Los Angeles Times

North San Diego County lags in vaccinatin­g Latinos

- By Deborah Sullivan Brennan and Lauryn Schroeder Sullivan Brennan and Schroeder write for the San Diego Union-Tribune.

SAN MARCOS, Calif. — A success story in one part of San Diego County is bringing scrutiny to another.

Now that vaccinatio­n rates among Latino communitie­s in south San Diego County have risen well above the region’s average, some are questionin­g why the same isn’t true for Latino population­s in the county’s northern neighborho­ods.

Advocates and statistics analyzed by the San Diego Union-Tribune indicate that areas with high Latino population­s in the North County region are lagging behind in COVID-19 vaccinatio­n rates.

“South Bay is at almost 89%” vaccinated, said community organizer Arcela Nunez-Alvarez. “But imagine, we have census tracts in Escondido, San Marcos and Vista that are barely hovering over 50%, and some are not even at 50%. That’s a huge disparity.”

As of late September, 87.6% of Latinos living in Chula Vista were fully vaccinated, according to county public health data, largely as a result of targeted efforts by health authoritie­s, community organizati­ons and health advocates.

That compares with 51.1% vaccinatio­n rates in parts of northern and eastern San Diego County that are heavily Latino. In Oceanside, one census tract had 42.3% of people only partly vaccinated, while Escondido and San Marcos had census tracts with 46.5% and 49.1% partly vaccinated, respective­ly.

“Escondido was one of the hardest-hit cities in the entire county,” said NunezAlvar­ez, co-founder of the Vista-based immigratio­n rights organizati­on Universida­d Popular. “It should have been one of the priorities for response, because the numbers merit that. But that wasn’t the sense of urgency we saw.”

Although people in other parts of San Diego sometimes associate North County with affluent, predominan­tly white coastal communitie­s that have fared relatively well during the pandemic, the region includes some urban areas, sprawling suburbs and rural backcountr­y.

Escondido and Vista are majority Latino cities, with high numbers of immigrants, migrants and essential workers. According to 2019 estimates, Escondido’s and Vista’s population­s were each almost 52%.

Escondido has been a hot spot of coronaviru­s infections, with a rate of 13,210 cases per 100,000 residents on Wednesday, well above the countywide rate of 10,371 and behind only Lemon Grove, National City, El Cajon and Chula Vista.

Early in the pandemic, some health advocates noted that Latinos in San Diego County experience­d higher coronaviru­s infection rates than other ethnic and racial groups, often because many were in jobs that were deemed “essential” and lived with multiple family members.

Hoping to stop the virus’ spread in hard-hit areas such as Chula Vista, Barrio Logan and City Heights, county authoritie­s teamed up with the Latino Health Coalition, a group of nonprofits. They dispatched neighborho­od representa­tives, including promotoras, who are neighborho­od workers who walk door to door to educate residents about safety measures, testing and vaccinatio­n.

Health workers also distribute­d face masks, hand sanitizer and thermomete­rs, and broadcast COVID-19 informatio­n in Spanish while enlisting community leaders to spread the message. Coalition members helped make vaccinatio­n appointmen­ts and organized testing and shot clinics in parks and schools.

Watching that coordiAnd nated effort, Nunez-Alvarez said she and her sister, San Marcos City Councilwom­an Maria Nunez, were impressed by its efficiency but frustrated that similar resources weren’t directed at their communitie­s.

“We knew that in South Bay, promotoras had been hired and trained,” Maria Nunez said. “We asked ‘Who’s contracted to do outreach and education here?’ But no one knew.”

County officials said that they did not neglect North County; they just targeted resources first to areas with the highest infection rates. Those efforts created a template for the next phases of their outreach, they said.

“The next region we expanded that to, frankly, was North County,” said Carey Riccitelli, who coordinate­s education and outreach for the county Emergency Operations Center. “We can’t be everywhere at once, but once we could reach out to North County, we did.”

County Supervisor Terra Lawson-Remer, whose district includes Escondido, pushed to open a vaccinatio­n center downtown at the former Palomar Hospital site, said spokesman Spencer Katz. LawsonReme­r, a former healthcare worker, even administer­ed shots.

“Thanks to her advocacy, Palomar Health in Escondido was stood up as a vaccinatio­n hub,” Katz said. “Prior to that, Escondido was left off the list of vaccinatio­n sites. The supervisor actually did a shift herself. It was the definition of a hands-on experience that was eyeopening for her and her team.”

