With supplies of covid-19 vaccines scarce, a federal advisory panel recommends first putting shots into the arms of health care workers, who keep the nationās medical system running, and long-term care residents most likely to die from the coronavirus.
Nowhere on the list of prioritized recipients are public officialsā spouses.
Yet the first ladies of Kentucky and West Virginia; Republican Vice President Mike Penceās wife, Karen Pence; Democratic President-elect Joe Bidenās wife, Jill Biden; and Vice President-elect Kamala Harrisā husband, Doug Emhoff, were among the first Americans to get the potentially lifesaving shots.
Kentucky also vaccinated six former governors and four former first ladies, including current Democratic Gov. Andy Beshearās parents.
The early vaccinations of political spouses spurred outrage on social media, with several Twitter users Ā they should not be able to ājump the lineā ahead of doctors, nurses and older people.
In most of the 29 states that responded to KHN inquiries of all 50 governorsā offices, top elected officials said they ā and their spouses ā will be vaccinated but have chosen to wait their turn behind more vulnerable constituents. Some Congress members from both parties said much the same when they refused early doses offered in the name of keeping the government running. Those werenāt offered to their spouses.
Governors who got the shots along with their spouses, and the vice presidentās office, said they wanted to set an example for residents, build trust, bridge ideological divides and show that the vaccine is safe and effective.
But thatās a rationale some critics donāt buy.
āIt looks more like cutting in line than it does securing trust. The politicians can get the hospitals to give it to them under this illusion of building trust. But itās a faƧade,ā said , a bioethics professor and founding head of the medical ethics division at New York University Grossman School of Medicine. āPeople might say: āYup, typical rich people. They canāt be trusted.ā This undermines what they set out to do.ā
Besides, Caplan said, the public doesnāt trust politicians all that much anyway, so inoculating celebrities, religious leaders or sports figures would likely do more to boost confidence in the vaccine. Rock ānā roll king in 1956 to help win over those who were skeptical; the actions of governorsā wives from that period are less remembered.
Dr. JosĆ© Romero, chairperson of the Centers for Disease Control and Preventionās , said in an email to KHN that while his group provides an outline for distributing limited vaccine doses, ājurisdictions have the flexibility to do whatās appropriate for their population.ā Kentucky and Texas officials pointed out that CDC Director Dr. encouraged governors to publicly get the vaccine.
No one mentioned medical reasons for their spouses to get vaccines; hospitals are generally not vaccinating the spouses of medical professionals who have gotten the shot. (Itās unclear whether vaccinated people can still spread the virus, so itās possible that a vaccinated person could pass the virus to their spouse or have to quarantine if an unvaccinated spouse were to get covid.)
The office of West Virginiaās governor, Republican Jim Justice, released pictures of him, his wife, Cathy Justice, and other officials receiving shots. He also showed his own vaccination on .
Beshearās office in Kentucky also released photos of him getting the vaccine in December on the same day as his wife, Britainy Beshear, and other state officials.
āThere is no question that there is vaccine hesitancy out there,ā Beshear said at a coronavirus briefing on Monday, the day former Kentucky governors and their spouses were vaccinated. He alluded to a future program involving faith leaders and others. āValidators are incredibly important to building that confidence.ā
His father, Democratic former Gov. Steve Beshear, posted photos of his vaccination on , saying that he and his wife, Jane Beshear, along with other former Kentucky governors of both parties and their spouses, stepped up partly to show residents the vaccine is safe and encourage them to get it when itās available to them.
Kentucky is currently in the first stage of vaccine distribution, which targets health care workers and residents of long-term care and assisted living facilities. Fewer than 15,000 of the 58,500 doses received for long-term care had been given out when the former governors and their spouses were vaccinated.
Tres Watson, a former communications director for the Republican Party of Kentucky who founded a political consulting firm, was skeptical about the intentions behind the event. He said it seemed to be a public relations effort created so the governor could vaccinate his parents.
āI understand the continuity of government, but first ladies have no part in the continuity of government,ā he said. āYou need to stick with the priorities. Once you start making exceptions, thatās when you run into problems.ā
Officials representing the Biden-Harris transition team and three other states where governors got vaccinated ā Republican-led West Virginia and Texas, and Democratic-led Kansas ā either didnāt respond to KHN or didnāt answer questions about spouses. Alabamaās Republican governor, Kay Ivey, got the vaccine and is divorced.
Politicians in other states have taken the opposite tack.
In Arkansas, Republican Gov. Asa Hutchinson is focused on ensuring high-priority groups such as health care workers, long-term care staffers and residents are vaccinated, said spokesperson LaConda Watson. āHe and his wife will receive the vaccination when itās their turn,ā she said.
In Missouri, Kelli Jones, communications director for Republican Gov. Mike Parson, said in an email that he and the first lady fully intend to get the vaccine. Like governors from Colorado, Nevada and elsewhere, theyāve both recovered from covid-19, Jones said, and will āwait until their age group is eligibleā under the state plan. Doctors recommend vaccinations even for people who have already had covid.
Cissy Sanders, 52, an events manager who lives in Austin, Texas, said she understands why lawmakers would need to get the vaccine. Her own governor, Republican Greg Abbott, received it on live television to instill confidence, said his press secretary, Renae Eze, who wouldnāt address whether Abbottās wife was vaccinated.
But Sanders said politiciansā spouses should not be vaccinated before nursing home residents like her 71-year-old mom. Sandersā mother received the vaccine in late December ā after some public officials' spouses ā but she said far too many nursing home residents across America are still waiting.
āWhy is a non-high-risk group ā i.e., these spouses ā going before the most high-risk group? Who makes these decisions? Who thinks this is a good, responsible, safe decision to make?ā she said. āPolitical spouses have not been at ground zero for the virus. Nursing home residents have been.ā
KHN Montana correspondent Katheryn Houghton, California Healthline correspondent Angela Hart and KHN senior correspondents Markian Hawryluk and JoNel Aleccia contributed to this report.
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