Although the US is scheduled to vaccinate against Corona 19 this month, an analysis suggests that the initial supply will be very short.



The U.S. plans to vaccinate patients from nursing homes, where doctors and nurses are at the forefront of the medical field and the number of deaths is one after another.



The number of health care workers and nursing home patients selected by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) as the primary targets totaled 24 million.



However, the number of vaccines that the US health authorities said would be supplied through pharmaceutical companies Pfizer and Modena is only 40 million doses (two doses per person), for 20 million people.



Moreover, the vaccination of 20 million people is only a target of US health authorities, and it is unknown whether the actual vaccine supply will be smooth.



Pfizer predicts that by mid-month, the vaccine supply will only reach 6.4 million.



CNN broadcast compared the demand for primary vaccinations prepared by state governments with the amount of vaccines that would actually be delivered, and diagnosed that the initial vaccine supply shortage would occur across the United States.



The state of California plans to give the vaccine first line to 2.4 million healthcare workers, but Pfizer's supply of the vaccine is only 327,000.



Governor Gavin Newsom said at a recent press conference that the shortage of vaccines has meant the need to re-adjust vaccine priorities among healthcare workers.



The state of Alabama initially set a goal of supplying 112,000 vaccines from Pfizer, but it says the actual supply will be only 4,950.



Compared to Alabama's priority targets for vaccination, 300,000 medical workers and 22,000 nursing home patients are inadequate.



In addition, Montana's health officials said they would give the vaccine to 40,000 medical workers first, but announced that the actual supply of vaccines was only 9,570.



In New York State, 215,000 people, including nursing home patients and nursing facility staff, were selected as their top priority, but only 170,000 vaccines can be obtained by the 15th.



Texas, with a total of 1.32 million confirmed cases, predicted that an initial vaccine shortage would be inevitable.



State health officials have estimated the number of healthcare workers to be given the primary vaccine at 1.6 million, but said the actual dose will be only 700,000 (1.4 million vaccines), less than half.