Super Bowl-bound healthcare workers tout vaccination as ticket to
normalcy
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[February 03, 2021]
By Gabriella Borter
TAMPA, Fla. (Reuters) - Onika St.
Louis, a nurse at Tampa General Hospital, said her decision to get
the COVID-19 vaccine was a "no-brainer" once she did her research
and considered the immunity benefits it would offer her on the
pandemic front line.
At the time, she had no idea an additional benefit from the shot
would be her chance at a free ticket to the Super Bowl.
Now St. Louis is one of 7,500 healthcare workers from around the
country who received invitations to Sunday's National Football
League showcase between the Kansas City Chiefs and the Tampa Bay
Buccaneers, provided they had received both doses of the vaccine.
"This is sort of a once in a lifetime opportunity, so I'm really,
really excited," said St. Louis, who has worked grueling shifts
since her unit accepted the hospital's first COVID-19 patients in
March.
Last month, the NFL announced it would give away nearly a third of
the seats at the reduced capacity championship event in Tampa to
healthcare workers in honor of their heroic work during the
pandemic.
The league said the initiative would also serve as "an unprecedented
vaccination promotion" at a time when COVID-19 vaccine hesitancy in
the United States still runs high.
While vaccine shortages and logistical hurdles have stalled U.S.
states' vaccine rollouts, hesitancy has also slowed the effort. Just
61.4% of Americans said they were somewhat or very interested in
getting the vaccine, according to a Reuters poll conducted from Dec.
2-8.
Nearly a third of Americans who work in healthcare delivery settings
remain hesitant, according to a Kaiser Family Foundation survey
published in December.
St. Louis said some of her colleagues, including some who are
breastfeeding, declined the vaccine because they want to wait for
more research to come out.
The U.S. Centers for Disease Control recommends that healthcare
workers receive the vaccine because they are at high risk of
contracting COVID-19.
The agency states on its website that there is no data on the safety
of COVID-19 vaccines in breastfeeding women, but the vaccines are
not thought to pose a risk to breastfed infants.
'NEVER HESITATED'
Health experts have deemed the COVID-19 vaccines currently approved
for emergency use in the U.S. to be overwhelmingly safe and
effective at preventing illness after observing their effects in
millions of people.
"I never hesitated to get it," said Sharon Alvarez, an intensive
care unit nursing manager at Ascension St. Thomas Hospital Midtown
in Nashville, Tennessee.
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The NFL logo is pictured
on a football at an event in the Manhattan borough of New York City,
New York, U.S., November 30, 2017. REUTERS/Carlo Allegri
Alvarez is among a handful of healthcare workers selected to attend
the Super Bowl from Tennessee, and she is relishing the opportunity
to root for Tampa Bay Buccaneers quarterback Tom Brady while also
serving as a vaccine ambassador.
The majority of the healthcare workers attending the game will come
from Florida, while some will travel at the invitation of their
regional NFL clubs.
Despite being vaccinated, the healthcare workers will wear masks and
practise social distancing to be safe and abide by NFL rules.
Several employees from Sarasota Memorial Hospital were invited,
although 35% of that hospital's staff were ineligible for free
tickets because they opted not to receive their first vaccine doses.
Among their reasons for not getting vaccinated were concerns about
the limited data on the vaccine's effects in pregnant and
breastfeeding women, a representative for the hospital said.
Keisha Helmuth, one of the nurses attending the game from Sarasota
Memorial, said the free tickets had boosted morale in her unit even
though some unvaccinated colleagues could not go.
"They're happy for the ones... who took that risk, and now (we) get
that reward," Helmuth said.
Some of the Super Bowl's healthcare worker attendees, like Helmuth,
are lifelong Bucs fans embarking on a dream experience. Others said
they are casual football spectators more excited to see The Weeknd's
halftime show.
They said they were looking forward to a fun-filled event unlike any
they have attended since the pandemic began, and they hoped their
attendance would offer a tempting glimpse of a post-vaccine future
to Americans who may be hesitant to get the shot.
Alicja Salman and her husband Jacob, both hospitalists in Illinois
who have cared for some 1,000 COVID-19 patients between them, see
their winning free tickets to the game as a harbinger of good things
to come.
"It's the beginning of the end, if we can just get everyone
vaccinated," Salman said.
(Reporting by Gabriella Borter; Editing by Toby Davis)
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