A long-delayed federal education campaign aimed at encouraging Americans to take the COVID-19 vaccine is set to launch in January.
Author: Elizabeth Weise, USA TODAY
States were left scrambling after finding out they’d get 20-40% less vaccine than they expected. Here’s why.
After some confusion, the source of the problem was clarified Friday night: States were given estimates based on vaccine doses produced, not those that had been OK’d.
Role-playing, planning for earthquakes, mass training: US health care centers prep for arrival of COVID-19 vaccine
The first doses of Pfizer’s FDA-authorized COVID-19 vaccine will be injected into the arms of health care workers in all 50 states beginning Monday.
Trading COVID-19 vaccines. Regular deliveries. Tracking doses. What we know about Operation Warp Speed distribution process.
Operation Warp Speed, the White House COVID-19 initiative, plans to only ship half of all vaccine available each week.
Getting a vaccine has been a huge undertaking. How all 50 states scramble to dole them out is the next massive challenge.
A USA TODAY survey finds most states are ready to distribute a coronavirus vaccine to health care workers but maybe not all who are next in line.
First responders? Long-term care patients? CDC committee considering who’s in group ‘1a’ for COVID-19 vaccine.
Front-line health care workers are clearly first in line for a COVID-19 vaccine. Then there’s the question of who else should be in the initial group.
How long could it take for COVID-19 vaccine to be authorized? FDA Commissioner Stephen Hahn answers common questions
Food and Drug Administration Commissioner Dr. Stephen Hahn discussed the vaccine approval process and how the FDA will evaluate immunization safety.
A ‘Herculean’ effort: States finalize their COVID-19 vaccine distribution plans
State public health departments say they’re ready to leap into action as soon as a COVID-19 vaccine is approved but caution much is still unknown.
Thanksgiving would be the earliest a COVID-19 vaccine could arrive, Pfizer says
An open letter from the frontrunner COVID-19 vaccine producer published Friday ends any expectations a vaccine might be available before Election Day.
Report: Coronavirus vaccine shouldn’t be first-come, first-served
A coronavirus vaccine would be scarce when it first arrives, so it should go first to health care workers, paramedics, firefighters and police.