Sentinel & Enterprise

State targets highest risk communitie­s

- By Chris Lisinski

Massachuse­tts will begin an outreach campaign next week in the 20 highest-risk cities and towns aimed at boosting access to the COVID-19 vaccine and addressing any hesitation among vulnerable population­s, officials said Thursday.

A team of 200 bilingual community organizers will hold a total of 83 events across those communitie­s, plus conduct door-to-door canvassing and phone-banking to spread awareness about the availabili­ty and value of vaccines.

Combined with grants the Baker administra­tion will direct to local health boards in those cities and towns, officials hope to help drive up vaccinatio­n in places where rates still lag and where residents have been particular­ly hard-hit.

“It’s like a political campaign, except it’s vaccine canvassing,” Health and Human Services Secretary Marylou Sudders said at a Thursday press conference after

touring a food bank and then a vaccinatio­n site at La Colaborati­va in Chelsea.

The community events set to launch next week, part of a plan developed alongside Archipelag­o Strategies and Health Care for All, involve locally hired organizers in Boston, Brockton, Chelsea, Everett, Fall River, Fitchburg, Framingham, Haverhill, Holyoke, Lawrence, Leominster, Lowell, Lynn, Malden, Methuen, New Bedford, Randolph, Revere, Springfiel­d, and Worcester.

Gov. Charlie Baker said Thursday that his administra­tion will make $4.7 million available to those cities and towns from a pool of $20 million in funding his office pledged to help support them.

The so-called “best value grants” will flow directly to the municipali­ties without a formal applicatio­n process.

Last week, Baker also announced his administra­tion would direct $100 million to Chelsea, Everett, Methuen and Randolph,

four hard-hit communitie­s lenges during its rollout. that are in line for disproWhil­e many young people portionate­ly small batches are not eligible for vacof federal aid through the cines yet, some are due to American Rescue Plan. their occupation­s.

Baker said added re“They don’t believe in sources will “move the neethe vaccinatio­n, but they dle forward” to reduce vaclove to party and gather,” cine hesitancy in Vega said, later adding, communitie­s of color, also “Don’t be afraid of the vacnoting that surveys show cination. Be afraid of hesitation among other COVID-19 that has taken population­s such as white so many lives away from Republican men. us.”

“For a bunch of people, Next week, mobile vacthere’s a hesitancy, and it’s cine clinics will also different reasons for differlaun­ch in Chelsea, Revere, ent people,” Baker said. Boston, Fall River and New “The more people you get Bedford as part of a federal vaccinated, the more fapartners­hip at the Hynes miliar people become with Convention Center mass other people who have vaccinatio­n site. been vaccinated, the more Teams will pick up doses likely you’ll be to get folks at the Hynes each day, then here vaccinated but also to set up smaller vaccinatio­n get some of the white popsites in city parks, parking ulations that are hesitant lots and other easy-to-acto get vaccinated.” cess areas.

Local leaders praised Baker said the effort will the added funding deramp up to about 500 dossigned to boost vaccinatio­n es per day in each of the efforts, describing vaccine five communitie­s. hesitancy in communitie­s The mobile program will of color as a result of derun for about eight weeks, cades of underinves­tment Baker said, the same duraand inequity. tion as the Federal Emer

Gladys Vega, executive gency Management Agendirect­or of La Colaborati­cy’s program to direct va, said that convincing 6,000 more doses per day younger residents to get to the Hynes. vaccinated has proven to Baker and Sudders said be one of the largest chal- Thursday that they are not

concerned about next week’s promised shipment of 100,000 Johnson & Johnson vaccine doses to Massachuse­tts in the wake of a manufactur­ing error that reportedly led to as many as 15 million potential shots being ruined.

That imminent batch is “not in jeopardy,” Sudders said, though the administra­tion is not yet sure what to expect for the following weeks.

The administra­tion plans to push out the burst of Johnson & Johnson doses through existing channels such as regional collaborat­ives, community health centers, and its homebound and low-income senior housing programs, Sudders said.

J&J said its quality control process “identified one batch of drug substance that did not meet quality standards” at the Emergent Bayview Facility in Baltimore, which has not yet received emergency use authorizat­ion for manufactur­ing.

Asked if he was concerned by the manufactur­ing problem, Baker replied that “the message I take from this is actually the opposite.”

“People screwed up, peo

ple recognized it, people ditched it,” Baker said. “The message to me is whatever the control process was that was in place there, it worked. Those vaccines didn’t get distribute­d.”

“It’s a shame to have 15 million vaccines, when you’re in a race against variants, go down the drain,” Baker continued. “But the good news is the control process worked. The control process worked, they realized they had a problem and they didn’t ship any of them.”

With eligibilit­y set to expand on Monday to adults 55 and older and those with one medical condition increasing their risks from COVID-19, the Baker administra­tion continues its push to target vulnerable population­s for the potentiall­y life-saving immunizati­on.

The general public will become available starting April 19, which is several weeks later than some other states such as New York and Connecticu­t.

Baker defended his administra­tion’s rollout efforts on Thursday, noting that more than 80% of the state’s residents aged 75 and older and more than

70% of those 65 and older have been vaccinated.

“People tell me all the time that there are other states that have broader eligibilit­y standards than we do,” Baker said.

“Every single one of those states that people have raised with me that was a significan­tly sized state has vaccinated fewer people as a percent of their population fully, fewer people in terms of their first dose, and typically, in most cases, have not put as much of the vaccine that’s been made available to them to work.”

Through Wednesday afternoon, Massachuse­tts had fully vaccinated more than 1.33 million residents, about 24% of the state’s adults. That’s a slightly higher rate than the 21.7% of adults fully vaccinated nationwide, according to data from the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention published Thursday.

“Eligibilit­y is one thing. Actually executing on the ground and getting big portions of the population­s that are eligible vaccinated is another, and I think the way we’ve set this up has been the appropriat­e way,” Baker said.

 ?? POOL PHOTO ?? Gov. Charlie Baker addresses the media during a press conference at the East Boston Neighborho­od Health Center vaccine clinic at La Colaborati­va in Chelsea on Thursday.
POOL PHOTO Gov. Charlie Baker addresses the media during a press conference at the East Boston Neighborho­od Health Center vaccine clinic at La Colaborati­va in Chelsea on Thursday.

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