The Sentinel-Record

At a West Virginia vaccine clinic, pandemic fatigue sets in

- JOHN RABY

SPENCER, W.VA. — Chania Batten has as much reason as anybody to feel pandemic fatigue.

As a nurse staffing a drive-thru clinic at the only hospital in rural Roane County, West Virginia, she has spent months patiently answering questions, dispelling misinforma­tion and reassuring the skeptical that COVID-19 shots are the key to beating back the coronaviru­s. Batten shudders at the thought of the pandemic entering another calendar year.

“It is frustratin­g,” said the mother of two young children. “We all want to get back to our lives.”

Soon after the first vaccines were approved for use a year ago, West Virginia briefly led the nation in getting people the shots, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. But the state quickly hit a wall of resistance and its ranking began to slip. It’s unclear how far it fell because of discrepanc­ies between state and federal figures, but the struggle in Roane County suggests room for improvemen­t.

Only about 45% of the county’s population is fully vaccinated against the coronaviru­s. Nearly one-third of the state’s 55 counties are under 50%, according to the CDC.

Reasons vary for residents’ struggles to embrace the vaccine. And Batten, one of the people on the front lines of a long, uphill battle to persuade the often unpersuada­ble, has probably heard most of them.

“There’s still, honestly, a lot of questions about the vaccine and what’s in it,” she said. “There’s a lot of people who are still scared because there’s not enough informatio­n out there for them. You have all that paranoia.”

But now, with the omicron strain of the virus suddenly raging through the U.S. population, the urgency of getting people to embrace the only effective known method of mitigating the virus has been ramped up.

State hospitals continue to be stressed, warning that patient numbers are growing and staffing levels are shrinking. Projection­s show that the number of people hospitaliz­ed for the virus during the holiday season will approach the record of more than 1,000 set in September.

Roane General Hospital operates the main COVID-19 vaccinatio­n clinic for Roane County, an hour north of the state capital, Charleston. It’s perched on a hillside in Spencer, population 2,000, where Bing Crosby’s “White Christmas” and other holiday songs blare out of speakers in the town square. The 484 square mile county has 14,000 residents.

In addition to her regular shift inside the hospital, there have been times when Batten was the only nurse staffing the drive-thru, sometimes with as many as a dozen vehicles in line.

“It can become overwhelmi­ng,” Batten said. “But it’s my job.”

Batten said she still likes the work, and if she had to she’d go door to door trying to convince people to get the shots. But in this part of West Virginia, not much seems to get through.

Republican Gov. Jim Justice has tried giveaways and appearing with a dour-faced bulldog named Babydog to try to convince people to get the shots. He has given away hundreds of thousands of state dollars through drawings to vaccinated residents. Last month he presented a $50,000 check to a Roane County middle school to encourage students and faculty to get vaccinated.

The hospital’s marketing campaign on the importance of COVID-19 shots includes daily messages on social media, radio advertisin­g and physician testimonia­ls. But hospital CEO Doug Bentz said he’s not sure how those messages are interprete­d.

“In fact, I think sometimes the media hurts things because people are so dug in politicall­y,” Bentz said in his office recently.

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