Morning Briefing
Summaries of health policy coverage from major news organizations
Several Florida Communities Criticized Over Distribution Of Shots
As Florida鈥檚 eldest residents struggled to sign up to receive their first dose of the COVID-19 vaccine, nearly all those ages 65 years and older in a wealthy gated enclave in the Florida Keys had been vaccinated by mid-January, according to an emailed newsletter obtained by the Miami Herald. (Klas and Goodhue, 3/3)
The winds blew southwest the day of Pahokee鈥檚 Covid-19 vaccination drive, which meant the sugarcane fields were ablaze. Growers are banned from burning excess leaves when there鈥檚 an eastward breeze, to keep fumes away from the gated communities of Florida鈥檚 Gold Coast 40 miles away. Pahokee is in the same county but, with a median personal income of $13,674, its residents live in a different world. (Goldhill, 3/4)
Gov. Ron DeSantis held a press conference on Feb. 18 at the Mainlands of Tamarac by the Gulf, announcing the arrival of 3,000 vaccines for the Pinellas Park senior community. But the process that followed after the cameras were turned off was chaotic and questioned by some. (LeFever and Contorno, 3/3)
In other news about who's getting the covid shot 鈥
The leaders of Maryland鈥檚 two largest majority-Black jurisdictions on Wednesday urged the state to do a better job distributing vaccines in an equitable way. 鈥淒espite statements otherwise, the residents of Baltimore City are both entitled to 鈥 and deserve 鈥 the vaccines,鈥 Baltimore Mayor Brandon M. Scott said. 鈥淗owever our residents do not have equitable access to vaccine doses and the state is not providing an equitable share across jurisdictions.鈥 (Wood, 3/3)
With the expansion of the state鈥檚 mass vaccination sites and the emergency authorization of the Johnson & Johnson vaccine late last week, Maryland is preparing to ramp up its COVID-19 vaccination efforts over the next few weeks. But even as it does, the state is reckoning with inequities in the rollout of the vaccine thus far, with white Marylanders receiving nearly four times as many doses of vaccines as Black residents. (Kamidi, 3/3)
One retired couple is helping prevent the spread of COVID-19 by going viral. Joel and Harmony Kaplan, from Edina, Minnesota, have been taking to TikTok to share video messages about the pandemic. Singing together, they encourage everyone to wear masks, to wash their hands and to get a vaccine. The lyrical duo has been married for 50 years, and they have two children and four grandchildren. On March 1, they received the second dose of the Pfizer vaccine. (Yamada and Noll, 3/3)