The clinic also administer­ed coronaviru­s tests and monoclonal antibody treatments, Palomar Health spokesman Derryl Acosta said.

“That location was selected because of the harderto-reach [population­s], to create better access to the vaccine,” he said.

The Escondido hospital site delivered more than 30,000 vaccine doses before the shot clinic closed May 1 because of dwindling attendance, Acosta said. Since then, the health system has been providing vaccinatio­ns in the homes of people who can’t visit clinics.

Nunez-Alvarez said the shrinking lines at the clinic weren’t a sign of dwindling demand but signals of a more challengin­g phase.

Though the hospital was centrally located, it still wasn’t accessible for many immigrants and migrant workers, she said. Some lacked transporta­tion, couldn’t get time off work for vaccinatio­n or were nervous about being asked for personal identifica­tion, she said. with Latino communitie­s more spread out in northern San Diego County than in the southern part, it’s been challengin­g coming up with regionwide public health strategies, said Herminia Ramirez, program manager for outreach and migrant health with the Vista Community Clinic.

“I think North County has a very unique landscape,” Ramirez said. “We have much more diverse geographic locations. We’re very separated; there are a lot of people living in unincorpor­ated areas. So I think resources need to be rolled out differentl­y in North County.”

Early in their vaccinatio­n campaign, volunteers with Universida­d Popular assisted staffers with the California Department of Forestry and Fire Protection with shot clinics at North County farms, providing education and interpreta­tion services, including multilingu­al translatio­n of English, Spanish and Indigenous Central American languages.

“We would show up, and it would be mostly Guatemalte­cos, who hardly spoke any Spanish,” NunezAlvar­ez said.

After helping with vaccine drives in the backcountr­y, she realized some people would never go to a large clinic. Instead, health authoritie­s needed to bring the shot to them; the problem wasn’t vaccine hesitation but logistics, she said.

“What we were hearing was all about access,” Nunez-Alvarez said. “‘Where do we go?’ ‘What do we need?’ ‘Do we need insurance?’ ‘What happens if I get sick and can’t go to work after I get my vaccine?’ Those were the questions we got. Not the politicize­d concerns that we see at the county Board of Supervisor­s.”

She and her team identified a key place for addressing these kinds of local concerns en masse: the Escondido World Marketplac­e. Often called the swap meet, the market is an emporium of food, clothes, antiques and housewares that attracts thousands of visitors a day, particular­ly on weekends.

“The Escondido World Marketplac­e is the place that every immigrant goes to,” Nunez-Alvarez said.

At the first event on May 16 organized with Cal Fire and Palomar Hospital, they administer­ed shots to 350 patients.

“Many don’t have insurance, many were immigrants, even migrants, and many were farmworker­s,” Nunez-Alvarez said. “So we knew we had found a way to reach a hard-to-reach community.”

Before a second swap meet clinic, scheduled for June 6, Palomar Health pulled out of the plan. Worried that would prevent people from getting second doses, Nunez-Alvarez dashed off letters to county officials.

“It is unacceptab­le that the entire North Inland region, in particular the City of Escondido that was the third worst hit by COVID-19 in the county, has been underserve­d and neglected in this manner,” she wrote to Paola Martinez-Montes, director of community engagement for Board of Supervisor­s Chair Nathan Fletcher.

Cal Fire agreed to deliver the shots, and MartinezMo­ntes wrote back that she had requested authorizat­ion for the agency to hold vaccine clinics at the swap meet on that date and several others that month.

The events went on as planned, and vaccinatio­n efforts have continued at the site, Nunez-Alvarez said.

Maria Nunez also connected with other Latina elected leaders across the State Route 78 corridor, including Escondido Councilwom­an Consuelo Martinez, Vista Councilwom­an Corinna Contreras and Oceanside Mayor Esther Sanchez to press county officials for help, she said.

A number of people said they had already gotten vaccines, and several acknowledg­ed that they had been ill with COVID-19. A few asked about booster shots.

One man confessed that he hadn’t gotten vaccinated because he fears needles.

The vaccinatio­n clinic would offer the one-dose Johnson & Johnson shot, Nunez-Alvarez said, cheerfully chipping away at his hesitation.

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