State’s New Top Doc Will Prioritize Communication
Dr. Jasmine Zapata wants to be receptive to community needs, promote health programs.
As Wisconsin’s newly-named chief medical officer and state epidemiologist, Dr. Jasmine Zapata said she will use her experience as a physician to listen to concerns from the community at large and serve as a voice for Wisconsinites when consulting policymakers on health issues.
“It really is just speaking up for what I believe is right,” Zapata told WPR’s Kealey Bultena during an interview on “The Morning Show.”
In her role, Zapata provides health guidance to agencies around Wisconsin. She spoke about her priorities and plans for moving through the pandemic.
This interview has been edited for brevity and clarity
Kealey Bultena: You are a physician and a newborn hospitalist. What are your goals in this new role as chief medical officer and state epidemiologist?
Dr. Jasmine Zapata: The vision of the Wisconsin (Department of Health Services) is for everyone to live their best life, and I just love that — my goals are to do just that.
And more specifically, I’ll be focusing on bringing awareness to many of the amazing programs within the Bureau of Community Health Promotion within DHS, and also focusing a lot on combating racial inequities in maternal child health.
KB: We have about 46 percent of Wisconsinites who’ve gotten at least the first dose of the COVID-19 vaccine, but that means about half of the people in our state have not done that. Is getting Wisconsin vaccinated a priority for you?
JZ: Yes, it’s definitely a priority. We know that the vaccines are safe and effective, and we’re very proud that we have reached that number of Wisconsinites who have at least received their first vaccine dose.
We know that there still is vaccine hesitancy. We need to continue having conversations to help people get accurate information and talk through whatever hesitations they have.
It’s also important — and another priority of mine — that when we are talking about the issue of vaccine hesitancy, especially among communities of color, to have trusted messengers within the community to continue having these conversations.
Something I’m very excited about is that DHS was able to recently give $6.2 million to over 100 community organizations to help facilitate these community conversations. We still have some work to do. But I’m hopeful.
KB: I can imagine some people might ask why we’re spending money to talk about this? Tell us more about that relationship and why those connections play into public health.
JZ: We’re living in a historic time. It hasn’t been for 100 hundred years that we’ve been in a pandemic of this magnitude where there are people dying like never before, economic devastation — there’s just so much going on and there are people that are scared in this time. And so for some, it’s very easy to just hear the medicine and public health establishment say, “Take this vaccine, it’s safe and effective and we trust it.”
Some people really value having conversations so that they can process their feelings, gather correct information, talk about any myths they may have heard or things that may give them pause or caution and just be a listening ear and have that conversation with them.
In my personal experience, I’ve talked with people who were 100 percent against it, but after multiple conversations with me over time — just listening to them, letting them know, even if you don’t want to make a decision now, I’ll be here next week to talk about it as well — there were many people that ended up getting the vaccine after that approach.
This is a very tough time, and we need to respect everyone’s decisions and just be there to help them make the right choice.
Listen to the WPR report here.
Wisconsin’s New Epidemiologist Wants To Be A ‘Listening Ear’ For Statewide Community was originally published by Wisconsin Public Radio.
This article contains no information about who appointed her, and I am wondering who is Wisconsin’s chief health officer. The foremost results of a Google search were articles in the Chicago Tribune and the Minneapolis Star Tribune that reported on the officer’s resignation during the height of the pandemic. Also, there is very little information about her qualifications or support from the medical community.
These positions matter, as we have seen in Milwaukee, where our Health Department leader also left in the middle of the pandemic.