Press-Telegram (Long Beach)

Volunteers at vaccine sites getting doses for their work

- By Terry Tang and Manuel Valdes

When Seattle’s largest health care system got a mandate from Washington state to create a mass COVID-19 vaccinatio­n site, organizers knew that gathering enough volunteers would be almost as crucial as the vaccine itself.

“We could not do this without volunteers,” said Renee Rassilyer-Bomers, chief quality officer for Swedish Health Services and head of its vaccinatio­n site at Seattle University. “The sheer volume and number of folks that we wanted to be able to serve and bring in requires … 320 individual­s each day.”

As states ramp up vaccinatio­n distributi­on in the fight against the coronaviru­s, volunteers are needed to do everything from direct traffic to check people in so vaccinatio­n sites run smoothly. In return for their work, they’re often given a shot. Many people who don’t yet qualify for a vaccine — including those who are young and healthy — have been volunteeri­ng in hopes of getting a dose they otherwise may not receive for months. Large vaccinatio­n clinics across the country have seen thousands trying to nab volunteer shifts.

It’s raised questions at a time when supplies are limited and some Americans have struggled to get vaccinated even if they are eligible. But medical ethicists say volunteers are key to the public health effort and there’s nothing wrong with them wanting protection from the virus.

At the Seattle vaccinatio­n clinic, Swedish Health Services considers volunteers part of the state’s Phase 1 vaccinatio­n group. About 5,000 have been inoculated, and about 1,000 of them have come back to work again, RassilyerB­omer said.

Some may question whether it’s fair for volunteers to get to the front of the line for what’s often clerical work.

Nancy Berlinger, a bioethicis­t at the Hastings Center, a research institute in Garrison, N.Y., said the bottom line is that volunteers are interactin­g with the public and there’s nothing wrong with them wanting protection.

They also go through training and other obligation­s.

“There would be easier ways to game the system,” Berlinger said. “If that was really your goal, this could take more work.”

While many volunteer shifts are several hours on weekdays, Berlinger said that doesn’t necessaril­y mean only people of a certain class or demographi­c can sacrifice that much time.

 ?? THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? A volunteer worker injects the first dose of the Moderna vaccine into fellow volunteer worker Pete Graham in Seattle last month.
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS A volunteer worker injects the first dose of the Moderna vaccine into fellow volunteer worker Pete Graham in Seattle last month.

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