Miami Herald

Vaccine blitz is on in Dade, but leaders worry some will sit out

- BY BEN CONARCK AND DOUGLAS HANKS bconarck@miamiheral­d.com dhanks@miamiheral­d.com

Jackson Health System will receive more doses of the Pfizer-BioNTech COVID-19 vaccine and will begin scheduling the public for inoculatio­ns.

One of the first members of the public in Miami-Dade County to receive a COVID-19 vaccine, 81-year-old Patrick Range has been working throughout the pandemic.

Range goes to work every day at the Liberty City funeral home that his family has operated since 1953, a place that has seen its share of pandemic-related funerals this year. He is the son of M. Athalie Range, a Bahamian-American woman and the first Black person to serve on the Miami city commission.

On Wednesday afternoon, Patrick Range was in line for a shot at the recently opened Christine E. Lynn Rehabilita­tion Center on Jackson Memorial Hospital’s campus. Miami-Dade’s publichosp­ital system held the press event to help convince people to sign up for the two federally authorized COVID-19 vaccines. The hospital said it plans to vaccinate more than 10,000 people in the coming weeks using a shipment of PfizerBioN­Tech vaccine doses that could arrive as soon as Thursday.

Dressed in a black suit and a striped purple tie, Range said he had a message for his Liberty City community as he took off his jacket and rolled up his sleeve.

“Being in the funeral industry, I’m familiar with this virus,” Range said. “Nothing from the vaccinatio­n can be as bad as this virus.”

In the fluorescen­t-lit room where Range received his first dose, Miami musician Emilio Estefan, of the Miami Sound Machine, and Nat Moore, of the Miami Dolphins, had just received their COVID-19 inoculatio­ns moments earlier.

Though he isn’t a celebrity, Range might have felt like one on Wednesday when his shot prompted a round of applause from healthcare workers and news media assembled to watch.

“I’ve never been applauded before,” he said.

SWAYING THE PUBLIC

Health officials hope the event with Range, Moore and Estefan will sway a public that has responded to the unpreceden­tedly quick developmen­t of the vaccines with a mix of enthusiasm and skepticism.

That skepticism, termed “vaccine hesitancy,” is thought to be especially prominent in communitie­s without much healthcare access — the same types of neighborho­ods served by Jackson.

Miami-Dade administra­tors said hesitancy about the vaccine is a concern as the county begins to step up use of its own limited supply. The 5,000 doses of the Moderna vaccine obtained from the state went first to the county’s fire department under state guidelines that give priority to some rescue workers.

Even among firefighte­rs and paramedics, most of the department opted not to sign up for the first voluntary vaccinatio­ns. A survey of 1,367 fire-department employees found just 37% said they were interested in a COVID-19 vaccinatio­n right away, and 40% said they weren’t interested at all. Another 22% said they were interested in getting a dose but not right away.

“It’s not that different from the regular population,” said J.D. Patterson, the county’s chief public-safety officer, who oversees the fire department. “A lot of people in the country are reluctant to step up initially. That doesn’t mean that won’t change over time.”

At the press conference, Mayor Daniella Levine Cava said reluctance about getting vaccinated is a hurdle for the county’s push to see the broader population inoculated. “Unfortunat­ely, in the general public there hasn’t been yet the enthusiasm for the vaccine we’re seeing in the 65-plus category,” she said.

Miami-Dade is using its 5,000 doses for firefighte­r and paramedics on the county payroll, and for fire-department employees in cities across the county. From there, the plan is to administer doses to home-bound seniors living in county public housing. After that, Levine Cava said, the county will begin expanding vaccinatio­ns to vulnerable county workers, such as police, jail officers and transit

workers.

On Wednesday, the county also launched its vaccinatio­n website, miamidade.gov/vaccine, with links to some of the hospitals offering vaccinatio­ns to the general public.

Miami-Dade’s Jackson, like other Florida hospitals, had to shift its strategies for reaching people this week. Last week, Gov. Ron DeSantis announced that the state would move from vaccinatin­g healthcare workers to focus on seniors.

