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Three weeks into COVID-19 vaccinations, DOC has vaccinated 10 percent of inmates, 40 percent of staff

Three weeks into COVID-19 vaccinations, DOC has vaccinated 10 percent of inmates, 40 percent of staff Kelan Lyons, CTMirror.org FacebookTwitterEmail HVIZDAK ph722a # 3174 New Haven, Connecticut-11/15/07: New Haven Community Correctional Center main entrance. Three weeks into the Department of Correction’s vaccinations of the incarcerated population, 837 inmates less than 10% of the 9,034 people in prisons and jails as of Feb. 22 have received the first dose of the COVID-19 vaccine. The department received another 500 doses Tuesday morning. Department Director of External Affairs Karen Martucci said the DOC has used all of the shots it has received and is seeking more. “We roll them out as they come in,” said Martucci.

Middletown woman with lung issues: New vaccine rules delay eligibility

Middletown woman with lung issues: New vaccine rules delay eligibility FacebookTwitterEmail 2of3 Kathy Flaherty, right, is executive director of the Middletown-based Connecticut Legal Defense Project.Hearst Connecticut Media file photoShow MoreShow Less 3of3 MIDDLETOWN A city family that has four individuals who live with high-risk health conditions and expected to receive their COVID vaccine in the next round say they are now forced to wait longer than expected under the governor’s new policy. Gov. Ned Lamont Monday switched the state to an age-based system of vaccine eligibility in Connecticut, which will allow those aged 55 to 64 to begin getting their doses beginning March 1.

The Day - People with disabilities, pre-existing conditions, upset over change in vaccine prioritization

As a business reporter, I write about small businesses opening and closing, manufacturing, food and drink, labor issues and economic data. I particularly love writing about the impact of state and federal policy on local businesses. I also do some education reporting, covering colleges in southeastern Connecticut and regional K-12 issues. Erica Moser As a business reporter, I write about small businesses opening and closing, manufacturing, food and drink, labor issues and economic data. I particularly love writing about the impact of state and federal policy on local businesses. I also do some education reporting, covering colleges in southeastern Connecticut and regional K-12 issues.

Breaking with national recommendations, Lamont says Connecticut s vaccine rollout will now be prioritized by age

Teachers and other school workers still to be prioritized Gov. Ned Lamont looks at a syringe that Patrice Marriott, registered nurse at Trinity Health of New England, holds before giving him the first dose of the COVID-19 vaccine at the First Cathedral church in Bloomfield this month. (Yehyun Kim, CTMirror.org) Gov. Ned Lamont said Monday he is throwing out the state’s current playbook for the COVID-19 vaccine rollout – which had prioritized people with underlying medical conditions and certain types of workers, such as grocery store and agricultural employees – and is shifting to a system that is strictly age-based, with the next round of shots open to people who are 55 to 64 beginning March 1.

Breaking with national recommendations, Lamont says Connecticut s vaccine rollout will now be prioritized by age

Breaking with national recommendations, Lamont says Connecticut s vaccine rollout will now be prioritized by age
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