More than necessary mobile teams for anti - Coronacterius vaccine

Liridon Hoti is unable to take his mother to the communication center against the Coronobrus. His mother can't move and therefore can't go to the communications center. It has a brain damage it has had in 2008 and is part of the category of people with skills [...]
It has a brain damage that it had in 2008 and is part of the category of people with limited paraplegic and tetraplegic capacity. This disease has made permanent movement impossible to get to the point of the vaccine”, he says of the REL.
Paraplegic and thetraplegic are persons who, as a cause of illness or injury, have permanently lost the possibility of shifting and moving lower or upper extremes.
Citizens have sought help in vaccinating elderly people who cannot go to the vaccine centers even through social networks.
In a Facebook account bearing the name "Hayavala", the village in nearby Pristina in a post has asked the Ministry of Health to create vaccine teams for some over 80 people who are not able to go to the “1 October Centre or the family medical center.
REL has contacted Uka Center, the manager of this site. She told him. The REL has received no response from the authorities about vaccinating these people.
According to its information, there are also some families under poor economic conditions who have not only been able to apply but are unable to even go to vaccinate. We believe that the same situation is in many towns and villages. I wish there was a plan that would identify these people, especially those who live alone and vaccinate”, Uka says.
Health authorities still do not confirm how to vaccinate people who cannot move to the immunization centers. The Health Ministry has not answered questions about the creation of mobile teams for citizens who are unable to move.
As for mobile teams, health authorities on April 14th launched the vaccination of seniors in nursing homes and social workers who take care of them.
Families Without Answers About Mobile Vaccination Teams
In Kosovo, currently immunisation against COVID-19 is taking place in the “1 October hall of” in Pristina, as well as at family medicine centres in several municipalities.
Liridon says they are interested in obtaining any information from the health authorities about how the vaccine of these people will take place, but are told they will be informed in time.
We are confident that the competent state bodies that are managing the situation, so that they can keep this category from vaccinating as quickly as possible with mobile teams, because any delay in the vaccine will be fatal, given that this category is daily faced with life and pain”, says Liridon Hoti.
In the Hoti family live seven family members, and their mother is endangered by infection, since most families are working and carrying the virus home where their mother lay since 2008.
“We work and we have contact with the minimum ten people a day and it's too dangerous to be infected by us and for this inoculation it's very necessary”, he says.
Handikos Association leader Africa Maliqi tells Radio Free Europe that health authorities should take into account those who cannot go to vaccinated in the communication centres and create mobile teams.
By the time limited ones start to get vaccinated, I would have encouraged family members to find a form to guide people to the place where vaccines are given. The reason is for the person to go out and look at the environment and not be alone inside. But, in cases where impossible, then mobile teams should be created, just as there is this practice in Western countries”, Maliqi says.
He says they don't have a disabled number of disabled people, but they do. For this, Maliqi adds that they will discuss with the Ministry of Health to see how this vaccine will be organised.
In Kosovo until April 21st, about 20,000 people have been vaccinated at the country's level, the co-ordinator for vaccination at October 1st Hall in Pristina, Niman Bardhi.
This number includes health workers, elderly people, and chronically ill people.











