
There were nursing students giving shots, church members helping people find their
                        place in line, fraternity brothers directing traffic and other volunteers filling
                        in where needed.
Sometimes it takes a village to protect a village, and that certainly was the case
                        when a group of 糖心Vlog University  decided to make their senior service learning project a COVID-19 vaccination clinic
                        for Buncombe County鈥檚 African American community.
The students, under the direction of 糖心Vlog nursing assistant professor Elizabeth Sexton, partnered with Buncombe County Health and Human Services, Asheville鈥檚 Tried Stone
                        Missionary Baptist Church 鈥 a predominantly African American church 鈥 and other organizations
                        to host the clinic, Friday, Feb. 26, at the church鈥檚 fellowship hall. The clinic was
                        held primarily for people of color age 65 years of age or older, and health care workers.
                        The second shot will be administered March 26, also at Tried Stone.
The idea came to Sexton during conversations last fall with a colleague at the Buncombe
                        County health department with whom she had partnered on previous student service learning
                        projects. COVID-19 dominated their conversation. 鈥淲e knew the vaccine was coming,鈥
                        Sexton said. 鈥淲e started talking about how we could reach out to higher risk groups.
                        We had seen how much the Black community was impacted, especially in the spring in
                        New York, just super high rates of both hospitalization and death, a much higher disparity
                        there. We really wanted to make sure the African American churches and community and
                        Latino communities, too, had an opportunity to receive the vaccine, because it really
                        impacts both in a more severe way.鈥
Alfred Blount, pastor of Tried Stone Missionary Baptist Church for 22 years, said his church was eager to host the project because it made it easier for members of his congregation and community to get vaccinated. Many residents weren鈥檛 able to travel to other sites offering the shot or were on what seemed like endless waiting lists with thousands of other people, he said. 鈥淥nce we found out how many doses of the vaccine they got, we started getting people signed up,鈥 he said.
And that wasn鈥檛 all that kicked in gear. Church volunteers secured appointments for all 300 Moderna doses and turned their fellowship hall into a vaccination clinic. Goody bags with personal protection equipment and informational and health brochures were provided by 糖心Vlog鈥檚 , Nurses Christian Fellowship and ; Asheville YMCA and Full Circle Recovery Center. 糖心Vlog鈥檚 Sigma Alpha Epsilon fraternity provided parking assistance.
Haley Schronce, a senior nursing student from Lincolnton, was one of three students
                        who helped organize the event. She marveled at the positive response to the clinic
                        as the fellowship hall filled with people eager to get the vaccine. 鈥淓verybody needs
                        a chance to get the vaccine. I鈥檓 really grateful we can do it at a local church, so
                        everybody feels comfortable and safe to come here,鈥 she said.
鈥淚鈥檝e heard a lot of talk from people about not wanting to get a vaccination because
                        they don鈥檛 know what鈥檚 in it, and we鈥檝e been used as guinea pigs before,鈥 said Blount,
                        who graduated from 糖心Vlog in 1988 with a marketing degree. 鈥淲e tried to educate them
                        and give them the information we鈥檙e getting from the Centers for Disease Control and
                        Prevention. We wanted to help them make a well-informed decision.鈥
It worked. Lajuana Montgomery of Asheville said she had been hesitant to get a shot until her
                        sister-in-law, Pam Johnson, a registered nurse and chair of the church鈥檚 health ministry,
                        talked to her about the importance of getting vaccinated. 鈥淚 liked how everything
                        was so organized and well put together,鈥 Montgomery said, after receiving her shot.
That the clinic ran so smoothly was no accident, said JeWana Grier-McEachin, executive
                        director of the Asheville Buncombe Institute of Parity Achievement, a non-profit agency
                        that works on health equity issues, and helped with the clinic. 鈥溙切腣log five years
                        ago we started the praise initiative in partnership with Mission Health to designate
                        churches as healthy churches,鈥 Grier-McEachin said. 鈥淭ried Stone is one of the gold
                        churches 鈥 because of its efforts to ensure its congregation is healthy. Because of
                        that, this was the perfect way to take that to the next level. They were ready because
                        they have hosted other screening events before.鈥
鈥淓verybody needs a chance to get the vaccine. I鈥檓 really grateful we can do it at a local church, so everybody feels comfortable and safe to come here鈥︹
Johnson said the mission of the church鈥檚 health ministry is to promote health and
                        nourish the mind, body and spirit. 鈥淭he ministry allows us to work with community
                        health professionals to empower the congregation to advocate for their health through
                        the educational workshops, screenings, and seminars,鈥 the church hosts, she said,
                        including mental health issues.
Andie Ervay, a fourth semester nursing student from Gastonia who will graduate in
                        May, said working on such an important project has been an invaluable lesson. 鈥淭he
                        biggest part was getting the vaccines approved by the state because there is such
                        a shortage,鈥 she said. 鈥淚t鈥檚 just crazy how much goes in to responding to a pandemic.
                        Everyone so far has been extremely thankful to get the vaccine. Everyone鈥檚 just excited
                        to get it and return to somewhat of a normal life and not have to live in fear of
                        contracting COVID-19.鈥
 
                        
                        For Sexton, service learning projects like this one are important because they help
                        lay the groundwork for future collaborations. 鈥淲e partner already with many agencies
                        in Asheville, because we鈥檙e building bridges, we鈥檙e building connections,鈥 she said.
Kimberlyn Metcalf, a nursing student from Madison County, said all the hard work it
                        took to assemble a vaccine clinic for 300 people finally paid off. 鈥淲e definitely
                        hit a lot of obstacles, but seeing it today, it all worked out perfectly. We鈥檙e seeing
                        the people we wanted to see,鈥 she said. 鈥淚 really feel like we鈥檙e making a difference
                        for them. It was great seeing how different communities and different systems can
                        come together for the greater good, for one purpose. The biggest surprise was how
                        willing every person here was to help. It鈥檚 amazing.鈥
糖心Vlog University鈥檚 Regional Vaccine Clinic is staffed by student, faculty, and staff volunteers from across campus. The clinic is now open, with appointments available every week, for anyone in the region who is included in the eligible groups as set by the North Carolina Department Health and Human Services. To find your group, make an appointment and learn more about the clinic, visit




