Albuquerque Journal

Ambulance a vital cog in vaccine program

Homebound folks can now get shots

- Copyright © 2021 Albuquerqu­e Journal BY ISABELLA ALVES JOURNAL NORTH

Homebound residents in Santa Fe County are getting a shot at the COVID-19 vaccine thanks to a Santa Fe County Fire Department program.

In partnershi­p with the New Mexico Health Department, the county uses its Med 30 ambulance to get to homebound residents and give them their COVID-19 vaccinatio­ns. Since the program started May 7, it has vaccinated 10 county residents.

Most homebound patients are over 80 years old and received the one-shot Johnson & Johnson vaccine, volunteer firefighte­r paramedic Adam Stively said.

“We truly did see that these people were homebound,” Stively said. “Some of them were actually bedridden, and some of them very functional, but could not leave the house because they were the caregiver for the bedridden person.”

The vaccinatio­n program is run primarily by fire department volunteers, Stively said, so career staff are available for 911 calls. The Med 30 paramedics must wait at the residence 15 to 30 minutes after the vaccinatio­n in case of a reaction.

He said the health department lets them know who’s in need of the vaccine. On the health department’s vaccinatio­n registrati­on website, people can indicate if they’re homebound due to transporta­tion, health or a disability.

“So, this is a new niche because it’s a problem that we identified and there’s not a team that goes out to do home (vaccinatio­ns),” Stively said.

Stively said the department can do the vaccinatio­ns without an added cost or staff because Med 30 runs as a volunteer ambulance. He said doing the vaccinatio­n program is rewarding because firefighte­rs don’t get to see the homebound

population every day and they’ve developed an appreciati­on for this group of people.

Jackie Lindsey, Santa Fe County Fire Department chief, said the Med 30 program gives volunteers a consistent schedule to work, a chance to get to know one another and supplement­s the department’s career team.

“Like we say in emergency management, you don’t want to be handing off a business card at the disaster, you need to get to know each other before the emergency,” Lindsey said.

She said the ambulance doesn’t have specialty freezers to store vaccines long term, but transports doses to people as needed. The ambulance has vaccinated people from Edgewood to Española in a single day.

But Med 30 isn’t the county’s only vaccinatio­n vehicle.

Martin Vigil, assistant fire chief, said he repurposed a mobile health van for vaccinatio­n events throughout the county. The van has been operationa­l for several months since its debut at a vaccinatio­n event at the Santa Fe Place Mall.

On its own, the van can set up a full vaccinatio­n drive-through or a walk-up event. It also has barricades to help direct traffic, and a convention­al freezer and two refrigerat­ors to store vaccines temporaril­y.

Having the freezers and refrigerat­ors extends the operationa­l window of the vaccines. This means the van can travel to rural areas to distribute vaccines, Vigil said. The van also has internet connectivi­ty and other medical equipment, including trauma packs, oxygen and even an active shooter kit, he said.

“Santa Fe County — it’s 2,000 square miles,” he said. “We knew that accessibil­ity was going to need to be part of the plan. Not everybody was going to be able to come in for the mass events that we’ve had around the state.”

 ?? EDDIE MOORE/JOURNAL ?? Santa Fe County Assistant Fire Chief Martin Vigil, director of county’s Office of Emergency Management, climbs aboard the emergency management vehicle at a vaccine clinic at SF Fairground­s in May.
EDDIE MOORE/JOURNAL Santa Fe County Assistant Fire Chief Martin Vigil, director of county’s Office of Emergency Management, climbs aboard the emergency management vehicle at a vaccine clinic at SF Fairground­s in May.

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