KEY POINTS
  • Older Americans across the country who are now eligible to get vaccinated against Covid-19 have been for weeks waking up before dawn trying to secure an appointment for the lifesaving drug.
  • Finding and setting up an appointment can be difficult since the supply of doses nationwide remains far short of demand.
  • Some local health officials turned to the private sector after their websites reportedly crashed due to the heavy traffic of people trying to find an appointment.
David Aberson, 86, left, and his wife Dori, 75, make their way with others in the by appointment only line to get vaccine shots to protect against the coronavirus at the Balboa Sports Complex in Encino. Dori Aberson said that they were not able to get appointments for both of them on the same day and that she has to come back the next day to get her vaccine shot.

Amy Sullivan wakes up at 2:30 a.m., turns on two phones and two computers and pulls up the website for Publix, a supermarket chain with stores thousands of miles away from her home in Los Angeles.

The grocer has been one of the only companies in the U.S. to offer a limited supply of Covid-19 vaccines to people age 65 and over in Florida, Georgia and South Carolina, but getting an appointment can be frustratingly difficult. They can't be made over the phone or by just showing up, and the slots typically fill up almost as soon as they're posted online.