COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) — The state announced the third pair of Ohio Vax-a-Million winners Wednesday evening even as the initial bump from the incentive program fades and the vaccination numbers continue dropping.
The Ohio Lottery announced the winners at the end of the lottery’s Cash Explosion TV show for the third week in a row. The lottery, offering $1 million prizes for vaccinated adults and full-ride college scholarships for children, kicked off a wave of similar incentive lotteries nationally.
This week’s winners are Mark Cline, of Richwood in Union County, for the $1 million, and Sara Afaneh, of Sheffield Lake in Lorain County, for the college scholarship.
Last week, Jonathan Carlyle, of Toledo, won the $1 million prize and Zoie Vincent, of Mayfield Village in Cuyahoga County, won the college scholarship.
More than 3.3 million Ohioans entered their names for a shot at the $1 million, up a little from the 3.2 million who had registered for last week’s drawing. More than 143,000 children entered their names for the scholarship, up from just over 133,000 last week. The next drawing is June 14, with those winners announced on June 16.
Initially, Gov. Mike DeWine’s May 12 announcement of the incentive program had the desired effect, leading to a 43% boost in state vaccination numbers over the previous week.
Carlyle said the incentive pushed him to finally get the vaccine after weeks of putting it off.
But the effect was short-lived, with vaccinations falling again the following week.
Even the news of the first two winners May 26 and a news conference featuring them the next day could not stop the decline. Only about 61,000 people 16 and older received a vaccine from May 27 through June 2, a drop of about 43% from the previous week, according to an Associated Press analysis of state Health Department data.
Ohio figures still are not close to the highs of March and April. And vaccine reluctance appears to be so great that on Monday, DeWine made an urgent appeal to providers to distribute as many shots of the Johnson & Johnson vaccine as possible, with 200,000 doses set to expire June 23.
“For Ohioans who have been waiting to get their vaccine, I urge you to take action now,” DeWine said.
But for some, the chance of winning $1 million isn’t enough to overcome skepticism about the vaccine. Joanna Lawrence of Bethel in Southwestern Ohio says the COVID-19 survivability rate is so high, and the experiences of people she knows who took the vaccine are so bad, that she sees no need to risk a shot for herself. She also made it through her own bout of the coronavirus in August.
“My life is not worth money,” said Lawrence, 51, who farms and works in commercial real estate. “I can always get more money if I need to. I cannot get another life.”
About 5.4 million people in Ohio have received at least one shot of the Pfizer or Moderna vaccines or the Johnson & Johnson vaccine, or about 46% of the population. About 4.8 million people, or 41% of the population, have completed the process.