With a full reopening less than a month away, 60% of the state’s Latino population remains unvaccinated.
Can California dodge the latest surge?
It’s been a particularly brutal few days for America’s COVID-19 vaccination campaign, most recently due to the Johnson & Johnson rollout.
Some workers fear revealing their undocumented status at vaccination sites. It takes the spread of only a few stories to stoke those fears.
The Johnson & Johnson pause threatens to exacerbate vaccination hesitancy.
Dr. Rochelle Walensky’s comments underscore how ethnicity and economic inequity place heavy thumbs on the scale of health outcomes.
It could be a case of California vs. Californians, as policy and politics clash with the latest medical information and suggested guidance.
Los Angeles County’s reopening leads to anxiety for workers, families and advocates — and to hope, too.
Governor Newsom asked a major campaign donor to manage his state’s vaccine distribution. But Blue Shield has met with pushback.
Speed bumps on the path to mass immunity.
New collaborations with community organizations may produce innovative solutions that could make the pandemic recovery more equitable.
Why are whites more likely to get their shots when people of color suffer more from COVID-19?
Gov. Gavin Newsom says schools can reopen safely, but many campuses can’t meet the state’s most recent guidelines for being open.
A look at one of the country’s largest COVID-19 vaccination centers.
Critics of the state’s move to an age-based priority system say it defies statistical evidence that workplace transmission is a major source of the virus’s spread.
New numbers show that just 29% of the people receiving vaccines are Latinos, who account for 52% of L.A. County’s COVID deaths.
While California struggles to distribute COVID-19 shots, Latino Los Angeles takes a hit.
The state’s slow-footed distribution of COVID-19 shots is the result first and foremost of a federal botch-job of the highest order.
How could only 29% of Black Californians be willing to take a vaccine that might save them?
The ongoing threat of vector-borne disease is reshaping our understanding of the dangers of a warming climate.