Dr. David Zambrana, executive vice president of hospital operations at Jackson, said the hospital network is planning a blitz of public-service announceme­nts and media interviews aimed at underserve­d communitie­s in the coming weeks. He said Jackson will also make inroads in those places by reaching out to its own patients, many of whom

live in low-income neighborho­ods.

“No organizati­on other than Jackson cares more for the under-served,” Zambrana said. “We’re leveraging that part of our system as a mechanism for vaccinatio­n.”

Zambrana said Jackson is also relying on its own employees, nearly 4,000 of whom have already received their first doses of COVID-19 vaccine, to be ambassador­s to the public.

HOSPITALS’ ABRUPT PIVOT

Jackson is the second major hospital system in Miami-Dade to open COVID vaccinatio­ns to the public after inoculatin­g front-line healthcare workers, following Mount Sinai Medical Center, which has been inundated with phone calls from older people and their loved ones desperatel­y trying to set appointmen­ts as Florida’s hastily constructe­d vaccine-distributi­on program takes shape. In neighborin­g Broward County, Broward Health is also administer­ing the shots and has similarly experience­d overwhelmi­ng demand.

The pivot by South Florida hospitals from healthcare workers to seniors follows the directive from DeSantis a week ago — an executive order that sidelined so-called “essential workers” until large swaths of Florida’s over-65 residents and snowbirds get their shots.

Jackson will open up an online portal on Monday, which it had initially planned “for any MiamiDade County resident age 65 and older to request a vaccinatio­n appointmen­t.”

But the hospital reversed course after Jared Moskowitz — director of the state’s Division of Emergency Management, which is in charge of distributi­ng vaccines in Florida — reiterated on Wednesday that hospitals shouldn’t be requiring proof of residency or considerin­g it when scheduling appointmen­ts.

While there’s nothing legally prohibitin­g Jackson from doling out the doses as it sees fit, a spokespers­on said Jackson would abide by the state’s guidance, meaning it will no longer make county residency a requiremen­t for a vaccine appointmen­t.

The third week of Florida’s COVID vaccine rollout encountere­d some turbulence as hospitals and county offices of the Florida Department of Health began piecemeal efforts to reach out to the public as demand far outpaces the limited allotment of doses trickling to the state from the federal government.

Stephen Kissler, an immunology and infectious­disease expert with Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health, said that the haphazard nature of the rollout is to be expected, given how little time officials had to plan, and the overwhelmi­ng interest from seniors is “a good problem to have.”

But Kissler said health officials and hospitals should move quickly to do more than just offering hotlines and online portals for people to sign up for appointmen­ts.

“It’s complicate­d partly because of the way vaccines need to be stored,” said Kissler, referring to the ultra-cold storage requiremen­ts for the Pfizer-BioNTech and Moderna vaccines. “But that said, the outreach can still be done in a much more proactive way, and should be.”

He said outreach will help address disparitie­s in access to healthcare. The reason health officials want to get the vaccine out into the community rather than wait for the community to come to then, Kissler said, is because, like other health issues, inequities and disparitie­s in how people fare largely rise out of swaths of the public not having regular access to healthcare.

“Certain people getting the vaccine later than others can really entrench those disparitie­s,” he said.

 ?? PEDRO PORTAL pportal@miamiheral­d.com ?? Patrick Range, 81, owner of Range Funeral Homes, receives a COVID-19 vaccine from nurse Susana Flores at Jackson Memorial Hospital in Miami on Wednesday as Jackson Health System began vaccinatin­g people 65 and older.
PEDRO PORTAL pportal@miamiheral­d.com Patrick Range, 81, owner of Range Funeral Homes, receives a COVID-19 vaccine from nurse Susana Flores at Jackson Memorial Hospital in Miami on Wednesday as Jackson Health System began vaccinatin­g people 65 and older.
 ?? PEDRO PORTAL pportal@miamiheral­d.com ?? Former Miami Dolphin player Nat Moore, 69, receives a COVID-19 vaccine from nurse Susana Flores at Jackson Memorial Hospital on Wednesday in Miami.
PEDRO PORTAL pportal@miamiheral­d.com Former Miami Dolphin player Nat Moore, 69, receives a COVID-19 vaccine from nurse Susana Flores at Jackson Memorial Hospital on Wednesday in Miami.

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