San Diego Union-Tribune (Sunday)

FIREFIGHTE­RS ADMINISTER VACCINES AT 113 CARE FACILITIES

- BY DAVID HERNANDEZ & LAUREN J. MAPP

Firefighte­rs across San Diego County have vaccinated more than 2,500 residents at long-term care facilities since early January, responding to an urgent need to protect a vulnerable population against COVID-19.

As of Thursday, personnel from more than 20 fire department­s had visited 113 long-term care facilities. Dubbed Operation Collaborat­ion, the effort began Jan. 7 as a way to reach residents at the facilities, many of whom are homebound or don’t drive. Some are not tech savvy and likely find it difficult to go online and set up an appointmen­t at a vaccinatio­n site.

Residents at long-term care facilities, which have been hit hard by the novel coronaviru­s, are especially vulnerable to COVID-19.

“We’re hoping to mitigate that,” said Capt. Thomas Shoots of Cal Fire San Diego, which leads the vaccinatio­n effort in partnershi­p with the county Health & Human Services Agency

and the San Diego County Fire Protection District.

Firefighte­rs have visited facilities of all sizes.

“We’re hitting them all — big and small,” Shoots said.

On Jan. 11, firefighte­rs administer­ed 160 vaccines at Community Care Center in La Mesa. On Wednesday, just a couple of residents at Garden Adobe in Rancho Santa Fe were vaccinated.

“They need vaccines, and nobody else was going to make that happen for them,” Shoots said of the two residences.

Operation Collaborat­ion targets facilities and homebound individual­s that don’t otherwise have access to vaccines in-house.

The impact on skilled nursing, assisted living, memory care and other long-term care facilities has been significan­t. Because of their older population­s and higher rates of certain health conditions, residents in these various levels of care are at a greater risk for having severe cases of the novel coronaviru­s.

Deaths from COVID-19 at skilled nursing facilities alone account for 15.5 percent of all coronaviru­s deaths in the region, according to county health officials. Throughout the state, deaths at all long-term care facilities account for 31 percent of all coronaviru­s deaths, according to California Department of Public Health and California Department of Social Services data.

Some facilities have partnered with CVS Health and Walgreens Pharmacy through a coordinate­d effort with the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention that distribute­s vaccine doses directly to the pharmacies.

CVS and Walgreens work with individual skilled nursing and assisted living administra­tors to schedule three, in-house clinics per facility, but the vaccinatio­n rollout has not been as smooth or quick as some administra­tors would prefer.

Linda Cioffi, the administra­tor and owner of the Alpine View Lodge memory care facility in East County, said she was frustrated at the beginning of January while trying to find out when her vaccinatio­n clinic through CVS would be scheduled.

After weeks of daily, yet fruitless, calls and emails to CVS, she was contacted by the county to schedule the first round of shots administer­ed by Cal Fire San Diego to her residents and staff. Within days, 22 out of her 26 residents and all 22 staff had received the Moderna vaccine. Alpine View residents and staff will receive their second shots next week. Cioffi said she’s thankful to finally have all of her staff and the majority of her residents protected.

“It’s a vaccine, so does it make you bulletproo­f? No, but now you know you have a dog in the fight,” she said. “I feel a lot more confident for my elders’ futures and for the staff that are serving them. There’s not that sense of impending doom.”

For Leslie Bojorquez, Home Instead La Mesa’s director of operations, trying to get her residents and staff vaccinated before she connected with Cal Fire was especially difficult.

Home Instead employs approximat­ely 80 caregivers who provide in-home care to about 70 clients at their private residences. Since they are not all housed under one roof — and since some clients are homebound — figuring out the logistics of vaccinatin­g all staff and clients meant trying to schedule individual appointmen­ts at the county’s vaccinatio­n super stations through the already impacted scheduling website.

“It was such a huge challenge — it was like finding a unicorn to get those appointmen­ts,” Bojorquez said.

When she heard of Operation Collaborat­ion, Bojorquez made some calls and was able to schedule a vaccinatio­n clinic through Cal Fire for next weekend. Some clients will be brought in by their Home Instead caregivers or family members, and at least one will receive medical transport to receive their vaccinatio­n.

Bojorquez said her staff and clients are ecstatic to finally have a vaccinatio­n date.

“Still, we’ll have to wear all the masks and proper protection after the vaccines are given, but it’s just an added layer of relief for our families, especially,” Bojorquez said.

Operation Collaborat­ion began as a way to vaccinate paramedics and emergency medical technician­s — most of whom work as firefighte­rs. They’re on the front lines, responding to medical calls and going “in and out of homes all the time,” so the vaccines are important to protect not only them but the communitie­s they serve, Shoots said.

Personnel started to administer vaccines in rural communitie­s this weekend, starting with Borrego Springs. They will target residents who are 65 years and older, including those who live in private residences since they are generally far from vaccinatio­n sites.

david.hernandez@sduniontri­bune.com lauren.mapp@sduniontri­bune.com

 ?? K.C. ALFRED U-T ?? Linda Cioffi of the Alpine View Lodge care facility says Cal Fire got most of her residents vaccinated.
K.C. ALFRED U-T Linda Cioffi of the Alpine View Lodge care facility says Cal Fire got most of her residents vaccinated.

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