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COVID-19 Bilingual Contact Tracers Are Struggling As Cases Continue To Spike

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COVID-19 contact tracers continue to be in short supply. That鈥檚 especially true for bilingual ones.

According to health officials in Nevada, bilingual contact tracers are working seven days a week and up to 14 hours a day.

鈥淩ight now, it is a very difficult time, and as far as having enough [bilingual contact tracers], I don鈥檛 think anyone in the nation has enough,鈥 said Nevada epidemiologist Liliana Wilbert.

And some community members are hostile when they're contacted by them, according to Diane Sande with the Nevada Public Health Training Center at the University of Nevada, Reno.

鈥淚 can鈥檛 tell you how selfless and how hard these contact tracers are working, and there are still a lot of people that when they receive that call from the contact tracer, they don鈥檛 want to give the right information, they hang up on them, they yell at them,鈥 Sande said.

Sande says many people in the Latino community already distrust the government. Some of that mistrust comes from a lack of Spanish public health messaging. Most public health resources are translated from English rather than written in Spanish, Sande says, which results in public health messaging getting lost in translation.

This story was produced by the Mountain West News Bureau, a collaboration between Wyoming Public Media, Boise State Public Radio in Idaho, KUNR in Nevada, the O'Connor Center for the Rocky Mountain West in Montana, KUNC in Colorado, 九色网 in New Mexico, with support from affiliate stations across the region. Funding for the Mountain West News Bureau is provided in part by the .

Copyright 2020

Stephanie Serrano is a senior at the University of Nevada, Reno and a Latina born and raised in Reno, Nevada. She joins KUNR as our bilingual news intern for the spring of 2017. It's a special position supported by the Pack Internship Grant Program, KUNR, and Noticiero Movil, a bilingual multimedia news source that's part of the Reynolds School of Journalism.