USA TODAY US Edition

Churches become vital for vaccinatin­g masses

Groups aim to build trust amid new inequity battle

- Deborah Barfield Berry

WASHINGTON – The Rev. Karen Curry greeted the 65-year-old man stepping out of the mobile van with an elbow bump.

“Awesome, awesome,” she cheered. He was among nearly 100 people to get COVID-19 vaccine Saturday outside the Pennsylvan­ia Avenue Baptist Church in Washington.

Across the country, more faith-based groups are stepping up as vaccine sites, particular­ly in communitie­s of color, which have been disproport­ionately hard hit by the novel coronaviru­s.

Churches have often been a cornerston­e in the fight against inequities and a trusted source of informatio­n and guidance during troubled times. During the pandemic, vaccinatio­ns have become the latest public service in a health and economic crisis that has seen places of worship offer canned food, clothing, housing and other assistance.

“There’s a comfort level with the church,’’ said Curry, an associate minister. “Familiarit­y is important. We’re providing what people want and need.”

Faith groups said their facilities, particular­ly at megachurch­es, are often good locations for vaccine sites. In addition to being centrally located in communitie­s they serve, many have indoor space and parking lots large enough to host drive-thru services.

Faith leaders said they hoped to serve as critical partners in the largest vaccine rollout in history.

Federal and state officials are scrambling to distribute millions of vaccines as the death toll from COVID-19 continues to climb, reaching 500,000 Monday. Less than 14% of the U.S. population has received the vaccine, and preliminar­y data suggests people of color are being vaccinated at lower rates than white Americans.

“We need to get the vaccine into arms so that folks are protected,’’ said Kendrick E. Curry, senior pastor of the Pennsylvan­ia Avenue Baptist Church. “The church is often that place that people go to outside of the system . ... That safe space is usually your house of worship or some other community-related center.”

Once a week for the past two weeks, staff from the Wesley Community & Health Centers in Phoenix have gone across the street to the parking lot of the Antioch Missionary Baptist Church. They set up a drive-up vaccine station where residents over 65 years old were given the Moderna vaccine.

More than 100 people showed up for each session. Of those, about 60% were Latino, 5% were African American and 2% were Native American or Asian American. The rest were white.

The area the center serves in west and south central Phoenix has a COVID-19 positivity rate of about 27%, three times higher than Arizona’s statewide average, said Blaine Bandi, CEO of the faith-based group.

Center officials plan to work with other churches to set up more sites. They also hope to host a vaccine day with faith-based groups.

“They can help much in the way churches have been responsibl­e historical­ly for communicat­ing with their congregant­s about all sorts of things, like voting,” Bandi said. “All sorts of things beyond just God have been discussed in churches.”

Faith groups acknowledg­e there are challenges with convincing some to take the new vaccine and put aside a history of mistrust of the health care system.

According to the Kaiser Family Foundation, 43% percent of Blacks and 37% of Hispanic adults, compared with 26% of white adults, said they would “wait and see” before getting vaccinated.

In Texas, the Dallas Bethlehem Center has helped residents register

“Familiarit­y is important. We’re providing what people want and need.” The Rev. Karen Curry Associate minister, Pennsylvan­ia Avenue Baptist Church in Washington

for vaccines when they come for a food giveaway. Chelsea White, executive director of the faith-based group, said she expects the city will also ask the center to provide vaccines “which we will gladly, gladly do.”

White said the predominat­ely Black community of mostly low-income residents has suffered during the pandemic and needs access to the vaccine.

“COVID is bad enough for anyone, but when you have this kind of crisis in this neighborho­od, it’s just catastroph­ic and it will affect this neighborho­od for years,” she said.

White said historical­ly the community has not trusted the government or outside groups, particular­ly when it comes to health care.

“They’ll overpromis­e, underdeliv­er and then leave,” she said.

‘Our communitie­s can’t get it fast enough’

Rabbi Moshe Hauer, executive vice president of the Orthodox Union, a network of more than 400 synagogues, has called on federal and state officials to partner with faith groups to distribute the vaccine.

“We still stand ready,’’ he said. Hauer said faith leaders have seen the challenges and frustratio­ns of people trying to register for vaccines only to find slots filled and some sites crashing. Faith groups have been serving their communitie­s during the pandemic and already have the infrastruc­ture in place, he said.

“We know that our ticket out of this pandemic, God willing if that helps, is going to be these vaccines,’’ Hauer said. “Our communitie­s can’t get it fast enough.”

First Baptist Church of Glenarden will use space in its new Family Life Center in Upper Marlboro, Maryland, to host a vaccine site starting next month. Staffers are setting up stations and tables in one of the three basketball courts in the center’s gym.

The church has partnered with other

groups in the past to administer flu shots.

“They know that the church is a trusted entity within the community,’’ said Georgina Agyekum Manzano, the church’s health center administra­tor.

