From Yahoo/AP:
“'I put my
life on hold:' Disability groups plead for vaccine”
(Suzy Lindeberg
poses with her 20-year-old son John on a hockey rink, Tuesday, Feb. 9, 2021, in
Stillwater, Minn. John, who has Down Syndrome, can't spend as much time at the
rink as he used to since he is at higher risk for hospitalization or death if
he caught COVID-19, but his mother and other advocates worry that the state of
Minnesota has placed people with disabilities too far down the priority list.)
Though many
people with disabilities are more vulnerable to COVID-19, in some U.S. states
they fear being left behind in a massive effort to get limited vaccines into
the arms of those who need them most. People with disabilities have been pushed
down the priority list in places like North Carolina and California, where the
state reversed course after days of public pressure. In Minnesota, parents are
begging unsuccessfully to give their vaccination spots to their children whose
Down syndrome makes them up to 10 times more likely to die if they catch the
virus. With vaccine supplies limited and the rollout shaky in much of the
United States, getting a shot is difficult. Groups like older people and
essential workers are in dire need of the vaccine and state health departments
say their plans are aimed at making the most of limited supplies. But the
pandemic has also taken a disproportionate toll on people with disabilities around
the world.
People with
intellectual and developmental disabilities are often immunocompromised,
putting them at greater risk for complications if they get sick. They're also
more likely to lose their jobs, can have a harder time with mask-wearing and
social distancing, and have had to worry about whether they would be less
likely to get critical care at hospitals. Many have also had to make do with
less help, since caregivers can be an infection risk. The Centers for Disease
Control added Down syndrome to its list of high-risk conditions in late
December, but each state makes its own vaccine distribution plan and 20 haven't
explicitly placed people with intellectual and developmental disabilities disabilities
on their priority lists, said Donna Martin with ANCOR, a national trade
association for service providers for people with disabilities. Many of those
who do have priority live in group homes, a higher-risk location but one that
includes only a small portion of the community.
Some states
like Ohio and Tennessee are already vaccinating people with intellectual and
developmental disabilities. In Tennessee, officials said data showed people
with those disabilities had a death rate three times higher than the general
population, and put them higher on the priority list. In Ohio, a wide range of
people with disabilities became eligible for the vaccine in late January, said
Kari Jones, head of the Down Syndrome Association of Central Ohio. “It’s been
terrifying, so to actually have the vaccine in people’s arms, at least the
first round so far, has been such a relief,” she said.
In states such
as North Carolina and Minnesota, meanwhile, health officials say their plans
are still in progress and aimed ending the pandemic as soon as possible. In
California, public health officials said people with disabilities could begin
getting the vaccine in a month, an announcement that came nearly two weeks
after they were pushed down the list. The wait was agonizing for people like
Nicole Adler. The 25-year-old was a thriving college student in Redwood City
studying communications, eating lunch with friends and going to concerts. All
that stopped with the onset of the virus because Down syndrome makes it five
times more likely she'd have to be hospitalized if she got sick. It also made
online school much more difficult to comprehend so she had to stop taking
classes. Now, she lives with her mother and usually leaves home one just once a
week to get takeout dinner. “I was really depressed," she said. “My life
changed. I put my life on hold.” In Minnesota, there's no word yet on when
people with disabilities who don't live in group homes might get the vaccine,
said Sarah Curfman, executive director of the Down Syndrome Association of
Minnesota. The terrified parents include people like Suzy Lindeberg of
Stillwater. Her hockey-obsessed son John Lindeberg, 20, managed the high school
team before the pandemic, but even as the teens get back on the ice his Down
syndrome means he has to stay home. “He watches his brother leave for his high
school hockey practices, and that's hard because and he really wants to be at
the hockey rink," she said. “COVID has been very hard on our house.” In
North Carolina, people with disabilities were recently moved down the list, and
don’t know when they’ll be eligible for the shot. Rebecca DiSandro of Charlotte
has a rare genetic disorder called Freeman Sheldon syndrome that affects nearly
every part of her body. DiSandro has been working from home on data entry but
has been depressed, missing visiting friends, swimming and cheerleading. “It’s
hard for them to comprehend,” said mother Sharon DiSandro.
Even if people
with disabilities do have some priority status, there can be confusion on the
ground. Many states have given priority to people with high-risk medical
conditions, but if orders don’t specifically mention conditions like Down
syndrome, they can be turned away from getting their shots, said Michelle
Whitten with the Global Down Syndrome Foundation. In some cases, states have
listed a specific condition without including other rare conditions where there
may be fewer scientific studies on the risk level. Betty Lehman of Centennial,
Colorado, said her 32-year-old son's disability-associated medical complications
left him near death more than once a child. But his specific conditions don't
move him up the list, so he likely won't be eligible for the shot until this
summer, when other adults his age are eligible, she said. State health
officials say their plan is aimed at saving as many people as possible, but it
remains a hard pill to swallow for families like the Lehmans. “This is a horror
show of a broken value system,” she said. “My son is at massive risk, other
people I care about are at massive risk, and people are turning a blind eye to
them.”
^ This is
almost as bad as when States made plans to not treat the disabled with Covid in
over-run hospitals. ^
https://www.yahoo.com/lifestyle/put-life-hold-disability-groups-162408978.html
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