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Worcester launches Get Vaccinated Worcester public health campaign

WORCESTER The city has partnered with nearly 40 groups in a widespread effort to boost the number of people vaccinated against COVID-19.  A public health campaign to encourage vaccine acceptance called Get Vaccinated Worcester is going into effect, focused on direct outreach by health care providers and community-based organizations to educate those hesitant to get vaccinated.  The city of Worcester s Division of Public Health collaborated with the Health Foundation of Central Massachusetts, which provided $100,000 to the campaign, and the Meyers Primary Care Institute, as well as 32 community-based nonprofit organizations and five medical providers to design and implement the campaign. According to a release from the Health Foundation of Central Massachusetts, the public health campaign complements and coordinates with state and local vaccination distribution plans, specifically targeting communities of color and those living or working in Worcester, Grafton, Ho

City announces public health vaccination campaign Get Vaccinated Worcester

City announces public health vaccination campaign Get Vaccinated Worcester Isabel Sami, Telegram & Gazette © Rick Cinclair/Telegram & Gazette EMT Andrea Sivakova draws doses of the COVID-19 vaccine Tuesday during a clinic at Polar Park. WORCESTER The city has partnered with nearly 40 groups in a widespread effort to boost the number of people vaccinated against COVID-19.  A public health campaign to encourage vaccine acceptance called Get Vaccinated Worcester is going into effect, focused on direct outreach by health care providers and community-based organizations to educate those hesitant to get vaccinated.  The city of Worcester s Division of Public Health collaborated with the Health Foundation of Central Massachusetts, which provided $100,000 to the campaign, and the Meyers Primary Care Institute, as well as 32 community-based nonprofit organizations and five medical providers to design and implement the campaign.

Breast and prostate cancer screenings dropped during COVID-19 pandemic, UMMS study finds

Breast and prostate cancer screenings dropped during COVID-19 pandemic, UMMS study finds By Susan E.W. Spencer February 10, 2021 Breast and prostate cancer screenings declined rapidly in the early months of the COVID-19 pandemic compared with the same period a year earlier, according to a new study by UMass Medical School researchers working with Reliant Medical Group. While rates rebounded in June 2020, breast cancer screening rates, unlike prostate testing, stayed well below prepandemic levels through the study’s end in October 2020. Mara Meyer Epstein, ScD “We do know that it’s possible that when people miss a screening test, they could be diagnosed with cancer down the line, but it might be at a more advanced stage than if it had been detected earlier by screening,” said corresponding author Mara Meyer Epstein, ScD, assistant professor of medicine in the Division of Geriatric Medicine and the Meyers Primary Care Institute at UMMS

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