Sentinel Communities Insights—COVID-19: One Year Later Vaccine Roll-Out, Implications for Community Recovery, and Critical Gaps that Remain: San Juan County, New Mexico
Table of Contents
Table of Contents
Report Publish Date:
Primary Takeaways
Overview and Objectives
Summary of the issue, context, and its importance
Hypothesis or Approach
Anticipated outcome and study methodology
How This Influences Change
Actionable application of the findings
Grant Details
Amount awarded:
$3,400,000
Awarded on: 03/09/2020
Timeframe: 2020-2022
Grant number: 77245
Location: Santa Monica, CA
About Grantee:
Research: Go Deeper
In 2020, the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation (RWJF) began tracking the COVID-19 response and recovery efforts of nine communities across the United States with the goal of better understanding how the pandemic, and the local response to it, is impacting health, well-being, and equity in those communities. Lessons from these nine Sentinel Communities may also be informative to other communities on their journeys to respond to and recover from COVID-19 and promote health and well-being more broadly.
Previous reports summarized the pandemic’s early impacts (published July 2020), the ways cross-sector collaboration has contributed to ongoing response and recovery efforts (published October 2020), and the impact of the pandemic on children and families (published March 2021). In this report, over a year into the pandemic, we review efforts toward vaccination and community response and recovery across sectors—and the critical gaps that remain.
The past year has shown that recovery from COVID-19 has demanded a response across sectors—health, economic, housing, education, and more—and communities have approached their response across these sectors in different ways. The American Rescue Plan also brings historic funding to local communities and communities have significant discretion over how funds are used. While some have used COVID-19 response and recovery resources
to reaffirm their approaches to health and equity, other communities continue to encounter long-standing barriers to solving such entrenched community problems.
In this report, based on information available through mid-May 2021, we look at the path San Juan County, N.M., has taken toward COVID-19 vaccination, health and well-being, economic recovery, equitable housing, and in-person schooling, keeping an eye on the gaps that still must be addressed to achieve equitable community recovery.
Robert Wood Johnson Foundation, July 2021
Research Team
This study and report was conducted and created by the following people.
- RAND Corporation
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