
A group of Arlingtonians has worked nights and weekends to sign up nearly 2,000 members of local immigrant communities for the COVID-19 vaccine.
And the team, called the Arlington Schools Hispanic Parents Association, only advertised its services twice: once in March, when the group decided to get involved, and once when eligibility expanded to all Virginians 16 and older.
Word spread by mouth, text and through small social networks among mostly Spanish-speaking communities in Arlington.
"For the first couple of weeks, we were overwhelmed," said ASHPA member (and former Arlington School Board member) Tannia Talento. "In the last two weeks, it has settled down. But now that it's open to the public, we expect a second rush."
Talento and Janeth Valenzuela started ASHPA in 2016 with two other women to address the communication gap among the county, the school system, and Spanish-speaking and other immigrant households. During the pandemic, the group pivoted to focusing on weekly food distributions, rent support, mental health education and now, registering people for vaccine appointments through the community health center, Neighborhood Health.
"I'm very proud of my team," Valenzuela said. "We want to help our community get vaccinated."
It has been almost two weeks since anyone 16 and older officially became eligible to get a shot and the number of vaccinated people continues to rise in Arlington County -- more than 68,000 people in Arlington are fully vaccinated as of today, according to the Virginia Dept. of Health.
Now that the vaccine is widely available, focus has shifted to getting those hesitant to get the vaccine -- or unable to get it for other reasons -- into vaccination clinics.
Talento and Valenzuela said they did encounter vaccine hesitancy in February and March but the bigger hurdles they face involve access. They worry that hesitancy is used to gloss over these other, surmountable barriers.
"In the beginning, it was difficult. Most of the population did not want the vaccine," Valenzuela said. "It's part of the culture in third-world countries to talk bad about vaccines. We had to work with that and let them know the vaccine is something to open the economy in this country and get back the life they had."
But when hesitant folks saw their community leaders get vaccinated, they changed their minds, she said. A few skeptical community members do remain, however, she noted.
Talento said she spends more time helping people access the vaccine than convincing them it is safe to take. Some did not think they were eligible back in February, even though they were.
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