
Capital News Service โ On March 5, 2020, Marylandโs first three positive cases of COVID-19 were confirmed.
On March 30, 2020, Gov. Larry Hogan issued a stay-at-home order, keeping residents from work or school, and setting in motion a new normal for the state of pandemic-related anxiety to which the world is still accustomed.
On Dec. 11, the Food and Drug Administration approved the administration of the first coronavirus vaccine in the U.S., developed by Pfizer-BioNTech.
This month, on April 6, 2021, over a year from when the pandemic began, Hogan announced that all Marylanders over the age of 16 were eligible to receive a vaccine.
While the news gave the state its first true glimpse at a possible return to normalcy, some of the most vulnerable communities are still struggling to gain access to that same hope.
Individuals experiencing homelessness are one such population and are highlighted by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention as a โparticularly vulnerable groupโ for COVID-19.
The CDCโs website explains that, โHomeless services are often provided in congregate settings, which could facilitate the spread of infection. Because many people experiencing homelessness are older adults or have underlying medical conditions, they may also be at increased risk for severe illness.โ
โI think the pandemic has highlighted the extent to which a safe, stable place to stay is just so fundamental to health,โ Kevin Lindamood, founder and CEO of Health Care for the Homeless, told Capital News Service. โWe as an organization have very much learned that housing is healthcare.โ
The Department of Housing and Urban Development requires all Continuum of Careโthe coordinating bodies working to address homelessness in each jurisdictionโto conduct annual point-in-time counts of their homeless populations on a given night within the last two weeks in January.
According to the Maryland Interagency Council on Homelessness, HUD uses these โsnapshotโ counts to help set funding throughout the country for institutions aiding those experiencing homelessness.
As of January of 2019, Marylandโs point-in-time homeless count was 6,561. The state has not yet released 2020 data, though the preliminary total is 6,302, according to the Maryland Department of Housing and Community Development.
HUD requires sheltered individuals be counted yearly, but unsheltered data is only required on odd-numbered years, so true counts may be higher.
โThat count uses the narrowest of federal definitions, so itโs only those that are on the streets or in shelters. There are no fewer than five federal definitions of homelessness, and they donโt always agree with each other,โ Lindamood said.
โGenerally when you hear data about the numbers experiencing homelessness or you hear the national data, itโs using the HUD definition and itโs using a methodology, a point in time count, thatโs really flawed. โฆI donโt think you can conclude how many people may experience homelessness over the course of a year by a count that takes place on one nightโฆthe actual number is likely much larger,โ he added.
Health Care for the Homeless, a Baltimore-based organization aimed at ending homelessness, began limited vaccinations at the end of January, but since February, has been vaccinating individuals five days a week at increasing rates.
The organization has been vaccinating people out of its Fallsway clinic in downtown Baltimore, as well as through outreach programs at shelters and makeshift hotels-turned-sheltersโ โPeople experiencing homelessness are far likelier than their housed counterparts to die prematurely. And so we knew from the beginning that we had to keep our doors open to basic primary care and ensure that people could get the support that they needed. Then at the same time, we needed to slow the spread, develop a testing capacity and now develop a vaccination capacity,โ Lindamood said.
Baltimoreโs preliminary 2020 point-in-time count is 2,193, the most in the state, according to the Maryland housing department.
โThe real problem isnโt homelessness itself, thatโs a symptom. The real problem is the kind of social structures that create it; wages, unemployment, widening gap between the rich and the poor, lack of access to healthcare and other safety-net services. Weโre particularly concerned, as weโre going through this pandemic, with the number of people now that are at risk of eviction, and may at some point soon not have a regular place to stay,โ Lindamood said.
In Montgomery County, the Department of Health and Human Servicesโ Services to End and Prevent Homelessness has recently begun vaccination efforts for its homeless population.
As of April 15, the department has put on two rounds of vaccination clinics targeted toward those experiencing homelessness: The first took place on March 9 at three of the countyโs shelters where a total of 191 people received an injection, the other occurred on April 12, where an additional 83 individuals were vaccinated. A small number of shelter staff were among those who got the vaccine.
As to why it took so long for the county to begin dosing this population, Amanda Harris, chief of Services to End and Prevent Homelessness within the Montgomery County Department of Health and Human Services, said itโs largely a supply issue.
โWe only have control of the vaccines that the health department receives,โ Harris said. โThe county was working through the different priority groups and so the delay was because we hadnโt reached that priority group yet.โ
Much like in Montgomery County and the larger Baltimore area, in Anne Arundel, vaccination priority was given to those in shelters and hotels.
The county also works with community partners to put on community clinics as an additional means for vaccination.
