
 
        
         
		THANK YOU TO OUR 2021 CLASS 
 OF NYC WOMEN OF IMPACT 
 The American Heart Association’s Women of 
 Impact Campaign brings together passionate 
 groups of women across the nation, dedicated to 
 improving the state of women’s health by raising 
 awareness and funds for Go Red for Women®.  
 Caribbean Life, F 34     ebruary 19-25, 2021 
 Reena Gupte Joshi 
 AHA Volunteer & 
 Changemaker 
 Suzy 
 Davidkhanian 
 AHA Volunteer & 
 Innovator 
 Amy Edens 
 Marketer & 2020 
 NYC Go Red 
 Lifestyle Change 
 Award Winner 
 Hailey Rogers 
 National Account 
 Executive 
 iHeartMedia 
 Prachi Makkar 
 Associate 
 Blackstone 
 Sophia Wagner 
 Manager, Strategy 
 and Transactions 
 EY 
 Cynthia LaForte 
 AHA Young 
 Professional Board 
 Member & 
 Psychotherapist 
 Annabelle Jimenez 
 AHA Volunteer & 
 2018 NYC Go Red 
 Lifestyle Change 
 Award Winner 
 Protection, but  
 not for all 
 Central Brooklyn nabes among least  
 vaccinated communities in NYC 
 Registered Nurse Shyun Lin, gives Roberto Fisher, 72, the fi rst dose of the  
 vaccine at a pop-up vaccination site in William Reid Apartments in East  
 Flatbush.  Altaffer/Pool via REUTERS 
 By Ben Verde 
 The  predominately  Black  neighborhoods  
 in  central  Brooklyn  are  among  
 the least-vaccinated communities in  
 the city, according to new data. 
 Data  released  on  Feb.  16  by  the  
 Department  of  Health  shows  two  zip  
 codes — 11213 and 11221 — covering  
 parts  of  eastern  Crown  Heights,  Bedford 
 Stuyvesant,  and  Bushwick  with  
 particularly troubling statistics, as just  
 4 percent of adults have received their  
 first dose of the vaccine.  
 In  Crown  Heights’  11213  zip  code,  
 1,939  adults  have  been  partially  vaccinated, 
   while  1,329  adults  have  been  
 fully  vaccinated.  In  the  Bedford-Stuyvesant  
 and  Bushwick  11221  zip  code,  
 just  2,552  adults  have  been  partially  
 vaccinated,  while  just  1,569  have  
 received both doses — despite  the  zip  
 codes  having  a  population  of  64,000  
 and 79,000, respectively.  
 As both neighborhoods feature large  
 Black  populations,  highlighting  the  
 challenges  the  city  faces  in  reaching  
 the  hardest  hit  populations,  some  of  
 whom may be distrustful of the federal  
 government that authorized the jab. 
 Also among the lowest zip codes are  
 areas  in  the  south  Bronx  and  central  
 Queens. 
 The areas with the highest vaccination  
 rates  have  larger  white  populations, 
   such  as  10314,  encompassing  
 west  Staten  Island,  where  9  percent  
 of adults at 7,015 people have received  
 one  shot,  and  6  percent  of  adults  at  
 4,589 people have received both doses.  
 The  areas  with  the  lowest  vaccination  
 rates have had some of the highest  
 infection  rates  throughout  the  pandemic. 
   One  out  of  every  17  people  in  
 11213 has been diagnosed with COVID- 
 19 throughout the past year according  
 to Health Department data, while 168  
 people have died. 
 During  a  press  briefing,  Mayor  Bill  
 de Blasio pledged to do more outreach  
 in  vaccine-skeptical  communities  to  
 get towards New York’s goal of administering  
 5  million  vaccine  doses  by  
 June.  
 “This effort will not stop,” de Blasio  
 said, adding that new vaccination sites  
 opening  Wednesday  will  include  one  
 at  Teachers  Preparatory  High  School  
 on  Bristol  Street.  “We’re  going  to  go  
 deeper and deeper into communities to  
 make sure there is equity.” 
   Health