How a grassroots Bay Area vaccine clinic managed to get people vaccinated despite the faltering rollout
FacebookTwitterEmail
1of3
Dr. Joseph Aita administers a COVID-19 vaccination to Carlos Tiburcio, a worker with Renteria Vineyards.Brittany Hosea-Small/Special to The ChronicleShow MoreShow Less
2of3
Patients wait to receive their COVID-19 vaccinations at the St. Helena Foundation community clinic at Napa Valley College.Brittany Hosea-Small / Special to The ChronicleShow MoreShow Less
3of3
Marianne Scerri (center), a volunteer nurse practitioner who came out of retirement to help distribute vaccinations, talks with Maria Auxilio Irucuta, a worker with Renteria Vineyards, before giving her a COVID-19 vaccination at the St. Helena Foundation clinic.Brittany Hosea-Small / Special to The ChronicleShow MoreShow Less
Bay Area ramps up mass vaccination sites
Bay Area ramps up mass vaccination sites
Clinics around the Bay Area are matching whatever COVID-19 vaccine they receive with those who need it the most. KTVU s Debora Villalon checked out vaccination sites in Napa and San Francisco.
NAPA, Calif. - Mass vaccinations are gaining traction, as multiple Bay Area communities step up their shots.
From Antioch to Mountain View, San Francisco to St. Helena, providers are ready and raring to go, as long as unreliable supplies hold out. It s a giant jigsaw puzzle every day, said Glen Newhart, President and CEO of the St. Helena Hospital Foundation.