Florida News Connection
By: Trimmel Gomes
TALLAHASSEE, Fla. --
Health officials are optimistic broad immunity against COVID-19 can be achieved
for children, because the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention has
recommended a pediatric version of Pfizer's vaccine for kids 5-11 years old.
COVID infection rates are largely falling in the U.S., but that has been a
challenge due to vaccine hesitancy.
Tiffani Helberg, vice president for communications at Community Health of South
Florida, said reaching out in hard-to-reach communities and trying to gain
trust is something they have been doing for more than 50 years, but things have
been different with COVID.
"Of course, this is a greater challenge now as politics has been injected
into this medical fight over the pandemic," Helberg observed. "But nonetheless,
we have launched a full-court press to try and educate the community from the
beginning."
Florida's Republican leaders have been fighting against vaccine and mask
mandates. Gov. Ron DeSantis has called a special legislative session to block businesses
or school districts from implementing either. Some studies link a rise in
vaccine hesitancy to politicized debates around the pandemic.
Dr. Ron Yee, chief medical officer for the National Association of Community
Health Centers, said it is why community health centers are so
important. They have been working to build trusted relationships about COVID
with people in their areas, so they can get them accurate information, and
encourage them to get vaccinated.
"Not everybody is going to step up and get a vaccine right away," Yee
pointed out. "There'll be some, like we saw with the adults, that
immediately come in, there's going to be some that come in later, there's going
to be some on the fence. And there's going to be some that start with, 'No, I
don't want to get this.'"
Helberg noted since the inception, they have been tackling organic vaccine
hesitancy and the ones revved up by politics through a robust community
outreach plan to all of their South Florida locations.
"We also are very culturally sensitive," Helberg asserted. "All
of our employees are trained in cultural sensitivity. So we understand that
different cultures come with different beliefs about the vaccine, so we try and
approach it different ways depending on who we're talking to."
Community Health Centers have been caring for those living in poverty and other
hard-to-reach populations since the mid-1960s. To date, the centers have
completed nearly 16 million vaccines.
Content for this Post is provided by Florida
News Connection, a Bureau of Public News Service. Public News Service is a member of the The Trust Project.
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