‘We need to get the vaccine into arms’

In Washington, a steady stream of seniors parked Saturday at the Pennsylvan­ia Avenue Baptist Church. Some came by bus. Others walked up with canes.

“The people who are coming are the people who have already decided to” get the vaccine, Karen Curry said.

The church is the first to serve as a vaccine site as part of a pilot program in the city. Throughout the pandemic, the church has also served as a food distributi­on site and a drive-by COVID-19 testing site.

Inside the church, a handful of seniors who had made appointmen­ts through the city, waited their turn and talked to staff from FiveMedici­ne, which is running the site. In another room, those who had received their

shots waited the required 15 to 30 minutes before leaving to make sure there were no adverse reactions.

Outside, a teal mobile unit was parked near the fellowship hall. The unit provided by Learning Undefeated is usually a science lab offering students STEM lessons in underserve­d communitie­s. On this day, a white curtain inside divided the unit so two people could get their vaccine in private.

In the first three days of hosting the vaccine site, more than 300 seniors from three predominat­ely Black and brown wards with high numbers of COVID-19 cases got their shots at the church.

There has to be an option “that’s not necessaril­y going to a fire station. That’s not necessaril­y going to a senior wellness center or to a CVS or a Safeway,” said Kendrick Curry, the church pastor.

A history of mistrust

Whether it was forced sterilizat­ions or the Tuskegee experiment or more current inequities such as lack of access to quality care, some in communitie­s of color have little faith in the nation’s health care system, said Selwyn Vickers, dean of the University of Alabama at Birmingham School of Medicine.

“Unintentio­nally or not, many people of color have mixed experience­s in the current health care environmen­t,” Vickers said.

Blacks and Latinos are three times more likely than whites to be hospitaliz­ed for COVID-19 and nearly twice as likely to die from it, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Native Americans are nearly four times more likely than whites to be hospitaliz­ed and more than two times more likely to die.

For more informatio­n, Black people often turn to the Black church, which has been a “trusted voice for their wellbeing and the survival of our people in the midst of crisis,” Vickers said.

Communitie­s of color are coming off a year when they were devastated by a global pandemic that forced many to continue working on the front lines, and left many facing evictions or burying loved ones, said Manuel Pastor, director of the University of Southern California’s Equity Research Institute.

“You just went through a traumatic experience of the government clearly not caring about you seemingly as much as other communitie­s,’’ he said. “And now they’re showing up with a vaccine.”

Vickers said people are likely to trust medical profession­als in their church.

“They’re hearing not only from their spiritual faith leaders, but they’re hearing from congregant­s who sit next to them, who can speak to them about what they know and what they believe about the science and research and the value of taking a vaccine shot,’’ he said.

Agyekum Manzano, of First Baptist Church of Glenarden, said her pastor, John K. Jenkins Sr., invited a health profession­al to a recent online Bible study to answer questions.

“One of the things he says is, ‘I’ve seen a lot of people die from COVID. I haven’t seen anyone die or I don’t know anyone who has died from the vaccine,’ ” Agyekum Manzano said. “So if getting the vaccinatio­n will prevent you from being seriously ill, it will prevent you from being hospitaliz­ed and it will prevent you from death, then why wouldn’t you want to take something like that?”

 ?? OCTAVIO JONES/GETTY IMAGES ?? A health care worker administer­s the COVID-19 vaccine to a resident living in the Jackson Heights neighborho­od at St. Johns Missionary Baptist Church in Tampa, Fla. The Florida Department of Health is targeting the underserve­d population­s that are most vulnerable to getting the coronaviru­s.
OCTAVIO JONES/GETTY IMAGES A health care worker administer­s the COVID-19 vaccine to a resident living in the Jackson Heights neighborho­od at St. Johns Missionary Baptist Church in Tampa, Fla. The Florida Department of Health is targeting the underserve­d population­s that are most vulnerable to getting the coronaviru­s.
 ?? PROVIDED BY DEBORAH BARFIELD BERRY ?? Karen Curry, associate minister at the Pennsylvan­ia Avenue Baptist Church in Washington, D.C., discussed the COVID-19 vaccine operation Saturday.
PROVIDED BY DEBORAH BARFIELD BERRY Karen Curry, associate minister at the Pennsylvan­ia Avenue Baptist Church in Washington, D.C., discussed the COVID-19 vaccine operation Saturday.
 ?? JACQUELYN MARTIN/AP ?? The Rev. Wallace Charles Smith, 72, a pastor at Shiloh Baptist Church, receives his first COVID-19 vaccinatio­n from nurse Michelle Martin at United Medical Center in southeast Washington on Wednesday.
JACQUELYN MARTIN/AP The Rev. Wallace Charles Smith, 72, a pastor at Shiloh Baptist Church, receives his first COVID-19 vaccinatio­n from nurse Michelle Martin at United Medical Center in southeast Washington on Wednesday.

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