I have always done a similar method as others have described.
For wind I have always taken half the opening load to the jamb, plus the trib for the jamb, plus half the distance between the jamb and my resumed normal filled cell spacing. I rarely exceed 48" o.c. for minimum reinforcement though I know some engineers do, I have a hard time believing the CMU via mortar bonds (no intermediate bond beams) will span any further. This is probably conservative but...
With some buildings if the openings are large, wind loads are high, and maybe you also have floor loading above causing eccentric moments, we end up using 16" tie columns at many jambs. Also, if you have eccentricity at the floor/roof level to account for, this also gets concentrated in your jambs.
A more accurate procedure may be FEA similar to how PCA wall and other tilt programs work. However, unlike tilt which has a homogeneous thickness/rigidity, partially grouted CMU has a varying stiffness which would have to be accounted for in a program. I don't know of any such program to date.