KEY POINTS
  • Texas is preparing to start administering the first Covid-19 immunization shots in less than three weeks.
  • Last week, Pfizer announced that it had selected Texas among three other states -- New Mexico, Tennessee and Rhode Island -- to operate a pilot delivery program for its vaccine
  • The University of Texas at Austin is preparing to receive doses of a coronavirus vaccine as though it could arrive later this week in order to be as prepared as possible.

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A worker passes a line of freezers holding coronavirus disease (COVID-19) vaccine candidate BNT162b2 at a Pfizer facility in Puurs, Belgium in an undated photograph.

Texas is preparing to start administering the first Covid-19 immunization shots in less than three weeks — as soon as the U.S. Food and Drug Administration grants emergency approval to distribute Pfizer's or Moderna's vaccine.

It's a gargantuan task for the second-most populated state in the nation. The coronavirus has swept across the Lone Star State after it reopened its economy in May. It has confirmed more Covid-19 cases than any other state at roughly 1.2 million and has seen the second-most deaths behind New York, losing more than 21,000 Texans to the virus so far, according to data compiled by Johns Hopkins University. Hospitals in border cities like El Paso have been overwhelmed with cases, even bringing in extra morgue trucks to store the dead.

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