• Skip to primary navigation
  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar
  • Skip to footer
  • Home
  • WATCH NEWS
    • WHAT’S ON FOX
  • ABOUT
    • Meet Our Team
      • Our Journalists
      • Sales & Programming
      • Job Openings
    • Contact WSFX
      • WSFX Jobs
      • Sales & Programming
  • Welcome Home
  • Go With The Pros
  • Medically Speaking
  • Wilmington Eats
  • Unsung Heroes
    • Nominate an Unsung Hero

Fox Wilmington WSFX-TV

Wilmington, NC | Local news Weather and Sports

  • Local News
    • What’s Happening Wilmington
  • Coronavirus
  • Local Weather
  • National
  • Sports
  • Politics
    • NC Voter Information
  • Health
  • MORE…
    • Boundless: Contribute to History
    • Contests
    • Entertainment
      • What’s on TV?
    • Technology
    • Science
    • Lifestyle
    • What’s Happening Wilmington

Amid COVID-19 vaccine rollout, White House vows to ‘intervene, correct’ any inequities

March 1, 2021 By Kayla Rivas

Federal officials overseeing the country’s vaccination effort are placing a strong emphasis on an equitable and even distribution of jabs across all communities. During a White House briefing Monday, officials warned of intervening amid any inequities in the rollout.

“Should certain vaccines go consistently to certain communities, we will be able to intervene, we’re here to provide support and technical assistance to pivot and intervene and correct, if and when needed,” Dr. Marcella Nunez-Smith, COVID-19 equity task force chair, said during the briefing.

A reporter questioned what that intervention would look like. 

CLICK HERE FOR FULL CORONAVIRUS COVERAGE

Jeff Zients, COVID-19 response coordinator, said actions would include communicating and insisting standards, followed by technical assistance.

“If we were to see that vaccines were going to certain communities we will take action, as Dr. Nunez-Smith said, to ensure supply is distributed evenly, and first actions would include, obviously the communication of our standards and our insistence that people adhere to the standards, and then we would begin by providing technical assistance to the state or other providers,” Zients said.

‘KEEP AN EYE’ ON NEW YORK CORONAVIRUS VARIANT, FAUCI WARNS

Nunez-Smith said officials are tracking vaccinations by metrics like zipcodes and a social vulnerability index compiled by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. 

However only 54% of the data on race and ethnicity on people who received at least one COVID-19 vaccination is available, and of that data, 65% of vaccines among some 27.4 million people went to white individuals, while Hispanic and Black populations received 8.6% and 6.7% of the share, respectively.

Meanwhile, of available data for 13.5 million people, 67% of White individuals have been fully vaccinated, in sharp contrast to 7.5% among Hispanic populations, and 6.1% among Black populations. Just over half of the race and ethnicity data is available on two-dose recipients.

GET THE FOX NEWS APP

“We’re absolutely 100 percent committed to equitable vaccine access,” Nunez-Smith said during the briefing. “We know that we still have a challenge in terms of data, the data quality are not exactly where we’d like them to be as far as race/ethnicity, but even the data that we have do suggest this pattern.”

She said the team is already working closely with states to provide technical assistance where needed. Officials expect an even distribution for all three COVID-19 vaccines, including the vaccine developed by Johnson & Johnson that saw emergency approval and a final nod from the CDC over the weekend.

Filed Under: Health

Primary Sidebar

 

Follow Us On Facebook



TRENDING NOW

Here’s your chance to give back on #GivingTuesday

Bill seeks to end pistol purchase permits from NC sheriffs

Nevada woman, 18, ‘improving slowly’ from seizures, brain clots after J&J vaccine

TikTok’s ‘twisted bacon’ trend supposedly makes the ‘crispiest and chewiest’ bacon

St. Louis gun owner Mark McCloskey, who confronted protesters in front of home, may seek US Senate seat

St. Louis gun owner Mark McCloskey, who defended home from protesters, may seek US Senate seat

Footer

PUBLIC FILE INFO

Individuals with disabilities who have questions about the content of our public file or website may contact Connie Petway by phone at
(910) 343-8826 or by email at Isabella.gano@foxwilmington.com

 
 » WSFX FCC Public File
»EEO Report
»Closed Captioning

 

  • Home
  • WATCH NEWS
    • WHAT’S ON FOX
  • ABOUT
    • Meet Our Team
      • Our Journalists
      • Sales & Programming
      • Job Openings
    • Contact WSFX
      • WSFX Jobs
      • Sales & Programming
  • Welcome Home
  • Go With The Pros
  • Medically Speaking
  • Wilmington Eats
  • Unsung Heroes
    • Nominate an Unsung Hero

 

  • Local News
    • What’s Happening Wilmington
  • Coronavirus
  • Local Weather
  • National
  • Sports
  • Politics
    • NC Voter Information
  • Health
  • MORE…
    • Boundless: Contribute to History
    • Contests
    • Entertainment
      • What’s on TV?
    • Technology
    • Science
    • Lifestyle
    • What’s Happening Wilmington

Copyright © 2021 · American Spirit Media LLC · WSFX TV · Wilmington NC · Terms of Service · Privacy Policy