Las Vegas Review-Journal (Sunday)

Improved vaccinatio­n outreach in Southern Nevada is cause for optimism

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Southern Nevada is mobilizing to address ethnic disparity in local distributi­ons of COVID-19 vaccinatio­ns. Thanks to health officials and local government staffers, plus cooperatio­n from the private sector, Las Vegas neighborho­ods with large minority population­s are starting to receive the outreach, informatio­n and access to vaccines that they deserve.

We’re seeing it in North Las Vegas, where city and health officials devised a comprehens­ive plan to reach Black and Hispanic residents, and in places like the Rafael Rivera Community Center in east Las Vegas, the site of a vaccine clinic that began Thursday and was conducted by the Immigrant Home Foundation and Walmart. In addition, the Southern Nevada Health District has opened several pop-up vaccinatio­n sites in recent weeks.

North Las Vegas’ efforts have been especially impressive. The city’s multifacet­ed strategy included establishm­ent of pop-up and walk-in vaccinatio­ns clinics, as well as a bilingual public informatio­n campaign to reach individual­s in three ZIP codes with particular­ly large minority communitie­s. Mobilizing city staff and temporary workers, the city recorded robocalls, distribute­d fliers to churches, went door-to-door through neighborho­ods placing hang-tabs on doorknobs, made public service announceme­nts, and set up vaccinatio­n pre-registry sites outside grocery stores, among other actions. North Las Vegas firefighte­rs set up a registrati­on outreach booth at the popular Broadacres swap meet as well.

A key part of the strategy was to assure residents that getting a vaccinatio­n is safe — an important message for minority residents who, for historical­ly justifiabl­e reasons involving discrimina­tion and abuse at the hands of health care providers, are wary of the health care system. The city also is addressing concerns among Hispanic residents that receiving an immunizati­on would subject them to scrutiny by immigratio­n officials.

North Las Vegas City Councilman Isaac Barron, who is Hispanic, has been particular­ly active in spreading the word that the vaccine and the vaccinatio­n process are safe. He recorded a public service announceme­nt that is currently playing in La Bonita grocery stores and has done significan­t outreach to the Hispanic community through social media and collaborat­ions with community advocacy organizati­ons.

Other council members have stepped up as well, with one example being Councilwom­an Pamela Goynes-Brown, who is Black, playing an instrument­al role in establishi­ng a pop-up clinic at the Martin Luther King Jr. Senior Center.

It’s an all-hands-on-deck approach, and it’s working. Vaccinatio­ns have increased significan­tly in all three ZIP codes, including a whopping 154% in 89030.

Efforts like this come as a significan­t relief, because Clark County suffered alarming ethnic disparitie­s in the early goings of the vaccinatio­n rollout.

As of mid-February, Blacks had received just 5% of the doses despite making up 12% of the overall population, and Hispanics had received just under 11% despite comprising 32% of the population.

That was especially disturbing given that the pandemic has hit minorities especially hard. The disparity in Clark County has

improved slightly since then, but there’s a long way to go to reach equity in the vaccinatio­n process.

This isn’t simply about being fair, it’s about protecting the entire community. COVID-19 doesn’t recognize ZIP code boundaries — it spreads when infected people leave home for work, shopping, etc. Plus, many of the residents in Southern Nevada’s particular­ly hard-hit areas work frontline jobs that can’t be done remotely, putting them at heightened risk of transmissi­on.

From a public health standpoint, it’s critical to give these communitie­s an appropriat­e share of vaccinatio­ns.

Fortunatel­y, officials have recognized the situation as an emergency and have swung into action. We applaud them, and urge them to keep working diligently. It’s the right thing to do, not only for the neighborho­ods that have been short-changed but for everyone in the valley.

 ?? STEVE MARCUS ?? Southern Nevada Health District workers set up for a COVID-19 pop-up vaccinatio­n clinic Jan. 29 at Jerome Mack Middle School.
STEVE MARCUS Southern Nevada Health District workers set up for a COVID-19 pop-up vaccinatio­n clinic Jan. 29 at Jerome Mack Middle School.

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