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Mexico sends some minors to US to get coronavirus vaccine

A young woman from Tijuana, Mexico, receives a vaccination shot against the coronavirus outside of the Mexican Consulate building, Thursday, Nov. 18, 2021, in San Diego. Scores of Mexican adolescents were bused to California on Thursday to get vaccinated against the coronavirus as efforts get underway across Mexico to get shots in the arms of teens.
Gregory Bull / Associated Press
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AP
A young woman from Tijuana, Mexico, receives a vaccination shot against the coronavirus outside of the Mexican Consulate building, Thursday, Nov. 18, 2021, in San Diego. Scores of Mexican adolescents were bused to California on Thursday to get vaccinated against the coronavirus as efforts get underway across Mexico to get shots in the arms of teens.

Scores of Mexican adolescents were bused to California on Thursday to get vaccinated against the coronavirus as efforts get underway across Mexico to get shots in the arms of teens.

Mexico has resisted vaccinating minors ages 12 to 17, in part because the government focused on older adults believed to be more vulnerable. Mexico also did not have enough vaccine supply to cover its young population.

So a group in San Diego along with San Diego County stepped in to help its neighbor.

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The pilot program in San Diego aims to get shots in the arms of 450 youths ages 12 to 17 before it ends in late December. The adolescents from Tijuana were selected by Mexican social service organizations, including those who work with the children of parents deported from the United States.

The effort comes as Mexico is starting to rollout vaccines for minors in many parts of the country this month, including in Baja California, the state bordering California. But only teens ages 15 to 17 have been approved there to get the shots.

About 150 kids were brought over to the Mexican consulate in San Diego on Thursday where San Diego County nurses administered the Pfizer vaccine. The county donated the doses. They will return in about three weeks for a second shot.

All of the adolescents have a U.S. visa or passport, but they were unable to come to the United States before now to get the vaccine because they did not have an adult able to cross the border with them, said Carlos González Gutiérrez, the Mexican consul in San Diego.

Adrian Medina Amarillas, Baja California's secretary of health, praised the effort.

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“Baja California is experiencing a third wave” of infections, he said. “There is no doubt that this will help."

The program will be evaluated in early 2022 and officials will decide then whether it needs to be continued.

The effort comes less than two weeks after the United States fully reopened its borders, and Mexican officials see it as another step toward ensuring the border stays that way. Border businesses were decimated by the 18-month closure to tourists and shoppers.

About 80% of the adult populations in both San Diego County and in Baja California have received at least one dose of the vaccine.

The first mass vaccination of Mexican minors happened last month along the Texas border when more than 1,000 children from the Mexican border state of Coahuila were bused to Eagle Pass, where they got their first shot of the Pfizer vaccine administered by members of the Texas National Guard. The youths ages 12 to 17 are the children of workers at border assembly plants known as maquiladoras.

In May and early June, more than 26,000 maquiladora workers in Baja California were vaccinated at the San Ysidro border crossing in San Diego.