Special to El Rrun-Rrun
State, university, and county officials say that nearly 7,000 more doses of the COVID-19 vaccine are on the way to the Rio Grande Valley. The majority – 3,900 – are headed to Cameron County, according to the Texas Department of State Health Services.
They also announced that another 2,575 are headed to Hidalgo County.
And the Texas Department of State Health Services and the the University of Texas Rio Grande Valley – which has also received a shipment of Moderna’s COVID-19 vaccine at the UT Health RGV/Knapp Family Health Center in Mercedes and the UTRGV Clinical Education building in Harlingen – say they have began identifying and vaccinating qualified individuals.
According to a release from the university, the vaccines will be administered to the three groups of individuals prioritized by state health officials to receive the vaccine.
These groups include:
* Front-line employees who have heightened exposure to the virus or must remain healthy to support others as cases surge;
* Individuals under 65
* Individuals under 65 at risk for severe illness from COVID-19 because of certain comorbidities.
Notice there is no mention of home health workers of private companies in the prioritizing by state and university officials?
So why has Cameron County Health Director Dr. James W. Castillo II, the Cameron County health authority, announce that Cameron County plans to focus on vaccinating home health workers?
You know, these are the people – both young and middle age – that are employed by private home health givers to visit patients at home. So what happened to the priorities emphasized by the state and UTRGV health authorities? Nowhere in their announcements did they single out home health workers?
Could it be that Cameron County's vaccines will be funneled to home health workers – and some elderly skipped over – because Castillo just happens to be listed on its website as the senior medical director for Kindred at Home LLC, a company in Harlingen which provides home health, palliative, hospice, and community care service providers?
Since December 23, the county health department has confirmed 785 positive COVID-19 cases.
Castillo, in statements to the media, said he plans to focus on vaccinating home health workers.
An estimated 130 home health companies in Cameron County – including Kindred at Home – employ about 14,000 people.
An estimated 130 home health companies in Cameron County – including Kindred at Home – employ about 14,000 people.
"So, definitely, we want to focus in on that group because it's a lot broader, it's not as centralized," Castillo said.
Castillo conveniently pointed out that home health workers provide assistance to people with chronic medical problems, people with disabilities and people who are homebound. Vaccinating home health workers will help protect their clients from the virus, he added.
In some circles that is called self-dealing. Is this any way to deal with a pandemic?
13 comments:
They should be in the list- they go into homes all day long
If they don't protect the elderly and people with disabilities who are these health workers going to provide services to - THE DEAD?
PUROS PINCHES MAMONES AQUI EN EL VALLE!!!!!
Funny part of this situation is, I work at a nursing home and still haven’t had the opportunity to have the vaccine administered meanwhile my good friend who works for a home health company took his 3 days ago. This is utterly sad because I am in the direct contact of a positive patient daily.
They need to get the vaccine out to pharmacy employees now why are they being left out they are the ones filling the prescriptions to help people with covid it's a critical component.
vaccinate all the hillbillys first, bunch of jotos mamones, they sleep with bats in bus shelters...
If it true that this greedy bastard of so called doctor should be investigated by the federal government for stealing something that is not his. Greedy-Greedy bastards they already got their shot so the hell with the rest. Did he and all the other so called health workers pay a fee of administering the shot? Better yet, did so called senator Lucio pay a fee for his shot to be administer? Neither should anyone else have to pay a fee.
Second to the last bullet on page one clearly states that home health care workers are a part of tier 1
https://www.dshs.state.tx.us/coronavirus/immunize/vaccine/EVAP-Phase1A.pdf
FYI Dr. Castillo does not work with Kindred he works for DHR.
Where's the FBI? Oh escorting that ex-BISD employee to a federal detention. Now they need to escort a doctor...
December 31, 2020 at 10:53 PM
But is the good doctor part owner?
These people provide a much needed service to an elderly population that are ill and cannot afford to be in a nursinh home. So all who are calling them undeserving are so wrong.
Juan aggaren la onda, Looking out for number ONE $$$$.
nursinh home - idiota must be a hillbilly teacher coco
Post a Comment