More Than a Year After the COVID-19 Vaccine Rollout, Racial Disparities Persist

May 5, 2022

Mauro Ortiz had planned to get the COVID-19 vaccine, but work always got in the way. Plus, the 45-year-old Denver resident, who tows vehicles for a living, had tested positive for the virus twice over the course of the pandemic, but never felt sick. So getting the shot didnā€™t seem worthwhile. 

But during a recent visit to Saint Michael the Archangel Church in Aurora, Ortiz had a change of heart. Towards the end of the Sunday service, Julissa Soto, an independent health equity consultant working to improve vaccination rates among Hispanic Coloradans, stepped up to the microphone. 

ā€œCOVID is not going away; COVID is like that ex-husband or ex-wife,ā€ Soto joked to the congregation. Which is why, she continued in a more serious tone, we have to protect ourselves. And getting the COVID-19 vaccine is one way to do so. 

Read more at Collective Colorado.

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