Pennsylvania Health Secretary Rachel Levine and Gov. Tom Wolf on Friday issued an updated vaccination plan for the state that lays out who is eligible and when for the inoculations.
After the health care personnel and the nursing home residents and staff who are currently getting vaccines, people 75 and older, adults with high-risk health issues and frontline workers will receive the protection.
The frontline workers eligible for the vaccine in that second stage of the first phase of the rollout include first responders, correctional officers, U.S. postal service workers, grocery store workers, and transit workers.
The next stage of the vaccine rollout will cover people aged 65 to 74-years-old and people with high-risk conditions including pregnant women. Public safety workers, transportation workers, finance and banking workers, federal, state, county government workers, elected officials, and people who work in media will also be eligible for the inoculations at that point. After those groups receive vaccinations, adult members of the general public will be eligible. That should happen by early summer, according to state estimates.
“We must have patience because the amount of vaccine available to Pennsylvanians is limited,” said Levine. “It will take several months before there is vaccine available for everyone.”
The state now has 827,300 doses of two approved vaccines, Levine said, and more than 235,000 Pennsylvanians have been vaccinated to date.
Levine encouraged residents to continue following COVID-19 safety protocols such as hand washing, social distancing, avoiding crowds, and wearing a mask.
With 10,178 new reported cases, Levine said Pennsylvania is seeing the beginning of an increase in new cases because of travel over Christmas and New Years, and gatherings attended.
“We cannot let our guard down now,” said Levine. “We must follow through in our personal and collective responsibility to each other, to our community, to our commonwealth to prevent the spread of this virus.”