The Guardian (USA)

'Whose lives matter most?': California's vaccine rollout faces tough questions of equity

- Sam Levin in Los Angeles

As the first doses of the Covid-19 vaccine arrive in California, officials are facing intense pressure to prioritize vulnerable communitie­s and promote equity and racial justice in the state’s distributi­on scheme.

Historical­ly marginaliz­ed groups that have been ravaged by the virus and their advocates are pushing for urgent vaccine access, including farm workers in the Central Valley, undocument­ed laborers in the meatpackin­g industry, incarcerat­ed people in overcrowde­d prisons and indigenous communitie­s in remote regions.

In deciding who gets access to the limited supplies of the life-saving vaccine in the coming months, the most populous and diverse state in the country will have to answer thorny questions about what work is “essential” and how the government should address the pandemic’s systemic inequaliti­es and historical injustices amid the virus’ deadliest surge yet.

“This is a hard question, because you’re essentiall­y asking whose lives matter the most,” said Janel Bailey, co-director of the Los Angeles Black Worker Center, which has helped provide Covid testing in hard-hit Black neighborho­ods.

Who is essential?

California began receiving its initial batch of roughly 325,000 doses of the Pfizer vaccine this week, with the first state resident inoculated on Monday. In the first phase of the vaccine’s distributi­on, officials are prioritizi­ng healthcare workers and residents of long-term care facilities, with the goal of giving out at least 2m doses by the end of the month.

Officials have said the following phase will prioritize­essential workers and others at high risk of becoming infected or seriously ill, but it’s still unclear when the state will be able to move to the next tier or who will fall under the broad categories it has outlined for phase two. California has not yet detailed what labor is essential.

Dr Tony Iton, senior vice-president of the California Endowment, said he was worried some of the most disenfranc­hised workers in the health care system risk being left behind.

“It’s not just doctors and nurses. There are highly vulnerable people who need to be at the head of the line,” he said, pointing at hospital janitors, home health aides, licensed vocational nurses and others in often overlooked positions. “It’s people for whom work is essential – they have to make a daily cash number in order to pay rent, to eat and to survive.”

Aquilina Soriano Versoza, the director of the Pilipino Workers Center in LA, works with undocument­ed caregivers who have suffered Covid outbreaks, but have struggled to get basic support due to the precarious nature of their jobs and their immigratio­n status. She fears similar problems with vaccines, noting that some of their jobs aren’t on the books or are in private homes.

It’s especially critical now as more of them are being forced to work dangerous jobs to survive: “We’re continuing to lose people in the community.”

There are ongoing efforts to secure early access for childcare workers, grocery and warehouse workers and inperson retail employees. Advocates for public sector employees, including teachers and transporta­tion workers, have also argued they should be at the front of the line.

Reaching ‘invisible workforces’

In the discussion­s of equity, there are also major geographic disparitie­s to consider. California’s farmworker­s, who are primarily Latino, have suffered dramatical­ly during the crisis in the Central Valley and continue to work in perilous conditions while producing a majority of many of America’s fruits, nuts and vegetables. Latinos make up 60% of Covid cases in the state, even though they are 40% of the population.

“The systematic racism that has been built into the federal exclusion of agricultur­al workers is something that this country cannot deny,” said Diana Tellefson Torres, executive director of the United Farm Workers Foundation (UFW), who is also a member of the state’s vaccine advisory committee.

Dolores Huerta, a longtime labor activist in the Central Valley, said that many farmworker­s and other laborers in the region live in crowded homes and travel to work in packed buses and vans, and argued that it’s vital that they are prioritize­d. “Farmworker­s are always the invisible workforce, but they are doing the essential work of feeding this nation. They need to be protected.”

Torres warned that it would be especially challengin­g to reach farmworker­s, given they frequently change jobs and work in geographic­ally isolated areas. A recent UFW survey found that nearly 80% are also uninsured. Those challenges shouldn’t deter the state from addressing those inequaliti­es, she argued, but should motivate officials to invest resources as soon as possible.

Given the challengin­g logistics of vaccinatin­g people in remote areas, starting early would be key to success, echoed Iton, former director of Alameda county’s public health department. The Pfizer vaccine requires two doses and must be stored and transporte­d at about -70C. In addition to the Central Valley, he said he was worried about the rural industrial regions of the Inland Empire in southern California and well as remote parts of northern California where indigenous people live.

