“I’m not sure if people are worried about long lines we’ve seen historically. You can see here, that’s not an issue. Even if we have a bit of a line, it moves so quickly,” said Casey Willis, administrator at North Alabama Medical Center.
In metro Birmingham, where a mass vaccination site was set to open Wednesday at an outlet mall, some questioned whether the facility was even needed since so few people have shown up at an immunization site at the Birmingham Crossplex, an indoor sports facility.
“I don’t know that the demand is there to warrant another location,” Pauline Long, co-owner of Meds Plus. The station reported that it visited three vaccination locations Tuesday, and none had lines or were requiring appointments.
Jefferson County’s top health official, Dr. Mark Wilson, said the county couldn’t pass up the opportunity to bring more vaccine doses to the state’s most populated area.
“We’re just trying to make sure vaccine is widely available. This is a new site in a new area and we’re also trying to serve the larger region,” he said.
Multiple Alabama hospitals also have seen a decline in demand for vaccines, said Dr. Don Williamson, president of the Alabama Hospital Association. It’s unclear whether the addition of new immunization sites or low demand are behind the trend, he said, but some hospitals are looking at scaling back vaccination programs.