USA TODAY International Edition

These clinics are vital to vaccinatin­g America

Rollout in community hubs helps get vaccines to hardest hit groups

- Nada Hassanein

When the rollout of COVID- 19 vaccines began, 72year- old Jewelean Jackson looked to Dr. Chris Reif, her longtime physician at the local Community-University Health Care Center in south Minneapoli­s, for reassuranc­e.

Could she trust it? What would she tell her fellow Black neighbors when they asked if it was safe?

Similarly, doctors looked to her for insight into how they could help instill vaccine confidence in communitie­s of color.

“Today I had the second immunizati­on, and Dr. Reif administer­ed it, so that was special,” Jackson, a certified community health educator, said Friday.

More than 80% of patients at the clinic are Black, Indigenous or other people of color, said the clinic’s CEO Colleen McDonald Diouf. Many suffer from

“This system still doesn’t work for us as it should. Which is why, when you think about all that, the Community- University Health Care Center literally walks on water.”

Jewelean Jackson

chronic conditions, such as diabetes and hypertensi­on, require language assistance or are homeless. A couple of years ago, the city’s largest homeless encampment was right across the street.

All those factors combined, the center’s patients are especially vulnerable to contractin­g and experienci­ng complicati­ons from COVID- 19, making the clinic an anchor for patients amid the pandemic.

It’s a familiar story at Federally Qualified Health Centers – commonly known as community health centers – across the country. The designated clinics offer health care to underserve­d communitie­s, and as people of color continue to suffer disproport­ionately from the coronaviru­s, the centers could be essential in vaccinatin­g hard- hit population­s, experts say.

Nationwide, community health centers serve about 30 million patients. Two- thirds of them live at or below poverty, and half are racial or ethnic minorities. Most are uninsured or on Medicaid.

As part of its plan to improve the equitable distributi­on of vaccines, the Biden administra­tion is targeting the community health centers as distributi­on hubs.

Dr. Marcella Nunez- Smith, chair of the COVID- 19 Health Equity Task Force, announced earlier this month that the administra­tion would begin shipping doses to 250 centers, at least one in each state or territory.

Initially, the effort would focus on health centers that serve specific population­s, including migrant workers, agricultur­al workers, people with limited English proficiency, residents of public housing complexes and homeless people, Nunez- Smith said. The administra­tion recently released a list of the clinics.

A lifeline for the community

As hesitancy, fears and rumors surroundin­g the vaccine run rampant in communitie­s, Jackson, former committee chair at the center, has been having conversati­ons with friends and family to help dispel myths.

When she received a vaccine, other African American seniors at her book club said she was “crazy.” Her 31- yearold daughter, skeptical of the vaccine she took, was terrified when she found out her mother got it. “I want you to live a long life,” Jackson said she told her.

Jackson said the community health centers are essential to communitie­s like her own, with a history of medical injustices and lack of health care access.

“This system still doesn’t work for us as it should,” Jackson said. “Which is why, when you think about all that, the Community- University Health Care Center literally walks on water.”

‘ We don’t have enough’

Many health centers are experienci­ng unique challenges in providing care for their marginaliz­ed patients during the pandemic.

A report from the National Associatio­n of Community Health Centers found health centers reported delayed coronaviru­s testing results, lack of personal protective equipment and significant staff shortages – challenges the health care advocacy group said are expected to increase.

“After accounting for estimated vaccine- related costs, the total financial impact on health centers through June 2021 is estimated to be as much as $ 13.5 billion,” said another report from the advocacy group, which was echoed by one from the Kaiser Family Foundation.

In December, Congress passed a bipartisan coronaviru­s relief bill that included $ 4 billion reauthoriz­ed to the Community Health Center Program. The bill was signed into law during the last days of the Trump administra­tion. President Joe Biden has called on Congress to allocate more money to support the health centers.

The Southeast Mississipp­i Rural Health Initiative’s clinic staff are eager to receive the extra allotment. They need more vaccine doses.

Chief Operating Officer Janice Robinson said that throughout the network’s 17 community centers, 3,000 to 4,000 patients are on waiting lists for shots.

“We don’t have enough,” Robinson said. “This will definitely make a change.”

The network’s mission is to help control chronic illness in the state, where half the population is Black. The state suffers from the highest prevalence of obesity in the nation, and Black people suffer it and other poor health outcomes disproport­ionally.

