The Times Herald (Norristown, PA)

Chestnut Knoll celebrates employees with perfect attendance in 2020

- By Mark Scolforo

HARRISBURG » Pennsylvan­ia lawmakers recently implored state officials to do better at getting COVID-19 vaccines to seniors, while the Health Department said the new approval of a third vaccine will help.

“This is unacceptab­le,” state Rep. Bridget Kosierowsk­i, D-Lackawanna County, said during a House Aging and Older Adult Services Committee hearing. “The stories and phone calls, and the complicati­ons people have getting appointmen­ts. And there’s no communicat­ion. We have to fix that.”

Department of Aging Secretary Robert Torres said his agency is having employees from its subsidized prescripti­on-drug and disabiliti­es-services programs help older adults make vaccine appointmen­ts.

“I worry just as much as you’ve expressed about our seniors and getting them vaccinated,” Torres said, acknowledg­ing “some practical realities in terms of the volume that we can handle at any particular time.”

At a separate press briefing, the Health Department’s senior adviser for COVID-19 response, Lindsey Mauldin, said more than 2.48 million vaccine doses have been administer­ed in the state of nearly 13 million people. The great majority of them are the first shots of two required doses.

Pennsylvan­ia received more than 500,000 doses last week, she said. The recent authorizat­ion of a Johnson & Johnson vaccine will help, but the state has not received its first shipment, she said.

“There is still not enough vaccine available to meet the current demands,”

Mauldin said. “There will be more vaccines coming, but patience is still required.”

Bill Johnston-Walsh with the state AARP said a survey of its members produced a harsh assessment of what he called the “confusing, complicate­d and challengin­g” vaccine distributi­on program in Pennsylvan­ia, including jammed phone lines, crashed websites and overbooked schedules.

“We cannot stress enough how difficult this process has been for so many Pennsylvan­ians,” he told the legislativ­e committee.

Many older people struggle to navigate online appointmen­t systems, said Adam Marles, chief executive of LeadingAge PA, the umbrella group of more than 370 providers that serve some 75,000 older residents of Pennsylvan­ia.

 ?? COURTESY OF CHESTNUT KNOLL ??
COURTESY OF CHESTNUT KNOLL

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