Community Wellness Teams have helped city’s most vulnerable when it comes to Covid-19; now, will they get funded?

By Annika Horn : missionlocal – excerpt

The middle-aged Latina was the only person not in motion as the typical Thursday morning buzz unfolded at 701 Alabama St. For a few minutes, she observed the Resource Hub volunteers and Color Labs technicians offering free Covid-19 testing; then, in a sudden bolt of courage, she approached someone for help.

Her husband had tested positive for coronavirus the week before, she said in Spanish, so she guessed this might be the place for advice and resources. Jon Jacobo, the health committee chair for the Latino Task Force, which launched the Hub, listened to her. He then guided her to testing and information about how to access food and economic relief.

This is what the Latino Task Force’s Community Wellness Team was designed to do: deploy care and wrap-around services to San Franciscans infected with Covid-19, in a quick and culturally appropriate manner. And, it’s managed to do this without funding from the city – a predicament that could change in the next few months, with a promise of at least $450,000 for one Mission organization to deploy covid community outreach and care.

This model – one that other community based organizations have adopted – was the brainchild of the Latino Task Force and University of California San Francisco doctors, who deployed and fine-tuned it during three joint mass testing campaigns(more)