Coronavirus

South Carolina is prepared once COVID-19 vaccine becomes available, Gov. McMaster says

Though the White House and the country’s lead public health agency are hopeful a COVID-19 vaccine could go online as early as late October, South Carolina Gov. Henry McMaster and state health officials on Thursday aimed to manage expectations, saying the state is prepared but has no idea when a vaccine might become available.

The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention earlier this month sent a memo to all 50 states asking health departments to prepare for an eventual vaccine. South Carolina has been preparing for such a vaccine for months in a partnership between the governor, the state’s public health agency and the state’s emergency management division, where McMaster spoke Thursday.

But when a vaccine is eventually approved, McMaster said the state’s Department of Health and Environmental Control will be responsible for distributing it.

“The vaccine distribution program is expected to be a public health effort of significant scale,” requiring a “South Carolina effort” that will require everyone from emergency management, National Guard to “everyone in between,” McMaster said.

Stephen White, DHEC’s head of immunization, said Thursday the agency will follow federal guidance for vaccine distribution.

Meaning, White said, that limited doses will first be available to the most at-risk adult groups that include front-line medical workers, nursing home employees and residents and “critical infrastructure employees” outlined by the federal government.

Adults who get the vaccine will have to receive two doses, and both doses have to come from the same brand, White said.

Under the current plan, children will not qualify to get vaccinated, said White. Currently, the state requires children in fifth grade through 12th grade to get vaccinated for seven different diseases. By state statute, DHEC would decide whether a COVID-19 vaccine would be a requirement.

The Buzz on SC Politics Newsletter

Click here to sign up

The state’s health department isn’t sure when a vaccine might become available.

That includes a vaccine trial happening in South Carolina.

So far, three different vaccines have been approved for Phase 3 trials in the United States. One of those trials, created by England-based pharmaceutical company AstraZeneca, is being tested by the Medical University of South Carolina in Charleston. Those trials could produce results by the end of the year.

Once a vaccine does become available to everyone, the governor said Thursday every South Carolinian should get one.

But, without a vaccine now, DHEC’s acting director Marshall Taylor said South Carolina “must continue in a united fight against the virus” by continuing to social distance and wear masks.

Editor’s Note: The S.C. Department of Health and Environmental Control after publication clarified that the agency, not the Legislature, is responsible for deciding whether a COVID-19 vaccine would be a requirement for students to attend school.

This story was originally published September 10, 2020 at 5:01 PM with the headline "South Carolina is prepared once COVID-19 vaccine becomes available, Gov. McMaster says."

Follow More of Our Reporting on Coronavirus in South Carolina

Maayan Schechter
The State
Maayan Schechter (My-yahn Schek-ter) is the senior editor of The State’s politics and government team. She has covered the S.C. State House and politics for The State since 2017. She grew up in Atlanta, Ga. and graduated from the University of North Carolina-Asheville in 2013. She previously worked at the Aiken Standard and the Greenville News. She has won reporting awards in South Carolina. Support my work with a digital subscription
Emily Bohatch
The State
Emily Bohatch helps cover South Carolina’s government for The State. She also updates The State’s databases. Her accomplishments include winning multiple awards for her coverage of state government and of South Carolina’s prison system. She has a degree in Journalism from Ohio University’s E. W. Scripps School of Journalism. Support my work with a digital subscription
Get unlimited digital access
#ReadLocal

Try 1 month for $1

CLAIM OFFER