“To be able to get high volumes like that in a one-day setting, you need to have proper outreach...We rely heavily on our community partners to flyer the apartment buildings and, you know, contact local groups or agencies to make sure that they’re aware of the pop up as well.”
“Site selection is also crucial....It’s also important for the clinic to be located in a trusted space for the community, and one that is accessible, preferably by foot.
“What’s different about the pop up is it really creates a convenience factor”
“The people who may not be able to spend money on bus fare to get to a clinic or people who may not be able to take a day off work, you’re going to make it as convenient as you can for them.”
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🧵2/ I’ve still been processing the response to CDC’s change in guidance about *outdoor* masking! Remember that?! npr.org/sections/healt…
🧵3/ In that case, I thought guidance was pretty sound bc that’s basically how I’d been living even before I was vaccinated. Outdoor transmission risk so low. My family wore masks outdoors when close to people (playgrounds etc) or long face-to-face talking or just as a courtesy
1/ New #COVID19#K12 paper in @ScienceMagazine: the part that most excites me is zooming in on the safety measures that best predict low #COVID19 risks...
2/ Parents & school staff & community members really want to know: What is most important? What measures should be prioritized at my school? This paper models that in detail: results reinforce findings from previous work
3/ importance of extracurriculars consistent with a lot of what’s seen in contact tracing of #K12 outbreaks - it’s usually not the classroom contact; it’s the less regulated extracurricular time.
🧵3/ “...attendees lamented..lack of researchers interested... menopause is not an attractive topic for young researchers, or at least not as attractive as maternal health...often..only studied by researchers later on in life. This leads to a lack of continuity into the field.”
🧵1/ How one epidemiologist decided to keep sending her children to in-person group childcare during a pandemic, and what happened
🧵2/ The most consequential and difficult decision I made in March 2020, near the beginning of the US #COVID19 outbreak, was whether to keep sending my then 5-yo and 1-yo to in-person group childcare
🧵3/ I’m reflecting on this here because 1) Personal stories help me make better decisions & maybe it'll help others; 2) I think I can bring context, nuance, and compassion to a conversation that gravitates towards extremes, absolutes, and vilification
2/ Vaccines working great to prevent hospitalization among those vaccinated and strong evidence that vaccinated people much less likely to transmit virus...
3/ but big outstanding issues about “vaccine hesitancy” in minority populations (ultra-Orthodox, Israeli Arab), ethical issues with vaccine passports (govt proof of vaccination required to participate in certain activities of daily life)...