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mtbmike t1_j3x93aw wrote

Thanks for posting. I canceled my cvs appt and went to the library last week very very fast and easy! I appreciate it

17

Sane7 t1_j3xn9ma wrote

Can I get the $75 gift card if I've already gotten me bivalent? Cuz damn, wish I waited now.

9

HoneyBun21222 t1_j3xqvn0 wrote

Unfortunately not 😭

I already got mine too. And as of now there is only one dose of the bivalent booster.

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Jilltro t1_j3z7sml wrote

A friend of mine went to a place offering gift cards and showed them her vaccine card and explained she had gotten one earlier and asked if she could have a gift card anyway and they gave her one! Worth a try imo

3

[deleted] OP t1_j3yv3wo wrote

Seriously, I hate all these incentive programs. I vaxxed/boosted 4x by now, where's MY fucking cookie? -_-

1

gregkel22 t1_j3xq0a5 wrote

Absolutely should get 8x boosted because more is better, right? right?

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muk546 t1_j3yimf3 wrote

Yeah I’ve had all 3 vaccines so far and a booster

5

dandylion1313 t1_j3y91u9 wrote

I asked last time but didn't get an answer. I just moved to Auburn a couple months ago and don't have any proof of residency yet. my ID is form Plymouth county. am I eligible?

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HoneyBun21222 t1_j3yk3od wrote

Yes, you are eligible! Any government-issued ID will work - you don't need local proof of residency.

Sorry, comments got shut off on that thread so I wasn't able to reply there

9

hyperp0p t1_j3zg0z0 wrote

my gf went today and the $75 is still in the form of walmart gift cards

4

draken2019 t1_j41s7wi wrote

Why do people need a $75 gift card to do what's right for their health?

That being said, take that free $75 and buy yourself some groceries, I guess πŸ€·β€β™‚οΈ

4

bronabas t1_j4iik6e wrote

I had no clue about the gift card until after the shot. It was a nice surprise. In our town it was a Cumberland gift card.

2

moisheah t1_j3x4i9a wrote

Thanks again for posting ! Fwiw Umass is still doing vaccines and tests at mercantile - no gift cards though. Two days a week iirc. Right next door to CVS on front street. I’d post the schedule but it only seems to Pop up on Facebook as an image and I can’t repost those.

3

Neyabenz t1_j40jjar wrote

Do kids of residents also get a GC? My kiddo doesn't have a state ID yet (not quite old enough)

3

HoneyBun21222 t1_j418xtn wrote

Yes kids get gift cards! I'm honestly not sure what documentation kids need but I'm guessing just the parent's ID. I'll find out.

But regardless they get gift cards.

3

HoneyBun21222 t1_j426lg5 wrote

Also you don't have to be Worcester resident! Just need an ID to verify who you are, not to verify where you live.

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WorcesterMom t1_j4d2tp7 wrote

no one has ever asked me for my ID at the library. At least the Wednesday clinics. And both my kids got vaccinated there.

2

smellyk t1_j3wtshm wrote

Do you need an appointment?

2

sprinklecattoo t1_j3xnt1h wrote

I went with my husband and kids last weekend. It was super easy and well run!

7

WorcesterMom t1_j4d2zwl wrote

Are the offering the booster for kids under 5?

2

HoneyBun21222 t1_j4gbp7m wrote

Yes, the booster is available for kids ages 6 months and up who have completed the primary series :)

2

CaptainTripper t1_j4d65wg wrote

Is the clinic really open until 5 on Saturdays? The worcesterma.gov website says it goes until 3:30. Also, what floor is it on? Would like to try and go next Saturday

2

HoneyBun21222 t1_j4gbe8f wrote

Yes it's open till 5! That's good to know about the website - I will reach out to the clinic directors and let them know so they can change it

It's on the ground floor, in the room on the right hand side of the main lobby

2

rbcarter101 t1_j3xb20q wrote

Much like the last thread, be civil please.

1

nboyle378 t1_j3z95l5 wrote

πŸ˜‚πŸ˜‚πŸ˜‚πŸ˜‚πŸ˜‚πŸ˜‚πŸ˜‚πŸ˜‚πŸ˜‚πŸ˜‚

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NativeSon508 t1_j3wrwa0 wrote

Offering $ to get vaxxed? This is, odd to say the least

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HoneyBun21222 t1_j3wvjnd wrote

Thank you for bringing this up! It does seem odd but when you break down the logic it makes a lot of sense.

Vaccines keep the public from being severely ill, and prevent hospitals from being overrun. In preventing people from getting so sick they have to be hospitalized, so purely from a financial standpoint it is cost saving to not only offer the vaccines for free but also pay people to get them.

It also prevents complete healthcare system collapse. Many patients have had necessary care for non-covid issues delayed, and some have become severely ill or died as a result of lack of care due to complete overwhelm on the healthcare system by the pandemic. The more people we can prevent from being hospitalized with covid, the more healthcare is available for everyone.

It's kind of similar to how insurance companies sometimes give financial incentives to people for having annual physicals or getting a gym membership. Preventative medicine saves money.

It saddens me that we have a for-profit healthcare system. But, in the context of preventative medicine, it is advantageous from a public health as well as a financial perspective to offer this sort of incentive.

I hope that explanation makes sense!

16

NativeSon508 t1_j3xgcag wrote

I dunno. I completely agree w the theory of vax and their place in a healthy population but you can barely get an apple when donating blood but get vaxxed and get paid? There’s so many double standards and hypocrisy surrounding Covid that paying people to get vaxxed just doesnt sit well w me.

−4

HoneyBun21222 t1_j3xisea wrote

I completely hear where you're coming from with the comparison to blood donations. I agree those should be compensated.

I think one differences is that getting a vaccine also protects the person getting it AND is good for public health, whereas donating blood is not giving any health benefit to the person donating and ONLY is good for public health.

So, from and ethical standpoint, paying for blood donations is a little more complicated. In my opinion that should be more compensated, not less, but there's some ethical muddiness nto offering a financial incentive for a medical procedure that doesn't have the direct benefit to the individual.

There's also the cost. It's cost effective to offer this incentive, whereas to pay people to donate blood products would increase the cost of a medical treatment that's already really expensive, without the indirect cost-saving benefit that vaccines have.

But again, I hear you and agree that the premise of not compensating people who donate blood is problematic. Without direct benefit to the individual, I see even more reason to compensate people instead of less.

9

NativeSon508 t1_j3xkulo wrote

I appreciate the civil discussion and I’m w you on the muddy ethics of comping people for blood and the like. Do I think they should? Yes on one hand, no on the other. Eh. I really don’t have an answer.

−1

gregkel22 t1_j3xpiep wrote

Absolutely criminal.

​

Cardiomyopathy.

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BoringHoles t1_j3xwsq2 wrote

> Cardiomyopathy.

Would pair well with your encephalopathy.

7

HoneyBun21222 t1_j3ylr7j wrote

I appreciate calling out vaccine misinformation and fear mongering, but just a gentle reminder that calling such attitudes "encephalopathy" reinforces stigma against people with encephalopathy as well as other neurological and psychiatric disorders.

There could be people with encephalopathy reading this, including people with encephalopathy who want to get vaccinated!

7

gregkel22 t1_j3y772h wrote

What exactly is the vax for? Are kids at risk?

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