The Mercury News

Mobile vaccinatio­n clinic brings shots to farmworker­s

Over two days, outreach effort aims to inoculate 1,000 who put food on the nation’s tables

- By Elliott Almond and Randy Vazquez

MORGAN HILL » The solution to protecting the farmworker­s who feed millions of Americans seemed straightfo­rward for a population that can’t work from home: Bring the COVID-19 vaccine to their places of employment.

But in the early months of the vaccinatio­n effort, the 3.4 million “essential workers” of the food and agricultur­al business were overlooked. Now that is changing, with efforts like the collaborat­ive, public-private partnershi­p that on Sunday launched an on-site vaccinatio­n center at Monterey Mushrooms, the country’s largest mushroom farm.

The two-day mobile clinic has a goal of vaccinatin­g 1,000 employees of the region’s farms as Santa Clara County public health officials increase efforts to ensure all eligible citizens have access to vaccinatio­ns.

Dr. Sara Cody, Santa Clara County public health officer, said Sunday that officials want to reach the sectors that have been hardest hit by the COVID-19 pandemic. She added that the people who have been working diligently for the past year to bring California­ns their food should have a chance to breathe more easily.

“Their families can begin to stop worrying so intensely about them,” she said.

Of the hundreds of employees who lined up Sunday at the Morgan Hill facility in Coyote Valley to get their shots, perhaps none were as relieved as Anastacio Cruz of Salinas.

Cruz said in Spanish that he was

Monterey Mushrooms’ first employee to contract COVID-19 in April last year. Cruz, 60, said his case was so severe he spent three months in a hospital and had to be intubated to help him breathe.

“My family tells me I was asleep for 50 days,” Cruz said after receiving his shot. “I had no clue what was going on, but the doctors said I had a 1 percent chance of survival. Thank God I did wake up.“

Cruz, who has spent the past 13 years working at the mushroom farm, said he is on disability as he tries to get completely healthy. Health authoritie­s say that even those who have already had the disease can reduce their chance of reinfectio­n by getting the vaccine.

Santa Clara County and the mushroom farm teamed with the United Farm Workers and the UFW Foundation to hold clinics Sunday and this Wednesday in what some say could be a blueprint for other California counties to reach underrepre­sented communitie­s.

Monterey Mushrooms owner Shah Kazemi said he wants to protect his 1,200 workers but also farmworker­s across the country.

“The people who risk their lives every day are finally getting recognized,” he said. “That doesn’t happen in every county.”

About six weeks ago, the company began including COVID-19 literature, written in Spanish, with employees’ paychecks. The company’s medical director, Dr. Walter Newman, said the idea was to educate the farmworker­s on the importance of getting vaccinated by showing risks to the Latino community.

But he said the company’s workers had some comfort with getting vaccines because of the farm’s twodecade-old program to give employees annual flu shots on site.

According to research, the employees are at increased risk because they often work in close quarters and live in crowded housing. A UC San Francisco study found that COVID-19 deaths among California Latinos were 36% higher than among the average state population — with a 59% increase among Latinos who were food and agricultur­e workers.

Farmworker­s have been among the most difficult people to reach during the country’s mass vaccinatio­n campaign, experts say.

More than three-quarters do not have health insurance. More than 10% have never seen a doctor, a United Farm Workers Foundation survey shows.

Researcher­s say other issues about getting vaccinated include citizenshi­p concerns among the largely undocument­ed population, a language barrier in a mostly Spanish-speaking workforce, and computer illiteracy, which is needed to schedule online appointmen­ts.

Monterey Mushrooms’ Kazemi said the vaccine distributi­on underscore­s a larger issue for farmworker­s.

“This is the tip of the iceberg,” he said. “We need to provide better health care for (agricultur­al) workers. People need to have medical coverage.”

The collaborat­ion Sunday felt like a triumph for Cody, who has spent the past year trying to resolve one crisis after another. She said she felt good watching the farmworker­s receive vaccinatio­ns.

“I wanted to see and feel the tremendous hope we have here today,” Cody said. “I just want to soak it up.”

Walterio Martinez of Gilroy expressed relief while standing in line to get his shot.

“We were hearing how a lot of people were dying without the vaccine,” he said in Spanish. “We were at risk.”

Martinez, 61, said he knows fellow workers who have suffered because of coronaviru­s.

He said he wonders if the workers could have been saved had they had access to the vaccine earlier.

Cesar Omar Lara of San Jose showed little emotion after getting injected. He calmly walked to a waiting area where Lara was told to sit for 15 minutes to make sure he didn’t have any side effects.

Lara said in Spanish that he was happy to get it over with.

“The people doing the hardest work were the hardest hit,” County Supervisor Cindy Chavez said. “The way we can honor them” is to “do these vaccinatio­ns.”

 ?? PHOTOS BY RANDY VAZQUEZ — STAFF PHOTOGRAPH­ER ?? Cesar Omar Lara receives a COVID-19 vaccine at Monterey Mushrooms in Morgan Hill on Sunday, joining hundreds of others.
PHOTOS BY RANDY VAZQUEZ — STAFF PHOTOGRAPH­ER Cesar Omar Lara receives a COVID-19 vaccine at Monterey Mushrooms in Morgan Hill on Sunday, joining hundreds of others.
 ??  ?? Workers wait in line to receive their vaccine at Monterey Mushrooms in Morgan Hill.
Workers wait in line to receive their vaccine at Monterey Mushrooms in Morgan Hill.

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