Dayton Daily News

Volunteers help drive COVID vaccine rollout

Process benefits from hundreds who perform a wide variety of tasks.

- Kaitlin Schroeder and Riley Newton

Hundreds of community members have been giving their time to help with the historic COVID19 vaccine rollout, volunteeri­ng to direct traffic, answer phones, administer the shots and more.

Tammy Lowe, an RN and Preble County volunteer, said it has been rewarding to give vaccinatio­ns to older residents who are lonely and looking forward to get

ting out again.

“They might thank me several times and then I’m always saying ‘no, thank you for coming and getting your vaccine,’” said Lowe, who also teaches at Sinclair Community College.

As of Friday afternoon, about 13.5% of Ohioans have received at least one dose of the COVID-19 vaccine, which is about 1.57 million people.

This massive rollout in a little over two months has been made possiblewi­ththe help of hundreds of volunteers, both non-medical and medical background­s, from students to retirees to dentists and veterinari­ans.

Several health department officials said vaccinatio­n clinics wouldn’t have been the same without the assistance.

“The impact that the volunteers are doing is instrument­al in saving lives, preventing hospitaliz­ations,

preventing deaths,” said Don Brannen, community epidemiolo­gist with Greene County Public Health.

Even before the vaccines, volunteers had been helping out different department­s with different tasks like contact tracing, pop-up testing, community support efforts and more.

All county health department­s throughout the west Central Ohio region, which

includes Champaign, Clark, Darke, Greene, Miami, Mont- gomery, Preble, and Shelby counties, as well as most counties throughout the state, have Ohio Medical Reserve Corp. volunteer programs, which coordinate­s the bulk of volunteers.

For those volunteers, there’s a online training as well as an additional free training for people admin- istering COVID-19 vaccines.

Brannen said their volun- teers rolls have grown to over 500 people now, and have been helping even before vaccines with important services, such as volunteers Cecilia Bidigare and Vickie Carraher who he said made a big different with summer test collection.

Carraher, a nurse who got involved in public health volunteeri­ng after she lost her home in the Xenia tornado, said she can use her expe- rience and what she’s gone through to help other peo- ple through other traumatic events. In this case, particu- larly helping older residents who are scared and overwhelme­d during the pandemic.

“You’re helping your neigh- bors. You’re helping your friends,” Carraher said.

Lowe said she has always been a big believer in volun- teering and in encouragin­g her students to volunteer, and also likes that they can help other Preble County residents get vaccines close to home instead of having to travel to a farther away city.

“I am a firm believer in vaccines and vaccinatio­ns and that they do save lives, so I knew all along once the vaccine for COVID was developed, passed by the FDA or approved by the FDA and available, that I would be volunteeri­ng at the clinics to be able to help save lives,” Lowe said. “And I truly believe this vaccine has already done and will continue to do.”

Kyle Trout, communicat­ions coordinato­r for the Clark County Combined Health District, said without volunteers the health district’s vaccinatio­n clinics, which currently has the copacity to give up to 1,000 doses a day, would be “much smaller, would run much slower and would not be able to provide the level of care that the CCCHD prides itself on.”

Dr. Catherine Crompton, trustee for the Community Health Foundation and former president of the CCCHD’s board of health, agreed with Trout. She said when she saw how smoothly the county’s clinics were running, she too stepped up to volunteer.

“The reason it’s so well organized is because of all the volunteers and all of the efforts everyone is putting in here. Putting in to be a part of the solution, and hope- fully, it’s our ticket to free- dom,” Crompton said.

Champaign County Health commission­er Gabe Jones said the staff at the health district is small and has been stretched thin since the pandemic began nearly a year ago.

“We are extremely grateful for anyone who has helped us not only at our clinics but also behind the scenes,” Jones said.

 ?? BILL LACKEY/STAFF ?? Patricia Hart, a volunteer at the Clark County Combined Health District’s COVID vaccine distributi­on center, gives a Clark County resident his shot at the Upper Valley Mall.
BILL LACKEY/STAFF Patricia Hart, a volunteer at the Clark County Combined Health District’s COVID vaccine distributi­on center, gives a Clark County resident his shot at the Upper Valley Mall.
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 ?? BILL LACKEY/STAFF ?? Patricia Hart, a volunteer at the Clark County Combined Health District’s COVID vaccine distributi­on center, gives a Clark County resident his shot Tuesday.
BILL LACKEY/STAFF Patricia Hart, a volunteer at the Clark County Combined Health District’s COVID vaccine distributi­on center, gives a Clark County resident his shot Tuesday.

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