SAN DIEGO — UPDATE: UC San Diego confirmed via email that the Petco Park location will reopen on Tuesday, February 23 after being closed temporarily Feb 19-22 due to a shortage of vaccine.
San Diego County officials had said earlier in the day that the Petco Park vaccine super station run by UC San Diego Health would be closed again on Tuesday because of delayed vaccine shipments.
Appointments for second doses on Feb. 19-22 were canceled last week and will be automatically rescheduled, the hospital said. People who had appointments should check the MyUCSDChart website for updates.
Other vaccination locations across the county are still open and appointments can be made at the county's vaccinationsuperstationsd.com website.
Sunday's data increased the number of COVID-19 infections to 257,030 since the pandemic began, while the death toll increased to 3,190.
It was also the 10th consecutive day with cases below 1,000.
Of 18,194 tests reported Saturday, 4% returned positive.
Three community outbreaks were reported Saturday, with 26 reported in the past week and 102 cases associated with those outbreaks.
County public health officials said they were ready to administer those doses as soon as they arrive.
"We have the mechanism in place to be able to administer all the doses we get in San Diego County," Dr. Wilma Wooten, the county's public health officer, said Friday. "In the meantime, we're asking San Diegans to be patient. As the delayed doses arrive, we will administer them to everyone who has an appointment and release new time slots."
As many as several hundred vaccination appointments scheduled for Friday and Saturday at the county's largest vaccine distribution site -- Petco Park -- were postponed, owing to delayed vaccine shipments from the Midwest and East Coast.
The county's Health and Human Services Agency said residents who were scheduled for their second dose of the vaccine will also be rescheduled.
Currently, all county COVID-19 vaccination points of dispensing and the North County Super Station in San Marcos are offering appointments for second doses only. Appointments for first doses at these sites are being rescheduled into next week.
The Sharp HealthCare vaccination super station sites at Chula Vista Center and Grossmont Center are still offering first and second dose appointments with Pfizer vaccine.
The massive winter storm gripping much of the nation has frozen supply lines for the vaccines. Moderna produces the bulk of its vaccines in Massachusetts, while Pfizer makes its in Michigan. Sub-freezing temperatures across much of the United States have delayed shipments of the vials around the country.
The U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention has advised that people can wait up to 42 days between doses and still achieve maximum immunity.
As of Friday, of the 779,000 vaccine doses the county has received, 705,985 have been administered, more than 5,000 are awaiting processing and 67,000 are yet to be administered. A total of 18.5% of San Diego County's population over the age of 16 have received at least one dose and 6.4% are fully inoculated.
The county has five vaccine super stations and 15 smaller neighborhood distribution sites.