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Physician offices should have bigger role in vaccine rollout: MGMA


 

Physician offices, which have been deemphasized in the COVID-19 vaccine rollout, should have a more prominent role in the effort going forward, said the Medical Group Management Association in a letter sent to President Joe Biden on Jan. 26.

“Due to our members’ role as community providers, we ask that the Administration include medical group practices in COVID-19 vaccine distribution strategies moving forward,” Halee Fischer-Wright, MD, president and CEO of MGMA, stated in the letter.

“Current vaccine efforts are haphazard at best and appear to rely on a passive first come first served approach with the public rushing to sign up for vaccines when scant supply becomes available,” MGMA noted. “This favors patients who can advocate for themselves or have family members able to do the same. Yet medical group practices already have patient relationships and experience vaccinating patients for influenza and other conditions.”

Moreover, physician practices have data on patient demographics, preexisting conditions, and risk factors. This is valuable information not available to hospitals, pharmacies, and state health departments, MGMA said.

“Furthermore, in a time of uncertainty and misinformation, patients are looking to their own physicians as a trusted source for information on vaccine safety and efficacy,” the letter stated. “Physician group practices can and should play a significant role in vaccine education.”

Despite these advantages of vaccinating patients in doctors’ offices, MGMA pointed out that “states have largely not leveraged physician practices in vaccine rollout efforts.”

In an MGMA survey conducted last week, 85% of independent practices and 45% of hospital- or health system–owned practices that sought COVID-19 vaccine for their patients were unable to obtain any. Of the practices able to get vaccine supplies, the majority said they had received only enough to vaccinate 1% or less of their patients.

Susan R. Bailey, MD, president of the American Medical Association commented in an interview that, “once enough supplies are available, we encourage the administration to ensure physician practices have an adequate supply of COVID-19 vaccines to vaccinate their patients. Physician practices will be an integral part of the vaccine administration process. Physicians are a trusted source of information for patients and their direct conversations and recommendations for patients to get vaccinated will help address hesitancy and result in more people getting vaccinated.”

Many groups, MGMA said, had been approved by their states to distribute the vaccine but received little or no inventory. Practice phone lines have been “flooded” by patients wanting to know why their physicians can’t vaccinate them.

Programs vary by state

In an interview, Dr. Fischer-Wright said that most practices want to vaccinate their patients. But only some states have set up programs that allow them to apply for the COVID-19 vaccines. “Most of our practices that were eligible for vaccination have applied for it,” she added.

The New York State Health Department is taking a different approach, according to Dial Hewlett Jr., MD, medical director for disease control services with the Westchester County Department of Health in White Plains, N.Y.. The state health department has designated specific sites across New York as vaccination hubs; in Westchester County, the hub is the Westchester Medical Center. When the hospital receives a vaccine shipment, it distributes some of it to smaller sites such as the county health department, which includes a vaccination clinic.

“So far, they haven’t gotten to the point where they’re distributing to pharmacies or doctors’ offices,” Dr. Hewlett said in an interview.

Right now, he said, the chief limiting factor is vaccine supply. When that expands, he said, physician offices will likely get more vaccine doses.

Both Dr. Hewlett and Dr. Fischer-Wright pointed out that physician offices are limited because they aren’t able to store the Pfizer vaccine, which requires ultracold freezers. “But now that we have the Moderna vaccine, 50% of the 200 million doses that have been promised can be delivered in a physician office,” said Dr. Fischer-Wright.

So why haven’t practices received more vaccine? Besides the inadequate supply across the nation, Dr. Fischer-Wright said, there have been difficulties in getting the vaccine to physician offices. Some MGMA members, she added, did receive vaccine supplies immediately. “These were independent practices that had over 200 physicians.”

Dr. Hewlett noted that some smaller practices have complained to the county department that they couldn’t obtain vaccine because they lacked the clout to compete with larger groups. “They’re not ordering enough product to make it a priority for whoever is involved with the distribution.”

Another problem – evident in the results of MGMA’s recent poll – is that health care systems that have vaccine supplies are sharing them with their own practices before they make any available to community practices.

“If you’re working for Northwell Health, you probably won’t have the kinds of challenges that the small mom-and-pop practice would have,” Dr. Hewlett said.

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