Boston Herald

Sisters launch vaccine website

Alerts people about open appointmen­ts

- by RICK SOBEY

Three sisters have launched a Massachuse­tts coronaviru­s website to alert people of open vax appointmen­ts, yet another local effort to help strangers with the state’s aggravatin­g sign-up system.

The Gabrieli sisters from Beverly started a website that pings people when vaccinatio­n slots go live. After people sign up on the website — called MA COVID Vaccine Finder — they receive email alerts immediatel­y when appointmen­ts are available.

Almost 1,000 people have signed up for the alerts in about a week since the sisters launched the website out of their living room.

“Finding an appointmen­t shouldn’t be a full-time job, and it can’t be for so many people,” said Lilla Gabrieli, 23. “So many people are struggling to get appointmen­ts, so we wanted to build something that would help them, and make the process as convenient and easy as possible.”

The sisters started this effort after they were frustrated — like so many across the state — with the constant website refreshing to get their mother a vaccinatio­n appointmen­t.

“We were thinking, ‘There has to be an easier way,’ ” Gabrieli said.

As a result, they created MA COVID Vaccine Finder, which brings the sign-up process to the person by emailing them when vaccine appointmen­ts go live.

“We wanted to bring this to the people,” she said. “We’re always on our email during the pandemic, so these alerts go right to peoples’ emails within a minute.”

The three sisters pooled their skills to come up with this website and alert system. Lilla, a master’s degree student at the Oxford Internet Institute, has experience in computer science; Polly, 24, is a master’s degree student in bioinforma­tics at Harvard University; and Abigail, 26, works on policy and web design at MassEquali­ty.

The program they created pulls batches of vaccinatio­n appointmen­ts and alerts users within a minute. The users are notified with a link when 15 or more slots are posted.

Moving forward, the sisters are working on adding geographic alerts to limit a person’s alerts to only locations they want. Also, they’re looking at adding CVS and Walgreens appointmen­ts to the system, and implementi­ng text alerts.

“We’re building the plane as we fly,” Lilla said.

They’ve been self-funding the costs for the system, and are now trying to raise money for new features, including text alerts. They started a GoFundMe page called MA COVID Vaccine Finder.

To sign up for the vaccinatio­n appointmen­t alerts, visit www.macovidvac­cinefinder.org.

Other efforts to help Massachuse­tts residents with the vaccine sign-up system include: an Arlington software developer built an online vaccinatio­n platform, macovidvac­cines.com, where people can clearly see which vaccinatio­n providers have open slots; a Somerville software engineer created a Twitter account,@vaccinetim­e, that immediatel­y alerts people when new slots go live; and a Somerville woman on maternity leave started a volunteer group to directly book appointmen­ts, www.macovidvax­help.com, on behalf of strangers.

 ?? NAncy LAnE pHOTOS / HErALd STAFF FiLE ?? A SHOT IN THE ARM: Staff Sgt. Shavonne Santiago vaccinates a patient at the Brockton Neighborho­od Health Center vaccine site at the Shaw’s Center in Brockton on March 1.
NAncy LAnE pHOTOS / HErALd STAFF FiLE A SHOT IN THE ARM: Staff Sgt. Shavonne Santiago vaccinates a patient at the Brockton Neighborho­od Health Center vaccine site at the Shaw’s Center in Brockton on March 1.
 ??  ?? GETTING PROTECTED: Spc. Ryan Estes vaccinates Loraine McDuffy at the Brockton Neighborho­od Health Center vaccine site at the Shaw’s Center in Brockton.
GETTING PROTECTED: Spc. Ryan Estes vaccinates Loraine McDuffy at the Brockton Neighborho­od Health Center vaccine site at the Shaw’s Center in Brockton.

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