Rabbi vaccinated at clinic under investigation, says he asked if shot was legal (Why ask Hershel - You smelled a rat & jumped the line anyway!)
"Schachter said he and Willig were photographed receiving the shot in order to inspire confidence in it. Some Jewish communities are wary of vaccines, and low vaccination rates have led to measles outbreaks. Schachter had also said on a podcast that jumping the queue to obtain a vaccine was not permitted under Jewish law."
Half-vaccinated patients at NY clinic under investigation unsure what’s next
As the Jewish-owned ParCare network undergoes what appears to be the US’s first inquiry into vaccine misappropriation, it promises to work with state to administer second dose
JTA — When David first saw the advertisement on his local Long Island community Whatsapp group inviting people like him and his wife, both over 65, to sign up to get the COVID-19 vaccine, he was skeptical. The ad linked to a nondescript Google form that asked him to answer a few questions and submit insurance information.
“At this point I got suspicious. Is this an attempt to steal my identity? A scam?” he said in an email sharing his experience with the Jewish Telegraphic Agency.
After doing some research, however, he found that the provider that created the form, ParCare Community Health Network, was well known and had contracted with New York City’s health authority to administer coronavirus tests to the Orthodox Jewish community.
Days after submitting their information, David and his wife headed to ParCare. On December 24, the couple, who are not health care workers, drove to one of the network’s facilities and received what they were told was the coronavirus vaccine — as well as a follow-up appointment to receive the second dose in January.
Whether and how David will receive that second dose, required to maximize the efficacy of the Moderna vaccine he received, is now unknown. That’s because days after his vaccination, the state announced a criminal investigation into ParCare over allegations that the Brooklyn-based healthcare provider fraudulently obtained the vaccine and distributed it to members of the public, in what appears to be the first inquiry into potential vaccine fraud in the United States.
“Anyone found to have knowingly participated in this scheme will be held accountable to the fullest extent of the law,” New York State Health Commissioner Dr. Howard Zucker said in a statement Saturday announcing the investigation.
A representative for ParCare said Sunday that the network had “proactively” returned its vaccine supplies to cooperate with the state health department.
“We will be working with the state to ensure that we provide the second dose for our patients,” ParCare said in a statement. “We will do everything in our power to make sure that the state understands that our patients are our priority and that everyone receives their second dose accordingly.”
State officials did not answer questions Sunday about how they planned to handle the second doses of people vaccinated by ParCare. Moderna’s clinical trial found that a single dose was 80 to 90% effective, compared to 94% for the two-dose vaccination.
David — who asked to use an alias because he feared repercussions for speaking about his experience — said he was anxious that he would have to go without a second dose because of the investigation into ParCare. He issued a plea on behalf of other patients who had been given the vaccine’s first dose: “Please do not leave them in a lurch and authorize their follow up shot.”
It’s unclear how many people are in David’s position. BoroPark24, a Yiddish news service, reported on December 21 that ParCare had obtained 3,500 doses of the Moderna vaccine and would vaccinate 500 people that day.
A representative for the network told JTA that the vaccines had been properly obtained and shared what it said were a packing slip and an email from the state health department showing that 2,300 vaccine doses had been delivered to ParCare in Monroe, New York, the upstate town that includes the Hasidic village of Kiryas Joel.
But it’s clear that those vaccinated by ParCare include prominent Orthodox leaders. Rabbi Hershel Schachter and Rabbi Mordechai Willig, both head teachers at Yeshiva University, were vaccinated at ParCare last week, and the network tweeted a video of their vaccinations. Neither Schachter, 79, nor Willig, 73, is a frontline health care worker or nursing home resident or worker, the two categories currently eligible for vaccines.
On Sunday night, Schachter, who has been an outspoken leader urging compliance with pandemic guidelines, said he had been told that his vaccination was above board.
“If either of us would have been told that this was inappropriate, that it wasn’t legitimate, we would not have done that,” he said before delivering an online Torah lesson.
ParCare advertised that it would offer vaccines to people over 65 and with preexisting health conditions. But one Manhattan physician said he had reason to believe that people far younger had been vaccinated.
Dr. Mark Horowitz, a family physician with some patients in the Orthodox Jewish community, said he had seen a 36-year-old patient last week who said she had received a COVID-19 vaccine in Brooklyn the previous day, despite not meeting state vaccination standards. Horowitz tweeted about the patient three days before the state announced its investigation into ParCare.
Horowitz said he found ParCare’s alleged misconduct “morally repugnant,” especially as he said he sees patients with COVID-19 but has yet to receive the vaccine.
“I have little, if any, sympathy for people who jump the line, but I think the greater blame goes to the operators of this facility,” he said.
That’s who state investigators appear to be scrutinizing. The Centers for Disease Control’s vaccination program provider agreement, which New York requires private practices to sign, tells participants to “administer COVID-19 Vaccine in compliance with all applicable state and territorial vaccination laws.” Breaching the agreement risks suspension or termination from the program and federal criminal and civil penalties.
Gary Schlesinger, the prominent Hasidic businessman who owns the ParCare network, shared a picture of his own vaccination on Twitter late last week. He deleted his post after the state announced its investigation.
