfizer and Operation Warp Speed by Friday (December 11) based on their population and those who are in Phase 1a of vaccine allocation in the state: healthcare professionals.

Then, following the first round of distribution, Operation Warp Speed will ask companies how many doses they have available each week. States are then required to request how many they need to the federal agency by Saturday of that week, and the new vaccine doses will ship out every Monday morning, according to USA Today.

Operation Warp Speed created a software system called Tiberius that states can use to request and track their coronavirus vaccine doses. The software system was created based on what the CDC uses to track vaccines given to children across America.

So how many initial doses will each state receive? Most states have revealed how they anticipate once the companies receive emergency authorisation: 

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