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Northern Michigan health departments accelerate past state in expanding vaccine eligibility

Credit C/O Spectrum Health Local health districts in Northern Michigan said Thursday they will expand COVID-19 vaccine eligibility at a faster pace than state guidelines. Michigan’s Department of Health and Human Services said earlier this week that anyone 50 and older could get vaccinated against the virus starting on Monday, March 22. People in that age group could get vaccinated earlier March 8 if they had a pre-existing condition that would make them particularly vulnerable to the virus. But several Northern Michigan health districts said their March 8 eligibility expansion will include anyone 50 and up, regardless of pre-existing conditions. In the Northwest and Benzie-Leelanau district health departments, which cover six counties in the northern Lower Peninsula, health officer Lisa Peacock said the state allows for local adjustments to prioritization guidelines. She said for her districts, simplifying the eligibility steps would get more people vaccinated faster.

Michigan opens vaccines to more people, but frustration grows for those still struggling to book appointments

Michigan opens vaccines to more people, but frustration grows for those still struggling to book appointments Updated Mar 04, 2021; Posted Mar 04, 2021 About 300 Genesee County residents receive a first dose of the Moderna vaccine for COVID-19 on Thursday, Feb. 25, 2021 on Flint s north side. (Jake May | MLive.com)Jake May | MLive.com Facebook Share Michigan will soon allow residents 50 to 64 years old to sign up for a COVID-19 vaccination appointment. The eligibility expansion announced Wednesday, March 3, was welcomed by some providers who say they’ve gotten through the majority of the previously eligible population who have requested a vaccine, and didn’t want to slow down vaccinations in the coming weeks.

Stateside: COVID-19 variant at UM; homelessness increases in GR; UP vaccine doses stalled

Today on Stateside, how the new COVID variant, present on the University of Michigan campus, is affecting the school and what it could mean for the rest of the state And, shelters in Grand Rapids are seeing an increase in the demand for services as the economic fallout from COVID pushes people out of housing. Plus, how new guidelines for vaccine priority have cut off much of the supply of doses for the Upper Peninsula. [Get Stateside on your phone: subscribe on Apple Podcasts or Google Podcasts today.] Listen to the full show above or find individual segments below.

What Michiganders should know about new coronavirus variant B 1 1 7

What Michiganders should know about new coronavirus variant B.1.1.7 Updated Jan 25, 2021; Posted Jan 23, 2021 This undated electron microscope image made available by the U.S. National Institutes of Health in February 2020 shows the Novel Coronavirus (yellow, emerging from the surface of cells, blue/pink) cultured in the lab. (NIAID-RML via AP)AP Facebook Share A “super-spreader” strain of COVID-19 that has ravaged the United Kingdom is now in Michigan. So far, three cases of the variant known as B.1.1.7 have been confirmed among people associated with University of Michigan in Ann Arbor, according to the Michigan Department of Health and Human Services.

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