Since the onset of the pandemic, the network has grappled with making sure patients receive the preventati­ve health care and regular appointmen­ts they desperatel­y need. While hospitals and primary care clinics relied on telehealth for virtual appointmen­ts amid social distancing, many rural Mississipp­ians lack broadband access, Robinson said.

While Biden’s plan allocates more vaccine to these underserve­d communitie­s, staffing shortages and other logistical challenges exist. About 39% of health care centers surveyed, for example, said staffing shortages are a barrier to administer­ing a vaccine, according to a weekly report from the Health Resources & Services Administra­tion.

Robinson cited the same challenges. “Having enough staff to administer it all” is a problem, she said. Sustaining hard- to- fill, high- paying jobs, such as nursing positions, is difficult during periods of low patient volume and decreased revenue.

The initiative provides transporta­tion services for patients throughout the sparsely populated rural areas but new options had to be added during the pandemic, Robinson said. As transmissi­on rates rose, carpooling some patients relied on was no longer safe.

“Trying to meet them where they are so that we can continue to serve them the best that we can in the midst of the pandemic ... bring its own set of challenges,” said Robinson, who has been with the network for more than a decade. “We have had to increase our transporta­tion services to make sure they can make their appointmen­ts and get the care they need.”

Transporta­tion will be essential for vaccine administra­tion to those communitie­s. “For a lot of our patients, we are all they have,” Robinson added. “If we were not there, some people would have nowhere to go.”

Dr. Heather Leisy treats patients at Hope Health in Florence, South Carolina. About 43% of residents are Black in Florence, and the state suffers from a high obesity rate and other health disparitie­s. Leisy also cited a nurse shortage amid an increase in testing during the surge in COVID- 19 cases.

“We don’t want to stop normal workflow, but we have these extra work duties on top of that, like testing or giving the vaccine, and that’s a very specialize­d team,” she said. “There’s been a nursing shortage … they’re being hired at very high rates per hour. That has been a difficulty, but I think that’s across ( all) health care centers.”

Trusted doctors dispel fears

Back at the Community- University Health Care Center in South Minneapoli­s, Diouf says many of the center’s patients live in multigener­ational households throughout the diverse area of Somali refugees and other ethnic groups.

With that in mind, the health center’s leaders advocated for lowering the minimum age requiremen­t to get the shot. Recently, the state pulled the age limit down to 50.

The staff has worked to build trust with the community for years. During the most trying of times, it has paid off, especially in fighting vaccine hesitancy. The medical staff is diverse and multilingu­al, which helps in providing care, debunking myths and answering questions about the vaccine.

“There is a lot of misinforma­tion – they want the right informatio­n,” said chief clinical officer Dr. Roli Dwivedi.

She recalled one patient who scheduled an appointmen­t with her just to discuss her fears about the vaccine and to ask questions. “She wanted to hear from me. She wanted to process those feelings, to hear that there’s no genetic modifications, there’s no fetal tissue in this vaccine,” Dwivedi.

Another patient who has several health conditions and receives dialysis three times a week told her: “‘ I’m only going to get the COVID vaccine if you are in this room and you can observe me.”

Now, Dwivedi says she tells every vaccinated patient: “You’ve got the vaccine, now you’re a leader. You go out and you talk to your friends and family and share your experience so that they know we need 65% to 70% of people to have the shot before we can be safe.”

 ??  ?? The Community- University Health Care Center in Minneapoli­s with its mobile COVID- 19 vaccinatio­n clinic is one of many such centers across the USA where the national battle against the novel coronaviru­s is being fought at the local level.
The Community- University Health Care Center in Minneapoli­s with its mobile COVID- 19 vaccinatio­n clinic is one of many such centers across the USA where the national battle against the novel coronaviru­s is being fought at the local level.
 ?? PHOTOS PROVIDED BY COMMUNITY- UNIVERSITY HEALTH CARE CENTER ?? Jewelean Jackson, a patient at the Minneapoli­s center, says her doctor, Chris Reif, is a source of reassuranc­e for wary patients.
PHOTOS PROVIDED BY COMMUNITY- UNIVERSITY HEALTH CARE CENTER Jewelean Jackson, a patient at the Minneapoli­s center, says her doctor, Chris Reif, is a source of reassuranc­e for wary patients.
 ??  ?? Reluctant patients want to know what they’re getting, says Dr. Roli Dwivedi: “There is a lot of misinforma­tion – they want the right informatio­n.”
Reluctant patients want to know what they’re getting, says Dr. Roli Dwivedi: “There is a lot of misinforma­tion – they want the right informatio­n.”

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