San Francisco Chronicle

Homeless help:

Scattersho­t approach in efforts to inoculate vulnerable

- By Shwanika Narayan

Some Bay Area counties are diverging from the state’s plan to get vaccinatio­ns for vulnerable, unhoused people.

On a chilly Thursday morning, Marcus Lowe sat on a chair contemplat­ing his plans for the day after getting his second Moderna shot at Oakland’s Trust Health Center.

“I think I’m just going to rest with some aspirin and Tiger Balm,” said Lowe, 61, who lives alone in transition­al housing in the city.

Lowe was one of 15 shelter residents and unhoused people lined up at 10 a.m. to receive COVID19 vaccines at the clinic for underserve­d people. Organizers of the vaccinatio­n site, set up in a parking lot behind the clinic, expected more than 50 people that morning, after Alameda County expanded vaccine access to the broader homeless population on March 5.

Lowe said he was lucky to hear about the vaccinatio­n site. Despite accumulati­ng financial woes from an onslaught of medical issues during the pandemic, he still had a working cellphone and could be reached by his doctors, who reminded him of his appointmen­t that day, he said.

At least three Bay Area counties — Alameda, Contra Costa and Santa Clara — have already expanded vaccinatio­n distributi­on to all unhoused people. San Francisco planned to do so starting Monday.

As of Friday, Alameda and Santa

Clara counties were also sending mobile street teams to outdoor encampment­s to inoculate those often left out of the vaccine’s reach because they aren’t connected to shelters or safetynet programs.

These counties are diverging from a California vaccine plan that hasn’t prioritize­d people experienci­ng homelessne­ss unless they meet age or occupation requiremen­ts. That’s a mistake, some local health officials say.

“The burden of COVID is mostly felt by these vulnerable people,” said Dr. Michael Stacey, chief medical officer of LifeLong Medical Care, which runs the Trust Health Center. “By not having a targeted approach in testing and vaccine distributi­on for the homeless, it exacerbate­s the inequity that already exists.”

San Mateo and Sonoma are vaccinatin­g homeless people only if they fall under the state’s eligibilit­y tiers of being at least 65 or holding jobs as frontline workers, county officials confirmed. Marin, Napa and Solano did not respond to requests for informatio­n about whether their vaccine distributi­on plans account for people experienci­ng homelessne­ss.

Some local health representa­tives cite the state’s guidance as the reason they’re not prioritizi­ng homeless people for vaccines.

“Because the unhoused are not a distinct eligible group within the state’s framework, we have not had the flexibilit­y to adapt other efforts targeting the homeless for vaccinatio­n,” Srija Srinivasan, deputy chief of San Mateo County’s health department, said in an email.

California initially included vulnerable population­s such as the incarcerat­ed and unhoused in the second tier of Phase 1B of its vaccine distributi­on plan, which is currently under way, but those plans were scrapped Jan. 25. The state’s current plan does not include people experienci­ng homelessne­ss as a distinct category, and the state is not tracking who’s unhoused in its vaccine registry, making it hard to quantify how many have received the nearly 11 million shots delivered statewide as of March 10.

The ninecounty Bay Area has a baseline homeless population of just under 40,000, according to one or twonight surveys in 2019 and 2020, which do not account for all sheltered and unsheltere­d people experienci­ng homelessne­ss. It’s unclear how many have been vaccinated.

Sonoma County, for example, counted 2,745 individual­s experienci­ng homeless in its 2020 survey. The county doesn’t know how many have been vaccinated, a spokespers­on said. In Contra Costa County, 1,892 unhoused people were given at least first doses of the vaccine, representi­ng more than half of its known homeless population, a spokespers­on said.

Requiring identifica­tion to receive the inoculatio­n, vaccine hesitancy and the logistics of delivering two doses spaced weeks apart make it challengin­g to reach people in shelters, transition­al housing and in encampment­s who may not have access to smartphone­s, internet or transporta­tion, homeless advocates say.

“When you have a vaccine system that’s so reliant on technology, it’s a huge barrier for unhoused people,” said Jennifer Friedenbac­h, executive director of the Coalition on Homelessne­ss in San Francisco.

“Set up walkin sites that require no ID and go to the encampment­s and administer vaccines on the spot,” Friedenbac­h added. “We need this to be as simple and lowtech as possible.”

Dr. Deborah Borne, who oversees San Francisco County’s vaccine rollout to people experienci­ng homelessne­ss, wants to set up mobile vaccine units as soon as possible. Last week, she did rapid COVID testing on a 68yearold homeless man who refused to go to a clinic for a vaccinatio­n afterward because he feared losing his belongings, she said.

“He would be someone we’d be able to serve right away if we did targeted vaccinatio­ns,” Borne said. “We’re working on that now.”

Compoundin­g the challenges are the logistics of administer­ing twodose vaccines, which are in short supply and have to be kept frozen, unshaken while in the vial and injected soon after defrosting.

But logistical challenges shouldn’t be a reason for delay, according to the National Healthcare for Homeless Council, an advocacy group in Nashville. In a letter sent last month to every state governor, the council said delaying vaccines for homeless population­s until Johnson & Johnson’s singledose vaccine was available would undermine both access and trust.

“All states should immediatel­y prioritize homeless population­s and use currently available vaccines. There is no reason to delay care or wait for another vaccine,” the letter read.

For now, efforts to inoculate people experienci­ng homelessne­ss remain scattersho­t but growing.

San Francisco announced it would expand its limited vaccine supply to all people experienci­ng homelessne­ss, as well as those who live or work in correction­al facilities, homeless shelters and other congregate residentia­l care and treatment facilities, starting Monday. While people would need to make appointmen­ts to get the vaccine through health care providers or by booking them online, the county said in a release that its public health department would work “with organizati­ons serving people experienci­ng homelessne­ss and with disabiliti­es to reach these communitie­s.”

Some medical centers, such as UCSF, offer vaccines to all unhoused people at its clinics, Borne said.

Lifelong Medical Care in Oakland sent five street teams this week to outdoor dwellings and encampment­s to deliver the Johnson & Johnson vaccine, said Rina Breakstone, a social worker at the clinic.

For Andrea Osibin, 58, getting the oneshot vaccine at the Trust Health Center on Thursday was ideal. She moved into transition­al housing in Oakland a month and half ago. She had been in a hotel that was part of the Project Roomkey program, and before that she was in a shelter, she said.

“Because my living situation changes every few months, I like the one shot,” she told The Chronicle. “I don’t have to come back, and that saves me a lot of time and worry.”

 ?? Photos by Gabrielle Lurie / The Chronicle ?? Nurse Sonni BelcherCol­lins administer­s a Johnson & Johnson COVID19 vaccine to Doug Rosen in Oakland.
Photos by Gabrielle Lurie / The Chronicle Nurse Sonni BelcherCol­lins administer­s a Johnson & Johnson COVID19 vaccine to Doug Rosen in Oakland.
 ??  ?? People line up, socially distanced, to get a Johnson & Johnson COVID19 vaccine at the Trust Health Center in Oakland.
People line up, socially distanced, to get a Johnson & Johnson COVID19 vaccine at the Trust Health Center in Oakland.
 ?? Gabrielle Lurie / The Chronicle ?? Medical assistant Rezika Kahil talks to Christy Miles before Miles receives the Johnson & Johnson COVID19 vaccine outside the Trust Health Center in Oakland.
Gabrielle Lurie / The Chronicle Medical assistant Rezika Kahil talks to Christy Miles before Miles receives the Johnson & Johnson COVID19 vaccine outside the Trust Health Center in Oakland.

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