A grandmother was eager to get a Covid-19 vaccine. She called a hotline but no one answered for weeks
Rosie Arguello spent the past couple of months glued to her cellphone and landline, calling a hotline to get a Covid-19 vaccine. When she heard the busy signal, she called again, and again, and again.
The 66-year-old who lives in San Antonio’s South side would only put her phones down to take her 2-year-old grandniece on a walk, cook chorizo and eggs for breakfast, sandwiches for lunch and a casserole by dinner time.
“I will wash the dishes in a hurry and then get back to it,” said Arguello, who doesn’t own a computer.
A grandmother was eager to get a Covid-19 vaccine She called a hotline but no one answered for weeks
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A grandmother was eager to get a Covid-19 vaccine She called a hotline but no one answered for weeks
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North Carolina Has a Plan to Get the COVID Vaccine to Migrant Farmworkers Ã
This month, thousands of migrant workers will begin the hard work of planting, tending and harvesting crops in North Carolina farm fields.
The state Department of Health and Human Services, farmworker health groups, employers, and medical clinics plan to make COVID-19 vaccines available to workers whose close living conditions make for the easy spread of the coronavirus. Migrant farmworkers work long hours each day. Many donât have internet access, move from farm to farm over the season, speak Spanish as their first language, and depend on their employers to get around.