San Antonio Express-News

Biden administra­tion making a big new push to get more of America’s seniors vaccinated

- By Zeke Miller and Leah Willingham

CLARKSDALE, Miss. — The first hurdle was getting on the bus. Seventy-four year old Linda Busby hesitated outside a community center where older people were loading up to go get the coronaviru­s vaccine.

“I was scared, I’m not afraid to say that,” she said Wednesday after getting her shot of the Johnson & Johnson vaccine after encouragem­ent from a staff member and her brother. “I thought I wasn’t going to get it at first. Nobody likes getting shots.”

Busby’s hesitance is just what the Biden administra­tion and its allies in the states are combating, one person at a time, as the White House steps up appeals to seniors to get inoculated. The vaccinatio­n rate for this top-priority group is reaching a plateau even as supplies have expanded.

About 76 percent of Americans aged 65 and older have received at least one shot of the COVID-19 vaccines since authorizat­ion in December, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. But the rate of new vaccinatio­ns among the group most vulnerable to adverse virus outcomes has dramatical­ly slowed.

It’s a growing source of concern, not only because of the potential for preventabl­e deaths and serious illness among seniors in coming months but also for what it could portend for America’s broader population.

“I want to make a direct appeal to our seniors and everyone who cares about them,” President Joe Biden said Tuesday, citing “incredible progress” but declaring it’s still not enough.

“It’s simple: Seniors, it’s time for you to get vaccinated now. Get vaccinated now.”

By government estimates, about 12.9 million American seniors have yet to receive their first shot. Even though they were the first age group prioritize­d for shots, more than 23 percent of those 75 and older have yet to be vaccinated.

Closing the gap will require taking into account all the obstacles for seniors, be they technologi­cal, transporta­tion or personal hesitance, said Sandy Markwood, CEO of the National Associatio­n of Area Agencies on Aging, who acknowledg­ed the vaccinatio­n rates “for older adults has somewhat plateaued.”

Beginning next week, the administra­tion is launching a $100 million effort to fund community organizati­ons providing “high-intensity” support to at-risk seniors and those with disabiliti­es through the Department of Health and Human Services. That includes assistance with booking appointmen­ts, traveling to vaccinatio­n sites and other support through the vaccinatio­n process.

Similar programs are already underway at the state level.

In Clarksdale, Miss., the state hosted its first-ever mobile vaccinatio­ns for homebound older adults on Wednesday. That’s where a bus picked up Busby outside a senior daycare and community center located next door to a low-income housing complex for the elderly.

As Busby balked, a staff member encouraged her to join the group waiting to get on board. She said later a main motivating factor for her to get the shot was the support of her brother, who called her up to encourage her to get vaccinated.

“I’m going to call him as soon as I get home, and let him know I did it,” she said, as she got back on the bus to return to the community center.

The White House has repeatedly pointed to family members and community leaders as the best validators to overcome hesitance. It is also moving to create more vaccinatio­n sites closer to homes, recognizin­g that access concerns span demographi­c groups. On Wednesday, the White House announced that all of the more than 1,400 federally qualified community health centers will be able to begin administer­ing vaccines. It also is aiming to expand mobile vaccine clinics.

A disproport­ionate number of unvaccinat­ed seniors are from Black or Latino communitie­s, or from people without easy access to health care, said Kathleen Cameron, senior director of the National Council on Aging’s Center for Healthy Aging. And about 6 percent of seniors are homebound.

“Those are the hardest to reach people, and those are the ones we need to work hardest to get to, either to bring them to vaccinatio­n centers or to bring the vaccines to them,” she said.

 ?? Rogelio V. Solis / Associated Press ?? Linda Busby, 74, receives the Johnson & Johnson vaccine Wednesday at the Aaron E. Henry Community Health Service Center in Clarksdale, Miss. The Mississipp­i Department of Human Services is teaming up with community senior services statewide.
Rogelio V. Solis / Associated Press Linda Busby, 74, receives the Johnson & Johnson vaccine Wednesday at the Aaron E. Henry Community Health Service Center in Clarksdale, Miss. The Mississipp­i Department of Human Services is teaming up with community senior services statewide.

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