Sutter, Kaiser among Bay Area suppliers affected by long delays in shipping vaccines due to storms

About 702,000 of California’s vaccine doses have been delayed due to a winter storm that affected the Midwest, Governor Gavin Newsom said on Friday.

The missing doses represent more than half the supply of 1.2 million vaccines planned for this week. The delays mainly affect modern vaccines. Newsom said he does not know when the missed doses will arrive.

In the Bay Area, the result was canceled or delayed commitments.

Sutter Health said it was rescheduling some second dose consultations of Moderna due to delays in the delivery of the storm, and also “stopped scheduling new first dose appointments” due to supply restrictions.

A spokesman for Kaiser Permanente said that shipping delays affected part of the vaccine supply and that the company was reaching out to affected patients to reschedule appointments.

Contra Costa County health services said Friday afternoon that one of its partner pharmacies is having to cancel nearly 500 first-dose appointments. County spokesman Will Harper estimated that about 1,000 doses are still in transit, but he did not know how long it would take.

Marin County Health Department spokeswoman Laine Hendricks said the county is rescheduling up to 400 vaccine appointments this week, including second-dose visits, which require a Modern vaccine. Affected people will be contacted via email with rescheduling options next week, Hendricks said. Pfizer’s second dose vaccinations and most first dose appointments will continue.

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