โWe set a date, there are usually 100 vaccines allocated to each site, and weโre doing that six days a week at various locations,โ said Tonii Gedin, the Deputy Health Officer of Public Health within the Anne Arundel County Department of Health.
The Department of Housing & Human Services, also known as the Frederick Community Action Agency, in Frederick County has offered vaccinations to those in attendance for meals at county soup kitchens, through street outreach and at the Alan P. Linton, Jr. Emergency Shelter operated by the Religious Coalition for Emergency Human Needs, according to Janet Jones, assistant director of medical services within the department.
As of April 15, the department has vaccinated 73 individuals.
Both Anne Arundel and Frederick counties began vaccinating their homeless populations in January.
โI think itโs important to have access to the vaccine for those folks, and also to provide the educationโฆwhether or not someone chooses to get the vaccine is their choice, but I think itโs more in terms of the access of being able to get it for underserved areas and underserved individuals, and thatโs the key to the vaccination right now,โ Jones said.
Access to the vaccine is particularly important because those experiencing homelessness are most often from marginalized communities. Both COVID-19 and homelessness disproportionately affect people of color.
According to the Maryland Interagency Council on Homelessnessโ 2019 homelessness report, 57% of those experiencing homelessness in Maryland identify as African Americanโin comparison, as of July 1, 2019, only 31.1% of the stateโs total population identified as Black or African American alone, according to the United States Census Bureau.
โFor us, itโs really how can we ensure that people have access. And among those that weโre serving, the large majority of individuals that we serve are Black and Brown and other people of color, primarily African American and Latinx populations,โ Lindamood said.
Recently, certain approved vaccines have come under investigation after incidents of recipients developing rare blood clots were reported.
The AstraZeneca vaccine co-created by Oxford University and Vaccitech, and largely used in EU-affiliated countries, was the first to see problems.
According to a press release sent out by the Medicines and Healthcare products Regulatory Agency earlier this month, in the United Kingdom as of March 31, 79 cases of blood clots were reported to the agency resulting in 19 deaths. All of the issues occured after the first dose.
The majority of those who developed complications were younger women, and almost all of those affected were middle-aged or younger.
Many countries have halted or put age suggestions on the vaccineโs distributionโthe Australian Technical Advisory Group on Immunisation recommended AstraZeneca not be used in those under 50, and the Joint Committee on Vaccination and Immunisation in the United Kingdom recommended the same for those under 30 without underlying conditions โwhile Denmark became the first country to halt its usage altogether.
In the U.S., cases of blood clots have also been linked to Johnson and Johnsonโs Janssen vaccine.
The CDC and FDA suggested a โpauseโ on usage of the single-dose vaccine starting April 13 based on a preliminary suggestion from the CDCโs Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices while it investigated the issue further.
As of April 21, 15 instances of blood clots were confirmed out of the 7.98 million doses administered up to that point, according to the advisory committee.
All of the cases occurred in womenโ13 of whom were between the ages of 18 and 49, and 2 of whom were over 50. Three of the cases resulted in the individualโs death.
The CDC is currently looking into additional potential cases.
Given the extreme rarity of the clots, many health professionals have maintained that the benefits outweigh the risks.
โI am worried that this will only complicate overcoming hesitancy,โ Harris said.
Both rounds of clinics in Montgomery County used the Janssen vaccine. The department had halted its use after the pause was announced.
โI think itโs a game-changer being able to have the single dose. Cause itโs been so hard to get people to just agree to get one dose, let alone two, so I think this will make a big difference,โ Harris said.
She added that due to the transient nature of homelessness, a single-dose vaccine is easier to manage.
Though all three had also been using varying amounts of J&J, Lindamood, Gedin and Jones said they had all halted administration of the vaccine, but had kept operations going using only two-dose alternatives.
โHereโs the thing on J&J. We didnโt start with it. And the pause isnโt stopping our vaccination work,โ Lindamood said at the time. โIs a single-dose vaccine helpful, desired by many, simpler to administer? Yes. Would it help us fully vaccinate more people at a faster pace? Sure. But has the pause stopped us from vaccinating? Not at all.โ
On Friday, the FDA and the CDC lifted the pause on the Johnson & Johnson vaccineโhowever they advised that women under 50 โbe awareโ of the potential risk and the availability of other vaccines.
โPrioritizing populations experiencing homelessness is not just about altruismโฆitโs about broader public health, and ensuring that the most vulnerable among us, who canโt necessarily isolate at home, are vaccinated,โ Lindamood said. โLetโs hope that one of the many lessons weโve learned from a pandemic is that we need to do more to ensure that everyone has a safe and decent place to stay.
