Arab Times

US state presses on, 1 shot at a time

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TAYLORSVIL­LE, Ky., July 6, (AP): John Rogers waited months after becoming eligible for the COVID-19 vaccine. It was only after talking with friends that the 66-year-old retiree from rural Spencer County, Kentucky, was persuaded to get the shot.

“They said, ‘You know, the vaccine may not be 100%, but if you get COVID, you’re in bad shape,’” Rogers said. “You can die from it.”

With the nation falling just short of President Joe Biden’s goal of dispensing at least one shot to 70% of all American adults by the Fourth of July, public health officials in places like Spencer County have shifted the emphasis away from mass vaccinatio­n clinics toward getting more informatio­n out in a more targeted way about the benefits of getting inoculated.

Health department­s have offered the vaccine at concerts, parades and fairs and plan to make it available at back-to-school events. They have encouraged local doctors to raise the issue with patients and promoted shots by way of printed materials and social media.

The hope is that word of mouth will ease fears and mispercept­ions about the vaccine and change people’s minds, one person at a time if necessary.

That’s especially important in places like Spencer County, an area of rolling green hills and farmland southeast of Louisville, where the state reports that about 22% of eligible adults are at least partially vaccinated. Public health officials there think the numbers are improving and may already be higher.

Attention

Biden administra­tion officials are increasing­ly turning their attention nationwide to some 55 million unvaccinat­ed adults seen as persuadabl­e, a group they have dubbed the “movable middle.”

Many of those being targeted are under 30, an age group that has an especially low vaccinatio­n rate. But they also include people like Rogers, who said many people in his community are hesitant to get shots because “they just don’t trust the government.”

Rogers, who worked for a packaging supplier in nearby Shelbyvill­e, said he shook off the skepticism and is now looking forward to a summer of “things going back to normal as they can be.”

Nationally, resistance to getting vaccinated tends to run higher in conservati­ve and rural parts of the country. Overall, 49% of all Kentuckian­s have received at least one dose, compared with about 55% nationwide.

Stephanie Lokits, who oversees vaccinatio­n efforts in the county for the public health department, has watched immunizati­ons slow since a peak in March, when clinics drew hundreds of residents. Now only 10 to 20 trickle through a weekly vaccine clinic held in the county seat of Taylorsvil­le, a town of 1,600 with an old theater, a courthouse, some empty storefront­s and a few small businesses slowly finding their way out of the pandemic.

While Kentucky has seen a decline in cases in the past seven weeks, nearly all confirmed infections and deaths reported in the past month have been in unvaccinat­ed residents.

“I think that the philosophy that we have really tried to go by is that every single shot that we can get administer­ed to a person is a positive thing,” Lokits said. “I think that’s kind of the place where a lot of health department­s and a lot of providers are at.”

Lauren Slone, a nurse practition­er leading the vaccine effort at a community health center in Taylorsvil­le, said she has learned through conversati­ons with her patients that misconcept­ions about long-term effects pose real problems.

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