HHS Launches
Hotline to Improve Access to COVID-19 Vaccines for People with
Disabilities
Today, U.S. Health and Human Services (HHS) announces the
launch of a first-of-its-kind national hotline to connect people with
disabilities to information and services to improve access to COVID-19
vaccines.
The Disability
Information and Access Line (DIAL) is now available to help
people with disabilities find vaccination locations in their communities,
assist callers with making vaccination appointments, and connect callers to
local services – such as accessible transportation – to overcome barriers
to vaccination. The hotline also can provide information and resources to
answer questions and address concerns about the vaccines and can connect
callers to information and services that promote independent living and
address fundamental needs, such as food, housing, and transportation.
DIAL is operated as a collaboration between a consortium of
organizations serving people with disabilities and the National Association
of Area Agencies on Aging (n4a). The consortium includes:
- Association of Programs for
Rural Independent Living (APRIL),
- Association of University
Centers on Disabilities (AUCD),
- Independent Living Research
Utilization (ILRU),
- National Association of
Councils on Developmental Disabilities (NACDD),
- National Council on
Independent Living (NCIL),
- National Disabilities
Rights Network (NDRN), and
- The Partnership for
Inclusive Disaster Strategies.
This collaboration benefits from the disability networks’
extensive knowledge and expertise in meeting the needs of people with
disabilities across the U.S. and n4a’s decades of experience
operating the Eldercare Locator, the only federally funded national
information and referral resource that supports consumers across the
spectrum of issues affecting older Americans. By leveraging these
capabilities, ACL was able to launch this critical tool in less than six
weeks.
DIAL was created through a partnership
between the Administration for Community Living and the Centers for Disease
Control and Prevention to help older adults and people with disabilities
get COVID-19 vaccines. With support from CDC, ACL also:
- Increased the capacity of
the Eldercare Locator to connect older adults, including those who are
unable to leave their homes and those who live in underserved
communities, to local COVID-19 vaccination resources.
- Issued nearly $93 million
in grants to the aging and disability networks in every state and
territory to provide critical services to overcome barriers that are
preventing millions of those most at-risk for serious illness and
death from COVID-19 from receiving vaccines.
About the Disability Information and Access Line (DIAL)
The Disability Information and Access Line (DIAL) connects
callers to information about how to access the COVID-19 vaccine and related
supports for people with disabilities. DIAL connects callers to vaccine
sites and provides information related to barriers to vaccination by
referring callers to local and national disability resources.
acl.gov/dial | 888-677-1199 from 9:00 AM
to 8:00 PM ET | DIAL@n4a.org
About the Eldercare Locator
Launched in 1991, the Eldercare Locator is the only national
information and referral resource to provide support to consumers across
the spectrum of issues affecting older Americans. The Locator was
established and is funded by the U.S. Administration for Community Living
and is administered by the National Association of Area Agencies on Aging
(n4a).
eldercare.acl.gov | 800-677-1116 from 9:00
AM to 8:00 PM ET | eldercarelocator@n4a.org
About the Administration for Community Living
The Administration for Community Living was created around the
fundamental principle that older adults and people of all ages with
disabilities should be able to live where they choose, with the people they
choose, and with the ability to participate fully in their communities. By
funding services and supports provided by networks of community-based
organizations, and with investments in research, education, and innovation,
ACL helps make this principle a reality for millions of Americans.
About the CDC’s National Center on Birth Defects and
Developmental Disabilities
The National Center on Birth Defects and Developmental
Disabilities strives to advance the health and well-being of our nation’s
most vulnerable populations. NCBDDD’s work is broad and far-reaching, and
includes four areas of focus: saving babies through surveillance, research,
and prevention of birth defects and infant disorders; helping children live
to the fullest by understanding developmental disabilities; protecting
people by preventing the complications of blood disorders; improving the
health of people living with disabilities.
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