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Not Getting Their Shot: Black Residents Lag In COVID-19 Vaccinations

Mary Hansen / NPR Illinois | 91.9 UIS Illinois has given more than two million vaccinations. But Black residents are less likely to get the shots than their white peers, according to Illinois Department of Public Health data. As of Feb. 22, 4% of Sangamon County’s vaccine doses have gone to Black residents, who make up 13% of the county’s population, according to census numbers. State and county health officials point to hesitancy – a distrust of the medical establishment about getting the vaccine – as a reason for the gap. Nationwide surveys show there is more hesitancy among Black and Latino communities. Still, advocates for equitable distribution say ensuring access is as urgent as education.

Health care workers, students spending free time as volunteers giving COVID-19 vaccination shots This is one of the most therapeutic things

Health care workers, students spending free time as volunteers giving COVID-19 vaccination shots. ‘This is one of the most therapeutic things’ Madeline Buckley, Chicago Tribune © Antonio Perez / Chicago Tribune/Chicago Tribune/TNS Nursing student Monika Wida, from Lewis University College of Nursing, volunteers to give Moderna COVID-19 vaccine injections to people at Will County Community Health in Joliet on Feb. 8, 2021. CHICAGO – Montrice Brown was a 46-year-old casino worker with a high-risk pregnancy when she decided to finally make a career change. Brown always had nursing in the back of her mind, but it was her obstetrician’s care and encouragement while she was pregnant that inspired her to enroll in nursing school.

Health care workers, students spending free time as volunteers giving COVID-19 vaccination shots

How Illinois has struggled with COVID vaccine rollout

Joe Mahr and Angie Leventis Lourgos Chicago Tribune (TNS) Marj Leopardo is 85. Her husband, Sam, is 88. They both have health issues. And their days are now consumed with one thing: the vaccine hunt. The Crystal Lake couple are, on paper, just the kind of people the government wants at the front of the vaccine line. But they live in a country that’s struggled with the rollout, and in a state that’s struggled more than others. So that has meant reaching out daily to doctors’ offices, pharmacies, hospitals, the local health department. It has meant their daughter stalks websites to hunt for an elusive open appointment. And they watch others, in other suburbs and other states, snap up shots.

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