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May 13, 2021 SHARE
Matthew Kreuter, the Kahn Family Professor of Public Health at the Brown School at Washington University in St. Louis, has received a one-year $1.4 million grant from National Institutes of Health’s Community Engagement Alliance (CEAL) Against COVID-19 Disparities. Funding was supported by the American Rescue Plan.
The grant, which will help to increase COVID-19 vaccinations among Blacks in St. Louis City and County, has a number of partners, including the St. Louis City Department of Health, St. Louis County Department of Health, St. Louis COVID-19 Regional Response Team, United Way, Home State Health/Centene, 211, and Washington University’s Brown School, School of Medicine and Sam Fox School of Design & Visual Arts.
St. Louis Public Radio
A pharmacist reconstitutes a bottle of coronavirus vaccine at Christian Hospital in St. Louis last month.
St. Louis health officials are bringing the COVID-19 vaccine to homebound residents, instead of waiting for them to come to clinics or other distribution sites.
The St. Louis City Department of Health is working with the city s Fire Department and the St. Louis Area Agency on Aging to vaccinate residents who can’t leave their homes because of their age or disability.
“We realized early on we needed to connect with and partner with organizations who regularly provide services and interact with some of the most vulnerable people in our community,” said Dr. Fred Echols, the health department’s acting director. “One population who was at the top of our list was homebound individuals.”
Slow COVID-19 vaccine rollout for non-hospital health care workers across St. Louis
In the St. Louis area, medical offices that see some of the area s most vulnerable patients don t know when they ll have access to the COVID-19 vaccine Author: PJ Randhawa, Erin Richey (KSDK) Published: 9:29 PM CST January 7, 2021 Updated: 9:15 AM CST January 8, 2021
ST. LOUIS The COVID-19 pandemic put many routine doctor and dental appointments on hold in 2020. Vaccine news was a hopeful development on the way to life as normal for patients, doctors, nurses, and dentists.
Missouri s vaccine priority list puts all doctors and patient-facing health care workers at the top, to keep them working safely and protect their patients from exposure.
The FDA has approved Pfizerâs COVID-19 vaccine for emergency distribution. Hereâs how it will be rolled out in Missouri
It could be several months before vaccines are available to the general public, said one hospital network spokesperson.
Courtesy of the CDC
St. Louis could see its first shipment of the Pfizer-BioNTech coronavirus as early as Tuesday, December 15, according to Dr. Fredrick Echols, acting director of the St. Louis City Department of Health. The U.S. Food and Drug Administration authorized Pfizerâs COVID-19 vaccine for emergency use on Friday night, according to
The New York Times, making the United States the sixth country to approve the vaccine.Â