Miami Herald

Jackson expands vaccine eligibilit­y to at-risk 16&up

Jackson Health System, Miami-Dade County’s public hospital, now allows anyone 16 or older who is medically vulnerable to sign up for a vaccine appointmen­t, no longer requiring a doctor’s note.

- BY BEN CONARCK bconarck@miamiheral­d.com

It’s about to get a lot easier to qualify for a COVID vaccine appointmen­t at Miami’s public hospital system if you have a medical condition that could put you at risk for severe disease.

Jackson Health System expanded eligibilit­y on Monday, dropping the minimum age to 16. The hospital first moved beyond the 13 medical conditions that previously qualified people for a vaccine last week, expanding to include people with diabetes, but it still required a doctor’s note and only applied to people over the age of 50.

Now, after not seeing a surge in sign-ups, Jackson has also eliminated most of the paperwork requiremen­ts. Anyone who has consulted a physician for any medical condition deemed to put them at risk could qualify for the vaccine.

The changes will go into effect with appointmen­ts made Monday evening for Tuesday. To check for available slots, visit jacksonhea­lth.org/keepingyou-safe/

The public hospital has vaccinated nearly 106,000 people and receives 9,360 first doses of the Pfizer-BioNTech COVID vaccine every week from the state. Jackson CEO Carlos Migoya said he doesn’t anticipate that weekly supply changing, but overall Miami-Dade County

has seen an increase in supply, and a correspond­ing decrease in demand for appointmen­ts at Jackson.

“There are more vaccinatio­n sites available in Miami-Dade, and as that started happening we saw the vaccinatio­n for our sites slowing down,” Migoya said. “We felt it was important to go ahead and open it up again.”

But Jackson isn’t just expanding eligibilit­y, it’s also eliminatin­g much of the paperwork. It’s no longer requiring a signed physician’s notice and instead allowing people to “self certify” that their doctors told them they were at risk for severe COVID-19 due to a medical condition. Those between the age of 16 and 18 will require approval from a parent or guardian.

Though the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention has identified risk categories for medical conditions, Dr. Peter Paige, the hospital system’s chief clinical officer, said Jackson has decided to go beyond that and is simply asking patients to consult their doctor if they feel at risk. Then the doctor’s word would be good enough, he said.

“We’re giving the physicians a little bit more freedom,” Paige said.

The expansion from Jackson comes after some criticism of the doctor’s note policy, which public health experts said placed unnecessar­y barriers between people on the fringes of healthcare access and the vaccines.

Despite that, Jackson has still vaccinated the most Black people of any provider in South Florida by far. About 14% of Jackson’s vaccine appointmen­ts have gone to Black people, and about 50% of Black people in Miami-Dade who have received a COVID vaccine got it from Jackson. The Black communitie­s represent about 16 percent of Miami-Dade’s population.

The hospital has attributed that success in vaccinatin­g Black residents to its partnershi­ps with community-based groups such as churches and nonprofits. It has scheduled about

30,000 appointmen­ts that way.

The expansion at Jackson comes after a week of vaccine chaos, where statesuppo­rted mega-sites were going unused in some areas of the state, including Miami-Dade.

That’s because the sites are restricted by Gov. Ron DeSantis’ executive order on who qualifies for a vaccine, but the order gives hospitals wider latitude to craft their own policies in vaccinatin­g at-risk people.

On Monday, DeSantis said any Floridian 60 or older will be eligible for a coronaviru­s vaccinatio­n starting March 15 due to what he called “softening” demand among seniors 65 and up.

“The pharmacies have their windows to sign up. They’re not gone in 10 minutes like they were a month and a half ago,” DeSantis said. “We think that’s a good sign because we think that we’ve reached a critical mass of the senior population.”

With DeSantis’ latest order, Floridians eligible to get a coronaviru­s vaccine under state policy are: longterm care facility residents and staff; people aged 60 and older; front-line healthcare workers; and sworn law enforcemen­t, K-12 employees and firefighte­rs aged 50 or older.

About 60% of MiamiDade’s 65-and-older population

have received at least one dose of a COVID vaccine, slightly above the state average of 57%, according to University of South Florida epidemiolo­gist Jason Salemi’s dashboard.

In Broward County, that number is at 62.5%, and Palm Beach County has reached 65.8%.

Broward Health, the public health system in Broward, is offering appointmen­ts to seniors 65 and older, healthcare workers, emergency medical service providers and people 18 and older with certain at-risk conditions. It did

not respond Monday to a Herald request seeking whether it was lowering the age on its vaccinatio­n requiremen­ts.

Despite being tasked with vaccinatin­g the medically vulnerable, Jackson has taken on the task of vaccinatin­g seniors, too. More than 75% of Jackson’s vaccines have gone to people 65 and older, the primary demographi­c of focus so far in Florida’s vaccine rollout.

The new policy doesn’t require people to consult their physician to explicitly get permission for a vaccine, said Paige.

“A lot of these conditions

are chronic,” he said. “... People know that certain conditions put them at high risk, and their doctors know. They probably already had those conversati­ons.”

Paige added, “The point is, we’re getting to a point where we have more availabili­ty, and we want to spread those vaccinatio­ns out to a larger group.”

jail inmates beat up notorious accused child killer Jorge Barahona at the Miami-Dade jail because “of the nature of his pending charges,” according to a newly released police report.

The men have all been charged with battery by a

detainee for the March 1 attack at the county jail, also known as the PreFive

Trial Detention Center.

Barahona, 53, was attacked as he slept and suffered multiple bruises on his face, a nosebleed and a small cut on his nose, according to the Miami-Dade police report.

Barahona is accused or murdering 10-year-old Nubia in February 2011, after months of torturing her and her twin brother inside the family’s Westcheste­r house. Police found Nubia’s chemicalso­aked body in the back of Barahona’s pickup truck along Interstate 95 in

Palm Beach County.

The high-profile case rocked Florida’s child welfare agency, which allowed the adoption of the twins and then overlooked repeated allegation­s of abuse. His former wife, Carmen Barahona, accepted a life prison sentence and will testify against him.

After years of delays, Barahona’s trial was scheduled to start in April 2020, but was postponed when the COVID-19 crisis shuttered Miami-Dade’s criminal courthouse. The trial has yet to be reschedule­d. Barahona was granted a new defense attorney after it was revealed his previous lawyer is under investigat­ion over discrepanc­ies with his legal billing.

Barahona faces the death penalty if convicted at trial.

The five inmates charged with attacking him are: Armando Verdecia, 21, Hakeem Drane, 24, Klauss Moise, 20, Devaun Spaulding, 27 and Oscar Martinez, 29.

The attack was not captured on surveillan­ce video because the inmates tampered with the camera, according to the police report by Miami-Dade Detective Cheick Kaba.

 ?? PEDRO PORTAL pportal@miamiheral­d.com | Feb. 19 ?? Miami-Dade County Fire Rescue Paramedic Y. Marrero vaccinates Pedro Urquiaga at Jackson Memorial. To check for available slots, visit jacksonhea­lth.org/keeping-you-safe/
PEDRO PORTAL pportal@miamiheral­d.com | Feb. 19 Miami-Dade County Fire Rescue Paramedic Y. Marrero vaccinates Pedro Urquiaga at Jackson Memorial. To check for available slots, visit jacksonhea­lth.org/keeping-you-safe/
 ??  ?? Jorge Barahona
Jorge Barahona
 ??  ?? Nubia Barahona
Nubia Barahona

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