KEY POINTS
  • Dozens of states and cities are diverting doses from a federal program to vaccinate long-term care facilities after the program over-estimated how many shots it would need.
  • A combination of vaccine hesitancy, over-estimation of the number of doses needed for the campaign and other factors led to the program having too many shots, the CDC said.
  • It's not clear exactly how many doses are being diverted from the program, but Illinois, for example, announced this week that it was taking 97,000 doses out of the program.
A woman receives a Pfizer COVID-19 vaccine at a vaccination center established at the Triton College in River Grove, Illinois, on February 3, 2021.

Dozens of states and cities are clawing back thousands of extra doses of Covid-19 vaccine that were meant to be used by CVS and Walgreens to immunize residents of nursing homes through a federal partnership set up by the Trump administration.

The partnership, called the Pharmacy Partnership for Long-Term Care Program, allowed states to tap CVS, Walgreens and other retail pharmacies to vaccinate residents and workers of nursing homes. The federal government asked states to "allocate ample vaccine supply" to the program if they opted in, according to Kristen Nordlund, a spokeswoman for the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.