See the Texas COVID vaccine distribution list – “Our way of life is within sight”

Published 12:32 pm Monday, December 14, 2020

Getting your Trinity Audio player ready...

The first shipments of COVID-19 vaccine have been delivered in Texas.

Four sites received 19,500 doses of the Pfizer vaccine Monday morning, state leaders said. An additional 19 sites will receive 75,075 doses on Tuesday.

Dr. John Hellerstedt, Texas Department of State Health Services commissioner, said seeing the first doses of vaccine arrive in Texas is an important milestone signaling a return to “our way of life is within sight.”

Subscribe to our free email newsletter

Get the latest news sent to your inbox

“We cannot stop short of the finish line,” he said. “This hope should lift our spirits and strengthen our resolve to do what must be done to end the pandemic.”

The Pfizer vaccine began shipping over the weekend following an emergency use authorization issued Friday by the Food and Drug Administration.

FDA scientists determined the known benefits of the vaccine for people 16 and older outweigh its risks.

A second vaccine, manufactured by Moderna, is under consideration by the FDA and could be authorized late this week.

Additional shipments are expected to occur later this week.

In all, Texas was allocated 224,250 doses of vaccine to be shipped to 110 providers across the state in Week 1 of distribution.

The focus is on facilities that indicated they would vaccinate at least 975 front-line health care workers since that is the minimum order for the Pfizer vaccine.

Adding the Moderna vaccine next week, available in batches of 100 doses, will result in more vaccine being available for many more providers across the state.

Receiving the COVID-19 vaccine is voluntary.

Front-line health care workers and residents of long-term care facilities are the first groups to be vaccinated, and the Expert Vaccine Allocation Panel will make recommendations about subsequent groups.

It will take a matter of months to manufacture and distribute enough vaccine for everyone who wants to be vaccinated.

Until then, people should continue to prevent transmission of COVID-19 by wearing a mask and maintaining a social distance while around people they don’t live with, staying home when possible, and washing their hands frequently.

Monday:

San Antonio Wellness 360 (UTHealth San Antonio)
Dallas Methodist Dallas Medical Center
Austin UTHealth Austin Dell Medical School
Houston MD Anderson Cancer Center

Tuesday:

Amarillo Texas Tech Univ. Health Science Center Amarillo
Corpus Christi Christus Spohn Health System Shoreline
Dallas Parkland Hospital
Dallas UT Southwestern
Edinburg Doctors Hospital at Renaissance
Edinburg UTHealth RGV Edinburg
El Paso University Medical Center El Paso
Fort Worth Texas Health Resources Medical Support
Galveston University of Texas Medical Branch Hospital
Houston Texas Children’s Hospital Main
Houston LBJ Hospital
Houston CHI St. Luke’s Health
Houston Memorial Hermann Texas Medical Center
Houston Houston Methodist Hospital
Houston Ben Taub General Hospital
Lubbock Covenant Medical Center
San Angelo Shannon Pharmacy
Temple Baylor Scott and White Medical Center
Tyler UT Health Science Center Tyler