Read more about March 29, 1943, in the SunJournal.com archives. 100 Years Ago: 1923 “Come and See” is the slogan which the girls of the clubs and classes of Y. W. C. A. have adopted for their exhibition to be given Wednesday evening. April 4th at 8 o’clock in Auburn Hall. Very few people have […]
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The thousands of vials of COVID-19 vaccine that arrived in Maine this week came with an unexpected bonus – each contains at least one extra dose.
Maine and other states effectively received 20 percent more doses than expected in the first round of shipments, allowing hospitals to protect more front-line workers as part of the initial vaccine rollout, said Robert Long, spokesman for the Maine Center for Disease Control and Prevention.
“Maine CDC informed hospitals of this change as soon as the (Food and Drug Administration) announced it yesterday,” Long said on Thursday. “Given the supply shortage of COVID vaccine, the availability of approximately 20 percent more Pfizer vaccine is welcome and significant news.”
St. Mary’s workers get COVID-19 vaccine; more to come
The hospital also expects to get 300 doses of Moderna vaccine once it s approved for use.
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Intensive care physician Dr. Peter Bagley and intensive care nurse Debra Charest, right, receive the first doses of the COVID-19 vaccine Thursday at St. Mary’s Regional Medical Center in Lewiston. Nurses Lisa MacKenzie, left, and Christie Adams, second from right, helped administer over 200 COVID-19 vaccinations Thursday to health care workers.
Daryn Slover/Sun Journal
Both considered it no more daunting than getting a flu shot.
“If it’s going to protect me while I’m here for the patients … then I want all the protection I can get,” Charest said.
Both considered it no more daunting than getting a flu shot.
“If it’s going to protect me while I’m here for the patients … then I want all the protection I can get,” Charest said.
St. Mary’s Regional Medical Center in Lewiston received about 400 doses of the Pfizer COVID-19 vaccine. Three hundred will be given to St. Mary’s medical workers and the remaining 100 were given to Central Maine Medical Center, a hospital with a larger staff and in need of more doses to accommodate their front-line employees.
Daryn Slover/Sun Journal
CMHC and St. Mary’s are sharing 975 doses of the vaccine from this first distribution, administering them over several days to employees at high risk or who deal directly with COVID-19 patients. Because the vaccines are highly heat sensitive, Bates College in Lewiston loaned the two Lewiston hospitals ultra-low-temperature freezers to store the doses.