Online registration complicates the launch of the COVID-19 vaccine for the elderly

In PATTY NIEBERG and SUMAN NAISHADHAM, The Associated Press

DENVER – Howard Jones, 83, stays on the phone for three to four hours every day trying to sign up for a coronavirus vaccine.

Jones, who lives alone in Colorado Springs, has no internet, which made it much more difficult for him to make an appointment. It took about a week. He said the confusion increased his anxiety about catching what could be a fatal illness at his age.

“It’s been hell,” said Jones. “I am 83 years old and not using a computer is just terrible.”

As states in the United States implement the COVID-19 vaccine for people 65 and older, older people are struggling to figure out how to apply for vaccines. Many states and counties are asking people to book appointments online, but problematic sites, crowded phone lines and a patchwork of rapidly changing rules are plaguing older people, who often have less technology knowledge, may live far from vaccination sites and are more likely to not have access to the Internet at all, especially people of color and the poor.

Nearly 9.5 million seniors, or 16.5% of adults 65 and older, do not have access to the internet, according to data from the US Census Bureau. Access is worse for elderly colored people: more than 25% of blacks, about 21% of Hispanics and more than 28% of Native Americans aged 65 and over have no way to connect. This is compared with 15.5% of white elderly people.

In the San Francisco Bay area, Dr. Rebecca Parish was dismayed by the bureaucratic process and the continual calls for help from the elderly. One of her patients, who is 83, called her in tears, unable to browse Rite Aid’s online consultation system. A 92-year-old woman called her before dawn this week after reading about her in a newspaper , saying: “I will do anything to get this vaccine”.

So Parish decided to do things with his own hands. She contacted Contra Costa County and purchased 500 doses to vaccinate people this weekend at a high school in Lafayette, California. She is working with nonprofit organizations to identify elderly people who do not live in nursing homes and are at risk of falling apart. All of her consultations have been claimed, but she will start taking them again when more doses are available.

Some health officials have been trying to find other solutions to alleviate the confusion and help seniors sign up, just as the Trump administration urged states this week to make the country’s 54 million seniors eligible for the COVID-19 vaccine.

Some places have found simple ideas that work. In Morgantown, West Virginia, county health officials used a large road construction sign to list the phone number for the elderly to call for an appointment. Others are considering partnering with community groups or setting up mobile clinics for populations that are harder to reach.

Some elderly people may be waiting for a response from the doctor. But there are limits to the use of health systems, pharmacies or primary care providers to reach underprivileged people who have no internet, said Claire Hannan, executive director of the Association of Immunization Managers.

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