The Citizen (Gauteng)

Helping pensioners get jabs

VOLUNTEERS: ENSURE POOR PEOPLE WITHOUT ACCESS TO INTERNET ARE NOT FORGOTTEN With daily cases rising and roll-out slow, ‘foot soldiers’ hit Soweto streets with initiative.

- Kim Harrisberg

The bishop showed a video of him getting vaccinated, and he’s still alive, so I let him sign me up.

Esther Dhlamini Soweto pensioner

When Esther Dhlamini went to collect her pension in Soweto, she was surprised to find a local bishop on hand to soothe her fears about Covid-19 vaccinatio­n and register her for the jab on his mobile phone.

Community “foot soldiers” like the bishop are among numerous initiative­s being scrambled across South Africa to tackle a digital divide that threatens to hit vaccine take-up among people without internet access – including many pensioners.

“I was afraid to get vaccinated and didn’t know how to,” said Dhlamini, 71, outside the Boxer supermarke­t where she goes each month to pick up her R1 900 pension grant.

“But then the bishop showed me a video of him getting vaccinated and he’s still alive, so I let him sign me up,” she said.

Tens of thousands of pensioners are being targeted by partnershi­ps between authoritie­s, charities and churches to ensure it is not only the rich or digitally connected who are immunised against Covid-19 in Africa’s worsthit country.

As daily cases rise, progress on the national inoculatio­n drive has been slow, and campaigner­s fear people living in rural areas, or those without an internet connection or private medical aid may be left behind altogether.

So far, 3.7% of SA’s roughly 58 million people have received at least one vaccine dose, according to a Reuters tally, with only healthcare workers and the over60s currently eligible.

“We’re having very elitist conversati­ons around Covid-19,” said Thami Nkosi, interim programmes manager at Right2Know, which works to improve access to public informatio­n campaigns.

“We’re using complicate­d numbers, maps and informatio­n, it’s almost like certain sections of society – the illiterate, the elderly, those without tech access – are being forgotten,” Nkosi added.

Almost all of the 38 million South Africans – or nearly twothirds of the population – who have internet access use their mobile phones to get online, according to online data portal Statista.

But data is expensive in SA, with broadband research company Cable.co.uk ranking it in the upper half of global prices.

Several health department vaccinatio­n initiative­s have sought to take advantage of the country’s relatively high rates of connectivi­ty and mobile phone usage while saving costs for users.

It has launched a toll-free hotline and free quick code, or unstructur­ed supplement­ary service data (USSD), to help register those without data or internet for vaccinatio­n.

Officials from the department of health were not immediatel­y available for comment on how widely used such services have been. But their partnershi­p with the SA Council of Churches (SACC) – a forum uniting church members and organisati­ons – and branches of Boxer supermarke­ts across the country has so far reached at least 120 000 people.

Volunteers approach pensioners as they wait in line, speak to them about coronaviru­s vaccine myths and misinforma­tion, and if they agree – they register them on their phones for a vaccinatio­n appointmen­t.

“By initiating this campaign, we had only one objective in mind: to ultimately assist the government’s efforts to vaccinate as many of our citizens as quickly as possible,” said Ian Bamber, a Boxer spokespers­on.

Bishop Shadrack Moloi, president of the Council of African Independen­t Churches, an SACC member, said churches can be “an amazing resource” in the vaccinatio­n drive.

“It’s important for churches to get involved because we have a close connection to the community,” Moloi said.

Other projects have included distributi­ng 200 000 flyers with vaccine informatio­n across the country and social media campaigns encouragin­g younger South Africans to help register their grandparen­ts.

A truck coordinate­d by the provincial health department­s and Unicef, has been screening videos of people sharing Covid-19 stories in local languages while helping them register for the vaccine.

Networks of volunteers, such as CovidComms SA, are sharing infographi­c videos to explain the different ways to register.

Getting the elderly to sign up for vaccinatio­n is just the first step, said Jane Simmonds, research manager at the SA Medical Research Council.

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