David, the man who was vaccinated at ParCare, said he assumed ParCare was distributing the vaccine early because of COVID-19 rates in Orthodox communities. Both New York City Mayor Bill de Blasio and New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo have called attention to lapses in the communities in compliance with rules designed to curb the spread of the disease.
And the city has collaborated with ParCare as it has worked to manage the pandemic. In October, the NYC Test & Trace Corps, the city’s contact tracing unit, announced that it was expanding the provider’s COVID-19 testing capabilities and offering additional resources and supplies.
But while Orthodox Brooklyn experienced some of the first major outbreaks of the pandemic in the United States, neighborhoods with the most Orthodox Jews are not on the city’s list of areas experiencing the steepest toll throughout the entire pandemic. That list, de Blasio said last week, will determine where vaccines are sent first once vaccinations begin for the general public.
Dr. Aaron Glatt, the chief of infectious diseases and hospital epidemiologist at Mount Sinai South Nassau on Long Island and an assistant rabbi at the Young Israel of Woodmere, a large Orthodox synagogue, declined to comment on the ParCare investigation. But he said that he, along with other medical professionals, had no alternative but to follow state distribution schedules.
He also said that he personally has fielded many inquiries into vaccine availability since the first federal approvals earlier this month.
“People are very anxious, very excited, very interested in taking this vaccine,” Glatt said. “I think the sole concern at this time is ‘how can I get the vaccine.’”
The bigger point is that the same people who sponsored superspreader events, have now allocated vaccine to themselves. A Shanda.
ReplyDeletehttps://www.theyeshivaworld.com/news/headlines-breaking-stories/1932963/lakewood-of-mexico-ir-hatorah-of-south-america.html
ReplyDeleteDer Lakewood CEO nisht moyche geven? He already begged Mir Yerushalayim to not open in Upstate NY.
https://issuu.com/shalhevethighschool/docs/shalhavet_annual-report-with-insert_print
ReplyDeleteBeverly Hills rheumatologist Dr. David Silver sent his girls to Shalhevet high school.
https://images.shulcloud.com/443/uploads/Weekly_Brief/2018/WeeklyBrief-HaAzinu-Sukkot-Sep-22-25-2018FINAL.pdf
& he has mechutonim at Teaneck's Left Wing Modern Ortho shul Rinat Yisrael
https://www.happi.com/issues/2017-05-01/view_features/canale-knows-hair-color-inside-out/
He's CFO of the Canale hair salon chain
He's also known as the biggest grim reaper CEO in the nursing home industry. Will he weasel out of prison because Gavin Newsom is another Cuomo who likes to shrink deficits by eliminating old folks?
Mexican murders hit new high in first half of 2020
ReplyDeleteBy Reuters Staff
2 Min Read
MEXICO CITY (Reuters) - Murders in Mexico edged up to a new record high in the first half of 2020, despite easing during the last few months, preliminary government data showed on Monday.
Mexico has been blighted by gang violence for many years, with successive governments failing to tackle the problem. According to the latest data available, more than 34,600 murders were registered last year, a record.
President Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador promised to reduce the violence with a new strategy after taking power in December 2018, but homicides have continued to tick up.
In the first six months of 2020, there were 17,439 murders, a 1.7% increase on the same period last year, according to figures presented by Security Minister Alfonso Durazo at a regular news conference with Lopez Obrador.
While murders fell in June by 2.2% compared with the previous month, the third consecutively monthly drop, Durazo conceded the figures remained “very high in absolute terms”.
Murders of women because of their gender, categorized as femicides, increased more swiftly during the first six months, rising by 9.2% from last year to 489, the figures showed.
Bringing about a lasting reduction in Mexico’s murder rate would take time as the government works to tackle poverty and other root causes of crime, Durazo noted.
“If (the) increase (in murders) was the product of a long social process, its decrease will also be the product of a long social process,” he said.
Still, other serious crimes, including kidnappings and robbery, have fallen during the coronavirus pandemic.
ReplyDeletehttps://www.numbeo.com/crime/in/Mexico-City
home Crime > Mexico > Mexico City
Crime in Mexico City, Mexico
Crime Index: 69.17
Safety Index: 30.83
Crime012069.17
Crime rates in Mexico City, Mexico
Level of crime
79.21 High
Crime increasing in the past 3 years
81.44 Very High
Worries home broken and things stolen
58.87 Moderate
Worries being mugged or robbed
76.65 High
Worries car stolen
66.51 High
Worries things from car stolen
69.19 High
Worries attacked
62.76 High
Worries being insulted
51.02 Moderate
Worries being subject to a physical attack because of your skin color, ethnic origin, gender or religion
28.09 Low
Problem people using or dealing drugs
68.77 High
Problem property crimes such as vandalism and theft
74.58 High
Problem violent crimes such as assault and armed robbery
80.56 Very High
Problem corruption and bribery
89.36 Very High
I thought old Samuel K's game plan is the virus kills off before the drug cartels do, so covid infection is a type of shmira from the cartels.
ReplyDeletePesach in Acapulco Putz ---- Funny, but sad and true.
ReplyDelete