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Colorado Receives First Shipment of Pfizer Coronavirus Vaccine

AP Photo/David Zalubowski
Colorado Gov. Jared Polis, right, follows a cart bearing the state's first shipment of COVID-19 vaccine to a freezer with Patrick Belou, logisitics specialist at the laboratory for the Colorado Department of Public Health. Monday, Dec. 14, 2020.

Colorado received its first shipment of the coronavirus vaccine Monday morning, launching a months-long inoculation process that health officials hope will start to have meaningful effects on limiting transmission of the disease in the state by late spring.
A FedEx van delivered 975 doses of Pfizer’s vaccine to the Colorado Department of Public Health and Environment’s lab in east Denver. The vehicle arrived at a loading dock at 8:05 a.m. Gov. Jared Polis was on hand for the delivery, personally signing for the suitcase-sized package.

“It’s the Pfizer vaccine arriving here in Colorado to end the pandemic!” Polis called out as Preston Riley, a FedEx delivery man wearing a purple and orange uniform, rang the freight-entrance doorbell and wheeled up the cardboard box.

Even Riley shared in the celebration.

“It’s a great thing to be a part of,” Riley said through a mask with the words “FedEx strong” printed on it. “Get our country back moving again.”

Polis, who was appearing at his first in-person event since testing positive for the coronavirus on Nov. 28, said it was an “exciting day.” He also called the delivery a “powerful and emotional moment.”

He helped Patrick Belou, a logistics coordinator in the state’s lab, wheel the package down a long hallway. The two then unboxed the white tray of vials, a process that included Polis pushing a button within the container to confirm receipt for Pfizer. The pair worked together to place the vials in an ultra-cold freezer for storage.

“This vaccine, once it’s widely distributed, will end this pandemic,” Polis said, adding that he trusts the vaccine is safe because the trials included so many people. He said Coloradans should expect side effects similar to a flu shot.

The doses delivered to the state lab are to be distributed to Rose Medical Center and Saint Joseph Hospital, both of which are in Denver.

Two other vaccine shipments were delivered to UCHealth Poudre Valley Hospital in Fort Collins and Boulder Community Health on Monday morning. Health care workers at the facilities are expected to receive the first doses of the vaccine in Colorado on Monday afternoon.

Polis is scheduled to be at UCHealth Poudre Valley Hospital to witness the first doses being administered.

Health care workers will be the first recipients of Colorado’s first batch of vaccines, totaling 46,800 doses. The additional doses are all expected to arrive this week, with more deliveries on Tuesday and Wednesday. 

The vaccine must be administered in two doses over within a three-week period to be most effective, meaning the first shipment will only be enough to inoculate 23,400 people. 

Credit AP Photo/David Zalubowski
Colorado Governor Jared Polis signs for delivery of the state's first shipment of COVID-19 vaccine at the laboratory for the Colorado Department of Public Health and Environment, early Monday, Dec. 14, 2020, in Denver.

Nursing home residents and staff are also getting priority for the first doses of the vaccine, though they likely won’t start being inoculated until after Christmas, according to Brig. Gen. Scott Sherman of the Colorado National Guard, who is leading Colorado’s vaccine distribution task force.

“That program is a contract with both Walgreens and CVS in Colorado,” Sherman said. “They will receive the vaccine (and) actually schedule with the long-term care facilities to go into those facilities and start administering vaccine.”

It could be the summer of 2021 before the general public gets access to the vaccine.

A shipment of about 96,000 doses of the yet-to-be-approved Moderna vaccine is expected next week, state health officials said. The Moderna vaccine also must be  administered in two doses within three weeks to be most effective.

Scott Bookman, CDPHE’s COVID-19 incident commander, was also on hand for the delivery. He said distributing the Pfizer vaccine, which must be stored at roughly -75 degrees Celsius, is a “huge logistical operation.” He said there are ultra-cold freezers at the state lab and facilities across the state that will be used to keep the vaccine at those extreme temperatures.

(The Moderna vaccine is easier to transport and store, as it can be kept at temperatures  closer to that of a normal medical freezer, about 0 degrees Fahrenheit. Bookman said it will be much easier to manage.)

“Everybody is moving as fast as they can,” Bookman said. “Understand that this was authorized on Friday. We’re still getting more guidance as we speak.”

Bookman described the delivery as a "monumental day" and "absolutely historic," but he cautioned that Colorado still has a long road ahead battling COVID-19.

“I know people want to move fast, but we have to be careful,” he said. “This is just the beginning of a very long road. This is the gateway to the end of this pandemic.”

Bookman added: “The masks, they’re not coming off for a while. We need to be patient.”

Polis marveled at the scientific achievement of developing and distributing a vaccine in such a short amount of time.

“This is also a triumph of modern science,” Polis said. “When you think about how long it took to get prior vaccines -- like polio and others -- to market. Years, even decades, some of them. This one was done in record time.”

Polis said he hoped the milestone will inspire a “whole new generation” of young people to become scientists. “You got to witness real history today,” he said to those gathered at the state lab.

As he touted the achievement, the governor also nodded to the damage coronavirus has caused to Colorado, including the more than 3,000 who have died from the disease.

“For them, the vaccine (has) come too late,” he said. “But for others, people that will be with us for decades to come, their lives will be saved because of the vaccine that’s arrived here today.”

Asked if the arrival of the vaccine is a weight lifted off of him, Polis said yes.

“As leader, a lot of this has been on my shoulders,” he said. “But this has been on the shoulders of every Colorado family -- whether you got COVID or not, whether you personally lost somebody or not. The economic, the social impact, the psychological impact -- this has been a very tough year.”

Mark Duggan provided online production of this story for KSUT.

This story was written through a collaboration powered by COLab, the Colorado News Collaborative — a nonprofit formed to strengthen local public-service journalism in Colorado. KSUT joined this historic collaboration with more than 40 news organizations to share in-depth local reporting to better serve Coloradans.

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