Los Angeles Times

Bridging gaps to services, one by one

Hospital’s bilingual promotoras go doorto-door to connect low-income families with aid programs.

- By Lilly Nguyen Nguyen writes for Times Community News.

It’s another Thursday morning on Costa Mesa’s Shalimar Drive.

Cars rumble down the road. Distantly, banda music spills out the open windows of a ground-floor apartment. The playground is empty, with all the children having returned to their classrooms. The newest arrivals on the block — this day, at least — clutch clipboards in one hand and a stack of fliers tucked away in clear, plastic bags in the other.

It is time to make their morning rounds.

Shoes hit the pavement, and before they even start heading up the staircases of the nearby apartment buildings, before they make their way into the narrow corridors, the group of four approaches passing residents to ask: Have they had the COVID-19 vaccine yet and, if not, do they know where to get it? Do they have any concerns?

This is routine for the promotoras of Hoag Memorial Hospital Presbyteri­an in Newport Beach — bilingual representa­tives who connect lower-income families with services such as mental health or rental assistance and, more recently, share informatio­n on COVID-19 and how to get the vaccines.

The program started about three years ago, said Arturo Diaz, supervisor of the Melinda Hoag Smith Center for Healthy Living.

The center provides mental health services and food distributi­on and houses nonprofits such as Share Our Selves. It’s also where the Newport Mesa Family Resource Center is located.

Diaz said the promotoras program is funded by philanthro­pists Todd and Linda White. Diaz recalled the team was studying the promotoras program for Latino Health Access, a nonprofit in Santa Ana, when the Whites approached the center.

“The Whites asked us, ‘If we were to fund, what would you do with it?’ and [the promotoras program] was the first thing that came to mind, specifical­ly because it’s grass-roots,” Diaz said.

“The thought was we have to go out there and make these services accessible to those who don’t know we’re here,” he said. “We have a lot of people coming through here, which is beautiful, but there’s still those people that — either they don’t know about us or they struggle to get in here.

“It can be very difficult sometimes,” he said. “Sometimes, you hear someone knock on your door. Not to sell you anything, but just to check in and say, ‘Hey, how are you all doing and did you know these services were available?’ and you’d be surprised how many people just need that little bit of encouragem­ent .... How long have they been waiting to have someone to talk to?”

The promotoras at Hoag go into neighborho­ods such as Shalimar and the Oak View neighborho­od in Huntington Beach to pass along informatio­n about services available at the Melinda Hoag Smith Center for Healthy Living and the changing news of the pandemic.

At one point, they brought their laptops around Oak View to get interested people registered for a vaccine appointmen­t.

The team is made up of four outreach workers — Rosalba Lezo, Rocio Matlabalca­zar, Bryan Giraldo-Martinez and Santiago Pedraza — in addition to Diaz and the social workers at the center.

Lezo said she and Pedraza try to make it out to the Shalimar neighborho­od at least two days a week for eight hours each day.

“We’re talking about a community that didn’t know

where to get tested. Was testing available? Did you have to pay for it? As we started getting news, we came out here and it was literally door-to-door because a lot of misinforma­tion comes through social media. That’s where they were getting” informatio­n, Diaz said.

“We just started coming out here and saying like, ‘Look, this is the most recent informatio­n. As we’re getting it, we’re bringing it to you guys. This is where you can get tested. They do not charge here. If you’re getting charged, you need to let us know so we know not to be promoting this place,’ ” he said.

“But that wouldn’t happen through a phone call. They wouldn’t trust us. We’re just some random person, but because [the promotoras] are already a face in the community, they’re not strangers or not complete strangers,” Diaz continued.

Data show that Latino communitie­s in Orange County have been hit hard by the pandemic, which experts say is because many work in the service sector or are employed in essential jobs.

The health equity quartile positivity rate was introduced in October as a metric determinin­g a county’s tier to ensure disadvanta­ged neighborho­ods did not significan­tly exceed a county’s overall positivity rate. It is 1.4% in Orange County.

“Right now, we are promoting food distributi­on, informatio­n about the vaccine, the clinics that we have available. Just getting that informatio­n to the community, I think is a great opportunit­y to help those individual­s that are underserve­d,” Lezo said.

Pedraza added, “Sometimes, the lower income people get lost in such an affluent area, so [we’re] just trying to highlight these pockets [where] they’re not getting the resources that they need.”

“Sometimes, I think as profession­als, we think we know what people need, but if you’re not out here hearing from them, seeing it for yourself ... it’s kind of out of sight, out of mind,” Diaz said. “But once you’re out here, doing the footwork, you get to see not only the economical needs but the psychosoci­al impact of poverty.”

‘Once you’re out here, doing the footwork, you get to see not only the economical needs but the psychosoci­al impact of poverty.’

— Arturo Diaz, supervisor of the Melinda Hoag Smith Center for Healthy Living

 ?? Scott Smeltzer Daily Pilot ?? ROSALBA LEZO, right, a promotora with Hoag Memorial Hospital Presbyteri­an in Newport Beach, gives informatio­n about COVID vaccines to a Costa Mesa resident. The promotoras are bilingual outreach workers.
Scott Smeltzer Daily Pilot ROSALBA LEZO, right, a promotora with Hoag Memorial Hospital Presbyteri­an in Newport Beach, gives informatio­n about COVID vaccines to a Costa Mesa resident. The promotoras are bilingual outreach workers.

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