Albuquerque Journal

Navajo Nation seeing vaccine rollout success

- BY THERESA DAVIS JOURNAL STAFF WRITER

The Navajo Nation has administer­ed about 98% of its available COVID-19 vaccines and more doses are arriving this week from the federal government.

As of Tuesday, the Navajo Nation had administer­ed 77,074 of the 78,520 vaccine doses it had received.

The Navajo Area Indian Health Service, which helps coordinate the reservatio­n’s vaccine distributi­on, is expecting a shipment of 28,925 doses within days.

Roselyn Tso, area director for the Navajo Area IHS, credited local health care workers for managing the tribe’s vaccine clinics alongside testing programs and regular medical care.

“We are working very hard to make sure all vaccines available to the Navajo Area IHS are put into the arms of the people that we serve,” Tso said during a video update Tuesday.

Drive-through vaccinatio­n sites, along with social media posts and flyers informing

Navajo residents of vaccine availabili­ty at various clinics, have helped boost the number of tribal members that have

received COVID-19 vaccines.

These efforts have helped distribute vaccines even in smaller communitie­s, such as Teec Nos Pos, Arizona, and Thoreau, said Navajo Nation President Jonathan Nez.

“This virus, this pandemic, has probably touched every single person on the Navajo Nation one way or the other,” Nez said. “A lot of our relatives have lost their lives to COVID-19.”

The tribal government has a goal of administer­ing a total of 100,000 COVID-19 vaccines by the end of February.

Nearly 173,000 people live on the reservatio­n, according to Census Bureau data.

Last week, U.S. President Joe Biden signed a Major Disaster Declaratio­n for the Navajo Nation. The move frees up more Federal Emergency Management Agency resources, such as money, staff and supplies, to help the reservatio­n address COVID-19.

Nez said more than 80 federal health care personnel will be coming to the reservatio­n in the coming weeks to assist with vaccinatio­ns and clinical care.

COVID-19 vaccine eligibilit­y varies across the vast reservatio­n’s health care facilities.

Many sites have begun vaccinatin­g people older than 18. All sites prioritize older and high-risk residents.

Some vaccinatio­n sites focus on administer­ing the second doses of Pfizer or Moderna vaccines.

The Navajo Nation reported 54 new COVID-19 cases and 15 deaths Tuesday. A total of 28,994 people have tested positive and 1,075 people have died from the disease.

The average case numbers and deaths have held steady for the past two weeks, which health officials call a promising trend.

 ?? ROBERTO E. ROSALES/JOURNAL ?? Navajo Nation President Jonathan Nez visits the Chinle Comprehens­ive Healthcare Facility in Arizona in December to oversee the first delivery of COVID-19 vaccines to the Navajo Nation.
ROBERTO E. ROSALES/JOURNAL Navajo Nation President Jonathan Nez visits the Chinle Comprehens­ive Healthcare Facility in Arizona in December to oversee the first delivery of COVID-19 vaccines to the Navajo Nation.

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