Anonymous wrote:I tried to get mine today but it didn't work out. Walgreen's system went down and it was a fluster cluck of a situation there.
One woman had been waiting for an hour and 15 minutes. I scheduled mine during my 1-hour lunch break so I had to leave after 30 minutes of waiting.
I have another appointment tomorrow but now I've seen several warnings on social media (reddit, twitter) that if your insurance isn't accepted at Walgreens, you can't get a booster there even if you want to pay OOP. That's annoying for several reasons: a) no, Walgreens is not a pharmacy that my insurance accepts; b) my insurance's 'find a bivalent booster near you' link literally took me to the Walgreens site to make my appointment; and c) no other pharmacies in my area currently have the bivalent booster atm.
I'll be mildly annoyed tomorrow if I show up and can't get one.
This sounds like fake news. The government is still paying for covid vaccines so they shouldn't need your insurance to get give you one. That will end soon, by next year you will need insurance or you'll pay out of pocket for the next shot unless Congress funds it, but for now, this is a free shot for all.