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Queen’s Hospital does mock vaccine arrival drill

Hawai‘i’s hospitals and healthcare systems, in close coordination with the Hawai‘i Department of Health, are gearing up to ensure that they are prepared for the arrival and distribution of COVID-19 vaccines.

The State Department of Health in a release said that this week, the Queen’s Medical Center coordinated acceptance of a mock shipment of the Pfizer/BioNTech COVID-19 vaccine. This shipping drill will allow Queen’s staff to prepare pharmacy and medical staff for acceptance and storage of the vaccine, upon FDA Emergency Use Authorization (EUA).

The shipping drill included a thermal container, which is how the vaccine will be shipped upon EUA approval. Further drills are expected in the coming days.  The Pfizer/BioNTech vaccine must be shipped and stored at -90 degrees Fahrenheit, a challenge that the vaccine makers have said they’re ready for.

“My colleagues across the state have put their lives on the line in order to care for Hawaii’s COVID-19 patients,” said Kelley Withy, MD, MS, PhD, Director, Hawaii/Pacific Basin Area Health Education Education Center. “As a clinical trial participant, I feel confident in the vaccine safety protocols. They’ve given this vaccine to 43,000 people and nobody has had a serious side effect, only mild headaches and fatigue. I believe the Emergency Use Authorization of COVID-19 vaccines will be a huge step forward in preventing further infection, saving the lives of those most vulnerable to the virus and protecting our healthcare workers.”

Dr. Withy received the COVID-19 vaccine as part of the extensive clinical trials that both pharmaceutical companies that are applying for U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) Emergency Use Authorization, Pfizer and Moderna, are conducting. She is also a member of the Hawaiʻi Emergency Management Agency (HIEMA) Emergency team.

The FDA is working on Emergency Use Authorization requests from Pfizer and Moderna.  The agency will meet Dec. 10 regarding the Pfizer vaccine, and Dec. 18 regarding the Moderna vaccine.

Images courtesy State Department of Health.

 

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