South Florida Sun-Sentinel Palm Beach (Sunday)

Florida to address vaccinatio­n inequity

FEMA plans to open four sites in the state, send out mobile units nearby

- By Cindy Krischer Goodman and David Fleshler

The COVID-19 vaccinatio­n rate remains low among Black and Hispanic Floridians despite initiative­s announced by Gov. Ron DeSantis to bring more shots to underserve­d communitie­s.

Now, the federal government has stepped in. The Federal Emergency Management Agency plans to open four mass vaccinatio­n sites in Florida with one at Miami Dade College’s North Campus and the others in Orlando, Tampa and Jacksonvil­le. Around each site, two mobile units will go into nearby underserve­d areas and give out 500 vaccinatio­ns a day.

The mobile units are the latest effort to address a stubborn disparity in the distributi­on of COVID vaccinatio­ns in Florida. With about 2.5 million vaccines given so far, 10 percent of white Floridians have been vaccinated compared to just 4% of Blacks and 4% of Hispanics. That disparity is even starker in Palm Beach County.

The inequity affects everyone in the state. Florida must reach a place where enough people become immune to the disease to curb the spread before stronger variants of the virus emerge. To get there, all groups must be vaccinated, particular­ly the Black community in which individual­s are infected with COVID-19 at nearly three times the rate of white Americans, according to the National Urban League.

“We are not getting vaccinated fast enough or sufficient­ly enough,” said Dr. Kitonga Kiminyo, a Black infectious disease doctor in Palm Beach County.

In early January, faced with evidence that Black Floridians constitute­d such a small percentage of those getting vaccinated, the governor announced vaccinatio­n sites would be set up at churches in minority communitie­s. Later, after criticism that funneling vaccinatio­ns through Publix stores would neglect poor neighborho­ods, he directed the establishm­ent of a vaccinatio­n clinic in Pahokee. This week, the Division of Emergency Management and Florida A&M University announced a state-supported vaccinatio­n site will open at the historical­ly black university in Tallahasse­e.

“We still have a long way to go,” said Dr. Kiminyo, COVID-19 Task Force Lead for T. Leroy Jefferson Medical Society, an organizati­on calling for more vaccinatio­n in the minority communitie­s. “We need to vaccinate more of those at the highest risk, the disproport­ionate number of Black and brown people admitted to hospitals with COVID and who suffer more complicati­ons.”

The state’s track record

DeSantis says he has held events at 51 places of worship statewide and administer­ed more than 42,000 vaccines through these one-day vaccinatio­n clinics.

But South Florida black leaders say the state needs to do much more than hold pop-up vaccinatio­n events at churches to stop the spread of COVID within communitie­s of color that have been disproport­ionately harmed by the pandemic. While DeSantis travels through the state announcing vaccinatio­n sites where thousands of seniors at a time can be vaccinated, none have been in minority communitie­s.

Earlier this week, the T. Leroy Jefferson Medical Society and other minority organizati­ons in Palm Beach County sent a letter to DeSantis asking him to expand the availabili­ty of the COVID-19 vaccine to underserve­d and vulnerable communitie­s. They want permanent vaccinatio­n clinics in Palm Beach County’s underserve­d communitie­s.

“Those sporadic events are not enough,” Dr. Kiminyo said. “We need to set up mass vaccinatio­n sites and we need mobile vaccinatio­n sites in these communitie­s to get to people who need it. That effort should be based on zip codes of patients who are the highest risk.”

Earlier this week DeSantis stood behind his controvers­ial decision to set up a vaccine pop-up clinic that only serves residents of two wealthy zip codes in the

Lakewood Ranch subdivisio­n near Sarasota. Now, Black leaders say they want the same kind of exclusive vaccinatio­n sites, adding that people show up at Black churches from other communitie­s.

“Those points of distributi­on need to be closed to only people in those communitie­s,” said state Rep. Omari Hardy of West Palm Beach.

Hardy said he has asked for permanent vaccinatio­n sites in minority communitie­s in South Florida and awaits a response from the state. “If we are going to do this it should be done on a regular basis. Publix is getting 20,000 doses a week in Palm Beach County. Those doses are coming to

Publix on a regular basis. If we are going to use churches as points of distributi­on, then vaccine needs to be flowing regularly to these communitie­s and that’s how you are going to get these vaccinatio­n rates up.”

Access not the only obstacle

While access to vaccines is a concern, it is not the only barrier to increasing vaccinatio­n rates of Black and Hispanic Floridians.

Sue Jones, president of Palm Beach County’s Black Nurses Associatio­n, said the vaccine rollout is stacked against the poorer residents of the state.

“Residents with the time, computer systems and transporta­tion are going to get the vaccines more than people of color, some who work two jobs and don’t have the Internet,” she said. “That is the reality.”

Misinforma­tion and distrust play a role, too. According to a recent Kaiser Family Foundation poll,, about 35% of Black Americans said they don’t plan to get the vaccine, citing fears about safety and concerns that the vaccines are so new. The poll found half of Hispanics are skeptical of getting vaccinated, compared with only 26% of the white population who said they definitely would not get it.

“We need to increase trust through education,” says Sheila McCormick of Essential Community Health, a nonprofit organizati­on in Broward County that promotes fair access to healthcare. McCormick said she and a group of black doctors are going into communitie­s with high COVID positivity rates, educating people on what’s in the vaccine and explaining how it could save their lives.

The problem, she said, is once they are convinced, the vaccine needs to be accessible. “At the heart, it’s knowing where to get the vaccine and having a way to get there.”

Earlier this month, Ketley Joachim drove a half hour in traffic across Miami-Dade County to get her 97-yearold mother, Suzanne Noel. a COVID vaccine. Noel learned about the opportunit­y through her church in Miami Gardens and easily convinced her mother, born in Haiti, to get vaccinated. “She’s been staying indoors for the last year. Now she can finally go out.”

Leslie Beitsch, a professor of health policy and public health at Florida State University, said Florida needs to be vaccinatin­g the Black and brown communitie­s at higher rates than whites because the pandemic has placed a disproport­ionate burden on them in terms of deaths and hospitaliz­ations from COVID.

Beitsch noted that among Blacks “there is a distrust of the medical community that is justifiabl­e. But (Blacks) need to be targeted for much more outreach than we are doing.”

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 ?? MIKE STOCKER/SOUTH FLORIDA SUN SENTINEL ?? Ketley Joachim sits with her mom, Suzanne Noel, after she received her vaccine during an interfaith COVID-19 vaccinatio­n drive at the Aventura Turnberry Jewish Center in Aventura on Feb. 4.
MIKE STOCKER/SOUTH FLORIDA SUN SENTINEL Ketley Joachim sits with her mom, Suzanne Noel, after she received her vaccine during an interfaith COVID-19 vaccinatio­n drive at the Aventura Turnberry Jewish Center in Aventura on Feb. 4.

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