Greenwich Time

Advocates: J&J vaccine preferable for homeless.

- By Jordan Fenster

The single-dose Johnson & Johnson vaccine offers an opportunit­y for people in the state working to get Connecticu­t’s homeless population vaccinated, advocates say, but supply still remains low.

“The Johnson & Johnson vaccine helps, obviously, by reducing two doses to one,” said David Gonzalez Rice, senior program manager at the Connecticu­t Coalition to End Homelessne­ss.

The Johnson & Johnson vaccine is a relative newcomer to the state’s coronaviru­s vaccine framework. This week, the state expects to receive only about 4,200 doses, with another 1,300 doses going to pharmacies.

“J&J received federal emergency use authorizat­ion just a few weeks ago and its supplies are limited at the moment,” said Maura Fitzgerald, spokespers­on for the state Department of Health. “The federal government decides how many doses each state gets of each vaccine. We have no control over the amount of J&J we are given, though we do anticipate that our

supply will increase in the coming weeks.”

Perhaps because of the timeframe, plans for using this vaccine to reach the homeless population are still in their infancy.

“Conversati­ons about whether and how to use the Johnson & Johnson vaccine really kicked off two or three weeks ago among the state partners,” Gonzalez Rice said.

Those doses have not yet been specifical­ly allocated to Connecticu­t’s homeless population, though Steve DiLella, director of the individual and family support program

unit at the state’s Department of Housing, said the value of such a plan is obvious.

“With a population that kind of moves around a lot, a one shot vaccine obviously makes a lot of sense,” he said.

Fitzgerald said that as the supplies of various vaccines increases, different vaccines may be allocated for different purposes.

“Moving forward, as our supply from the federal government increases to meet or exceed our demand, we may determine that some vaccines, like the one dose J&J that doesn't require special storage and handling, can best be utilized to vaccine harder to reach population­s, like homeless or homebound individual­s,” she said.

Up until recently, plans to vaccinate Connecticu­t’s homeless population against COVID had centered around shelters.

“We, in the beginning days of the pandemic, totally understood that COVID could spread quite rapidly within a congregate living setting,” DiLella said. “At that point in time, it was OK to really think about having a two dose vaccine. Because when you're thinking about the shelter population, you're much more likely to have a little bit more stability in that shelter situation. Folks are more likely to stay.”

The strategy had been to “de-concentrat­e” homeless shelters, moving families out of congregate living situations into hotel rooms around the state.

But as the pandemic has continued, the strategy has shifted.

“Now, as we have been successful with the shelter in the hotel population, we really are turning our sights toward the unsheltere­d population where I think the one vaccine will certainly be a big advantage,” DiLella said. “So we also are hoping that the supply of Johnson & Johnson does increase as we create plans to do this.”

Those plans might center around mobile vaccinatio­n units.

“Just a couple of weeks ago, some of my colleagues within the state agencies started conversati­ons about identifyin­g locations where mobile vans could reach people who are not staying in shelter for one reason or another,” said Gonzalez Rice. “Maybe a soup kitchen, maybe a community clinic, and trying to put together a plan.”

DiLella said those mobile units could be heading to soup kitchens and community drop-in centers within weeks.

As for how many homeless people in Connecticu­t have so far been vaccinated, Fitzgerald, emphasizin­g that it was an estimate, said “approximat­ely 9,000 individual­s in known congregate settings have been offered vaccine or matched with a provider, out of total known population of [about] 13,000.”

It varies from shelter to shelter, and city to city. DiLella said uptake varies from as low as 35 percent at some locations to “up to 95 to 98 percent at any given site.”

“I think the general view around the state was uptake of around 50 percent, which, honestly is not as bad as I might fear for that population, with some variation by geography,” said Gonzalez Rice. “I think providers in New Haven have consistent­ly reported more concerns on that front than people in other parts of the state.”

To combat vaccine hesitancy, DiLella said the state will use some money obtained through the federal CARES act to hire people who are no longer homeless.

“We're in the process of contractin­g to try to get peer support to really address that hesitancy so hopefully talking not only to a doctor, but somebody who has similar experience­s in their life, they may be able to work and say that this vaccine really is an important thing for any individual's health and safety,” he said.

 ?? Erik Trautmann / Hearst Connecticu­t Media file photo ?? Open Door homeless shelter case manager Melexies Mena gets a vaccine injection in Norwalk on Feb. 12.
Erik Trautmann / Hearst Connecticu­t Media file photo Open Door homeless shelter case manager Melexies Mena gets a vaccine injection in Norwalk on Feb. 12.

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