When will a vaccination for COVID-19 be as easy to get as a flu shot in Florida? | Editorial

A new, FEMA-funded and staffed mass vaccination site opened on Wednesday in North Dade. And you know the one thing local residents don’t need to get vaccinated at this Miami Dade College North Campus site?

An appointment.

You don’t even need a car to have military personnel in fatigues give you a shot. Walk-ups are welcome.

We commend the BIden administration for getting the job of saving lives done — quickly, efficiently and without the political roadblocks that had marred even the feeblest federal attempts to address the COVID-19 pandemic before President Biden took office. This expansive approach is a big step in the right direction. And it raises this question: Has the time come for vaccination sites in Miami-Dade — and across the state — to adopt a less restrictive open-door policy to vaccination?

Not so fast. Still, shouldn’t that be the endgame?

“We hope that by word of mouth people realize: ‘I don’t have to wait for two to three hours,’ ” Marty Bahamonde, spokesman for the Federal Emergency Management Agency told the Miami Herald. “It’s easy.”

The federal site follows Florida vaccination rules, and Bahamonde said that includes accepting state forms signed by physicians declaring that someone under 65 eligible for a vaccine because of “extreme vulnerability.”

Elusive vaccinations

But Florida’s rules have been anything but all-embracing. Given inconsistent supplies of the vaccine, Gov. DeSantis was right to initially limit vaccinations to Florida’s vulnerable 65-and-older populations, administered by well-resourced hospitals.

But after that, local municipalities and seniors were left on their own, which resulted in the aggravating hunt for a shot, a search that favored those computer-savvy senior citizens with a lot of time, a lot of patience or a lot of assistance from a loved one — plus transportation.

And DeSantis’ photo-op announcements of lucky vaccine “lottery” winners such as Holocaust survivors and Bay of Pigs vets — both worthy groups — plus political insiders has rightly fueled accusations that he’s putting the politics of getting re-elected before public health. He is under fire for the unseemly links between hefty campaign contributions and various wealthy enclaves where vaccination sites pop up. The more he petulantly pushes back, the more Floridians have a right to ask if there’s fire, not just smoke.

New categories

DeSantis, through executive order, recently created new categories of vaccination-eligible: people under 65 deemed medically vulnerable by a physician; healthcare personnel with direct patient contact; K-12 school employees 50 years of age and older; sworn law-enforcement officers and firefighters 50 years of age and older.

Like we said, it’s heading in the right direction.

Now, it’s imperative for the state to announce a definitive — and long-term — vaccination schedule, something that has been missing since the governor sidelined the state’s health department at a time when its doctors and scientists should have been in the lead.

Who’s next? And who’s after that? Perhaps it’s time to throw out profession-based eligibility and make it based on age. It’s past time to give Floridians some peace of mind and the ability to do some planning. Maybe they can take that summer vacation they were afraid to contemplate; maybe it will be safe to send the kids back to school in the fall.

At some point soon, getting vaccinated against COVID-19 should be as easy as getting a flu shot. We’re not there yet, but with smart, strategic planning, we can be.