
Jackie Fortiér
Former Senior Health Reporter
(she/her)
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Health officials were counting on millions of doses of the Johnson & Johnson COVID-19 vaccine to immunize vulnerable communities.
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New state guidelines allow people in hard-hit areas to bring adult family members to get vaccinated if one person has an appointment. But L.A. County isn’t ready to roll it out across the board.
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Community clinics are welcoming the state’s decision to open up vaccine eligibility to anyone 50 or older on April 1 and to anyone 16 or older on April 15.
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Lisa Henderson and her kids wanted to do what they could to try to protect her husband, Mark Deetjen, a double transplant recipient who’d rejected one organ and had a heart attack.
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As a double transplant recipient who's dealt with organ rejection and a heart attack, Mark Deetjen was at high risk of getting seriously ill from COVID-19. To try to protect him, his wife and two kids signed up for vaccine trials.
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On March 15, millions more Californians will become eligible to get the free COVID-19 vaccine, including people ages 16 to 64 with developmental disabilities.
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To get more essential workers vaccinated, the Los Angeles County Board of Supervisors wants to expand clinic hours.
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The site opens today; any qualifying resident can get an appointment for a free vaccination at the Antelope Valley Fairgrounds.
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There are lots of obstacles, including hesitancy born partially of mistrust. 'You don’t know if this is good or bad,' said one resident of West Athens.
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For many in this Black community, there's lack of easy access to health care, no internet, "vaccine chasers" from far-flung wealthy areas who snap up appointments, and a sub-par online appointment system. And of course there's mistrust of the medical system born from generations of structural racism.
Stories by Jackie Fortiér
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