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Votes and Vaccinations on Tap this Election at Select Polling Stations

October 29, 2008
by Michael Greenwood

This year, many voters preparing to participate in one of the essential rituals of fall, casting their ballot, will also have a chance to simultaneously accomplish another: getting vaccinated for the flu.

For the first time on a national scale, flu vaccination clinics around the country are being set up within—or nearby—select polling stations. The Vote & Vax program will be operating 250 vaccination clinics in 36 states, including 11 clinics in Connecticut.

The idea is to provide people with a convenient way to get vaccinated. The population most at risk from influenza—those who are over 50 years old—is also the population most likely to vote (they make up nearly 70 percent of expected voters). The cost for people under 65 will vary depending on location, but it is usually free for people with Medicare insurance. Vote & Vax is requiring that participating health providers charge the same fee that they normally would at other flu clinics they host.

“This is entirely nonpolitical. It’s a way of providing an important public health service,” said Doug Shenson, an associate clinical professor at the Yale School of Public Health, who organized this year’s nationwide vaccination effort.

“Vote & Vax is a public health strategy designed to better protect vulnerable Americans against influenza. During national elections, polling places offer an extraordinary public health opportunity to reach very large numbers of older adults on a single day early in the flu shot season. More than 126 million adults will pass through the 186,000 polling places across the country – and by providing flu shots at polling sites we will reach many Americans who would not otherwise be vaccinated,” Shenson said.

The nonpartisan program is being funded by the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation, a Princeton, N.J.–based philanthropy that is devoted to improving the health and health care of all Americans. The effort is being directed by the Connecticut–based Sickness Prevention Achieved through Regional Collaboration, a nonprofit health agency that Shenson directs.

The idea initiated in 2006 as a pilot program that reached some 13,000 people. With the intense interest in this year’s election and the expanded network of clinics, the number is expected to be far higher. Shenson said he wants to see the program continue in subsequent election cycles until it becomes a routine part of public health practice.

In Connecticut, the program will offered at East Ridge Middle School, Scotts Ridge Middle School and Yanity Gym (all in Ridgefield); Vance School (New Britain); Plainfield Town Hall (Plainfield); Gordon C. Swift Middle School (Oakville); East Hartland Town Hall (East Hartland); JFK Campus (Bridgeport); Harborside Middle School (Milford); North Windham School Polling Station (North Windham); and the Clifford J. Hurgin Municipal Center (Bethel). The hours of operation for the clinics vary by site. Visit www.voteandvax.org for more details.

Submitted by Denise Meyer on August 14, 2012