Virginia Hedrick, a member of the Yurok tribe, who is also in the state’s vaccine committee, argued vaccines were urgent for the communitie­s that don’t have large hospital systems. Given that indigenous population­s make up just 1% of the state, it should be easy to prioritize them, she said, adding, “The equity lens should include historical injustice.”

‘Vaccinate those who can’t escape the virus’

There are also contentiou­s questions about access for incarcerat­ed people in the state’s prison system, which has faced a catastroph­ic and ever worsening Covid outbreak. Prison guards and other staff will access the vaccine as essential workers, but it’s unclear whether overcrowde­d prisons will simultaneo­usly offer it to prisoners, even though the institutio­ns qualify as some of the highest-risk congregate settings.

“Vaccinatin­g incarcerat­ed people is essential for the people in prison who can’t escape the virus,” said Hadar Aviram, a University of California, Hastings law professor whose research found that prison Covid spikes are correlated to surges in the surroundin­g regions. “It’s also a crucial step toward eliminatin­g the incubators that push the viruses out to the community.”

Since March, 30,000 state prisoners have been infected and 101 have died, many infected in regions whose hospitals are now overflowin­g with Covid patients.

Social distancing is impossible in prisons where there are high rates of immunocomp­romised and elderly people, noted James King, campaigner with the Ella Baker Center for Human Rights. Since the state has refused to do mass releases of vulnerable people, it has allowed Covid to reach every facility, threatenin­g thousands at high risk of death.

That means the state has a public health obligation to make vaccines available and mandate vaccines for guards, King argued: “If California is committed to holding them captive, then they should be committed to protecting their health.”

A spokespers­on for the state prisons said officials were working on a distributi­on plan for staff and incarcerat­ed people, but declined to give a timeline or say whether vaccines will be required for staff. Prisons “will aim to target frontline workers as well as medically high-risk patients”, the spokespers­on said.

Residents of homeless shelters also live in environmen­ts prone to rapid spread, and it’s unclear how quickly they will be prioritize­d, said Rev Andy Bales, head of the Union Rescue Mission, a Skid Row shelter. He said he hoped shelter residents and those living on the streets were equally prioritize­d, and that he was concerned he hadn’t yet heard when his organizati­on will get access: “We really need to protect people devastated by homelessne­ss who have so many other health issues.”

A state health spokespers­on said Tuesday that officials were still working on essential worker recommenda­tions, and that local county department­s will ultimately be responsibl­e for administer­ing vaccines. Governor Gavin Newsom said the next phase could include grocers, farmworker­s and teachers.

Building trust in the vaccine

Community groups said that building trust in the vaccine is a crucial part of addressing equity, given that many groups disproport­ionately harmed by Covid have historical reasons to be skeptical about US healthcare.

“A lot of Black folks have a deep and reasonable mistrust of the government,” said Bailey, arguing that it will take time and resources for some communitie­s to feel comfortabl­e taking the vaccine and that in the meantime the government should be providing better support so that people can afford to stay home.

In the prison system, there is a long history of neglect, medical experiment­ation, forced sterilizat­ion and other major health problems, advocates noted.

Combined with the prison system’s mishandlin­g of the virus, some incarcerat­ed peoplemay be reluctant to take a vaccine, said Aviram, noting that they would be more willing if they saw the state take Covid seriously and release vulnerable people: “At every turn, the message has been, ‘We don’t care about your lives, we are here to punish you.’”

Hedrick, who also heads the California Consortium for Urban Indian Health, said she has heard some residents spread false conspiracy theories that officials are prioritizi­ng “equity” so they can test the vaccine on communitie­s of color as “guinea pigs”.

She said she has been countering that message by explaining to people how the vaccine was developed, and by noting that the focus on equity is what activists have been demanding: “This is what us in the social justice movement have been asking for. This is an answer to prayer.”

 ?? Photograph: Jae Hong/EPA ?? Governor Gavin Newsom applauds ICU nurse Helen Cordova as she receives the coronaviru­s vaccine.
Photograph: Jae Hong/EPA Governor Gavin Newsom applauds ICU nurse Helen Cordova as she receives the coronaviru­s vaccine.
 ?? Photograph: Al Seib/REX/Shuttersto­ck ?? Jennifer Klein, a teacher at Lupine Hill elementary school in Calabasas, California, collects crayons from kindergart­en students.
Photograph: Al Seib/REX/Shuttersto­ck Jennifer Klein, a teacher at Lupine Hill elementary school in Calabasas, California, collects crayons from kindergart­en students.

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