Philly vaccines: How to tell if your appointment at the Convention Center is legit
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As the Philadelphia Department of Public Health continues efforts to restore trust and order in the cityâs vaccination program, a new set of emails are causing confusion.
People whoâd scheduled appointments with Philly Fighting COVID before the city cut ties are receiving confirmation messages to get their first shots at the Pennsylvania Convention Center this weekend. Those messages are bogus â and there are several tips you can use to tell.
In fact, the Health Department is running at the Convention Center this weekend for former PFC patients. But itâs only to give people their second doses, not their first.
âSome people who previously set appointments with PFC are getting reminders for appointments that have been canceled,â said Health Department spokesperson James Garrow.
The reminder emails are coming from a third-party platform, and the city has not yet successfully been able to get them turned off.
âPhilly Fighting COVID outsourced to a third-party company to do their reminder emails, but never cancelled those emails once they were shut down,â Garrow said. PFC was officially kicked out of the vaccine program on Jan. 25, after Billy Penn, WHYY, and other local news outlets brought to light many red flags around the company, including lack of experience and improper activity.
Garrow confirmed that the third-party company sending the appointment confirmations is a Maryland-based nonprofit called Multi-State Partnership for Prevention, a subsidiary of the Maryland Partnership for Prevention, founded in 1999.
The organizationâs clinic management and scheduling platform â called âPrepModâ â is used, or has been used in many places, including North Dakota, Washington state, Alaska and Los Angeles.
It is also, Garrow said, the same clinic management software used by the City of Philadelphia.
But the Health Departmentâs contract is completely separate from the one held by Philly Fighting COVID, âmaking the challenge of shutting those emails down harder,â Garrow said.
âWe have reached out to the company to see if they can stop the emails, but they havenât been able to reach PFC to turn off the emails. We are continuing to follow up with them.â
In the meantime, here are some ways to tell if your appointment confirmation is real or not.
Check for a match (you donât want one)
If you remember the time and date you originally signed up for with Philly Fighting COVID, compare that to what comes in your confirmation email.
If the date and time are the same, it means the appointment is not valid.
âIf they are the same,â spokesperson Garrow said, âit means PFC sent the message, and that appointment has been cancelled.â
Check the time
If the appointment says itâs after 5 p.m., itâs not valid, per Garrow, because all Health Department clinics currently close at that time.
Check the date
If the confirmation arrives more than a day before your scheduled time, itâs from the old system. The Health Department sends confirmation emails exactly one day prior to appointment, per Garrow (unless a patient specifically requests otherwise).
Is it your first dose?
Only second doses are being given at the Convention Center on the weekend of Feb. 6-7, Garrow confirmed. So if you didnât get the jab yet, sorry, but youâre still in line.
Still not sure? Send a note
If youâre still unsure whether your appointment confirmation is real or not, you can send an email to the Health Department at vaccines@phila.gov to check.
If you never got an appointment in the first place
Many people in Philadelphia havenât been able to sign up for a COVID-19 vaccine appointment at all, even if they pre-registered online.
The Health Departmentâs official registry was launched two weeks ago, after the city began distancing itself from Philly Fighting COVID.
Officials are asking all city residents to express their interest to get vaccinated by signing up there: phila.gov/vaccineinterest.
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