You are reading

Elmhurst Hospital Becomes First NYC Public Hospital to Vaccinate Staff

Elmhurst Hospital employee William Kelly is vaccinated for COVID-19 (Ed Reed/Mayoral Photography Office)

Dec. 16, 2020 By Allie Griffin

Elmhurst Hospital — once seen as the epicenter of the epicenter of the COVID-19 pandemic in the U.S. — became the first public city hospital to administer the vaccine in the five boroughs.

The hospital was the scene of a photo-op Wednesday as two staff members were vaccinated in front of elected officials and members of the media.

The occasion was quite a different picture than at the height of the pandemic — when images of body bags being loaded onto trucks from Elmhurst Hospital made national news. The hospital saw 13 patients die of coronavirus within a 24-hour period in mid March.

One of the staffers vaccinated Wednesday, Veronica Delgado, a lead physician’s assistant in the Emergency Department, compared the moment to “that first bit of sunlight in the morning after a very long, dark and frightening night.”

Delgado and William Kelly, a service aide in the Environmental Services Department, were the first staff members to receive the vaccine within the city’s 11 public hospitals. On Monday, a Queens nurse at a private hospital became the first American to get the COVID-19 vaccination.

The two Elmhurst Hospital employees are among the more than 1,600 health care workers vaccinated for COVID-19 in the city since Monday.

Elmhurst Hospital workers celebrate the first COVID-19 vaccinations of two staff members (Ed Reed/Mayoral Photography Office)

All staff members at Elmhurst Hospital are expected to be vaccinated in the next three weeks, the head of the city’s public hospital system, Dr. Mitch Katz, said.

“How great that we can be here to make the pain go away, to be able to protect the heroes of Elmhurst,” Katz said.

Mayor Bill de Blasio said there was no more fitting place to administer the vaccine than Elmhurst Hospital.

“We’re celebrating such an important moment here — the first ever vaccination at a New York City public hospital,” he said. “And there’s no more fitting place than here. This is the place where it should be because this is the heroic place.”

The testing line outside Elmhurst Hospital in April (Photo: Queens Post)

email the author: news@queenspost.com
No comments yet

Leave a Comment
Reply to this Comment

All comments are subject to moderation before being posted.

This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.

Recent News

Rego Park man killed in Bayside chain-reaction crash on Christmas Eve: NYPD

For the second time in less than a week, a motorist was struck and killed after getting out of their vehicle where the Clearview Expressway merges with the Long Island Expressway in Bayside.

The latest fatal collision occurred on the morning of Tuesday, Dec. 24, after a Rego Park man was involved in a crash at around 8:50 a.m. near the northbound ramp of the Clearview Expressway at the westbound entrance to the LIE.

Homeless men charged in deadly 7 train subway brawl in Woodside: DA

Three homeless men were arraigned in Queens Criminal Court on Tuesday and variously charged with felony robbery, attempted gang assault, and assault for allegedly stealing the belongings of a 69-year-old homeless man who was asleep on a Manhattan-bound 7 train in Woodside early Sunday morning.

The victim woke up and tried to regain his property. During the ensuing brawl, the victim fatally stabbed a 37-year-old assailant and slashed a second man. The victim has not been charged in the fatal stabbing. The investigation by the NYPD’s Queens Homicide Squad and members of the 108th Precinct in Long Island City remains ongoing.