Current:Home > NewsThis year's COVID vaccine rollout is off to a bumpy start, despite high demand -Nova Finance Academy
This year's COVID vaccine rollout is off to a bumpy start, despite high demand
View
Date:2025-04-25 18:11:49
When federal health officials recommended the next round of COVID-19 boosters for anyone 6 months old or older, doses were supposed to be available right away at pharmacies. But two weeks later consumers are reporting problems. Some people are finding some stores just don't have doses yet, or insurance coverage is not straight-forward.
"The rollout has hit some snags," says Jennifer Kates, senior vice president and director of the Global Health & HIV Policy Program at the Kaiser Family Foundation or KFF. "On the one hand, some of this was anticipated, but it has seemed to be a little bit more chaotic than expected.
Kates herself was looking to get vaccinated at her pharmacy this week but her appointment got canceled. She tried going in, anyway.
"The very nice pharmacist said, 'Yeah, we just don't have the supply. We're not getting enough in and we're still letting people schedule appointments,' " Kates says.
There's plenty of demand for the shots. Around half of all U.S. adults intend to get the new COVID vaccine this fall, according to a survey out Wednesday from KFF, including two-thirds of seniors. That's much higher than the uptake for last year's bivalent boosters – about 17% of Americans got those.
And the vaccine manufacturers say they've got sufficient doses available – the problem seems to be with distribution, Kates explains. Unlike year's past when the federal government purchased the vaccines and made them free to consumers, this year pharmacies had to buy the vaccines from suppliers.
"This is the first time that the vaccines are being commercialized. They're being largely procured, supplied, paid for in the private sector. So it's sort of our health care system as we know it," Kates says.
The problems include issues with insurance coverage. Since the government is no longer giving the shots away for free most people need to use their health insurance to pay for them. (The federal government is only making the vaccines free for the uninsured, via a temporary program called Bridge Access.)
For those with insurance, whether you have private insurance through your job, or you're on government sponsored insurance like Medicare, it should be free to you, without copays or charges.
But Kates at KFF says insurers seem to have missed that memo, "or have been slow to get their systems ready to make that an easy process for consumers." For instance, a colleague of hers tried to get the shot at a pharmacy that was out of network on her plan, and her insurer refused to cover it, "which is actually against federal law and regulations," she says.
If no pharmacy in your plan's network has the vaccine, insurers are supposed to cover it even if it's out of network, Kates says.
The situation is causing pharmacies headaches, too, says John Beckner, who is senior director of strategic initiatives for the National Community Pharmacists Association which represents independent drug stores around the country, including many in rural and urban underserved areas.
Beckner says some pharmacies are running into problems with insurers not reimbursing them for the vaccine. This is probably because many insurance systems haven't updated their systems to reflect new rules around the vaccine, now that the public health emergency is over, and the federal government is no longer paying for it.
Insurance plans were used to only having to reimburse pharmacies for the administration of the vaccine, not the vaccine product itself. "I don't think the health insurance plans did a good job of updating their system in anticipation of the vaccine rollout," he says.
Pharmacies will often give the vaccine to consumers even though these issues haven't been worked out, says Beckner. "Pharmacies are on the hook for that money until it becomes rectified."
America's Health Insurance Plans, the trade association for health insurance plans, said in a statement to NPR that insurers are covering the new COVID vaccine, and they say they're working with pharmacies and government and others to ensure that consumers don't face any costs.
Pien Huang contributed to this report.
veryGood! (87)
prev:Small twin
Related
- From family road trips to travel woes: Americans are navigating skyrocketing holiday costs
- Los Angeles school district bans use of cellphones, social media by students
- Massachusetts suffers statewide outage of its 911 services
- Olympic Hopeful J.J. Rice's Sister Speaks Out After His Fatal Diving Accident
- Appeals court scraps Nasdaq boardroom diversity rules in latest DEI setback
- What is a 427 Shelby Dragonsnake and why is it being built once again?
- The Daily Money: Will Wells Fargo's 'rent card' pay off?
- Judge rejects mayor’s stalking lawsuit against resident who photographed her dinner with bodyguard
- What to watch: O Jolie night
- Ashanti and Nelly didn't know she was pregnant when belly-touching video went viral
Ranking
- NFL Week 15 picks straight up and against spread: Bills, Lions put No. 1 seed hopes on line
- 41-year-old man dies near bottom of Grand Canyon after overnighting in the park
- I'm 49 and Just Had My First Facial. Here's What Happened
- In ‘Janet Planet,’ playwright Annie Baker explores a new dramatic world
- The FTC says 'gamified' online job scams by WhatsApp and text on the rise. What to know.
- Arkansas governor signs income, property tax cuts into law
- With pardons in Maryland, 2.5 million Americans will have marijuana convictions cleared or forgiven
- Bachelor Nation’s Ryan Sutter Admits Cryptic Posts About Trista Sutter “Backfired”
Recommendation
Chuck Scarborough signs off: Hoda Kotb, Al Roker tribute legendary New York anchor
Shooting in Philadelphia wounds 7 people, police say
Mount Lai Has Everything You Need to Gua Sha Your Face & Scalp Like a Pro
Florida plastic surgeon charged in wife's death after procedure at his office
From family road trips to travel woes: Americans are navigating skyrocketing holiday costs
Fake pin pad machine discovered at Kroger self-checkout in Atlanta, 2 men wanted: Police
Machine Gun Kelly Shares Rare Look at Dad Life With Daughter Casie
Pacers, Pascal Siakam to agree to 4-year max contract, per report