Texas Vaccine Outreach and Education Grant - Round 1
Inform, connect and protect your community.
The Texas Vaccine Outreach and Education Grant program is a partnership between Texas A&M Health and the Texas Department of State Health Services Immunization Unit to fund strategies that ensure greater knowledge of and access to COVID-19 vaccines by those disproportionately affected by COVID-19.
Community-based organizations (CBOs) were awarded funds to engage their community in proactive COVID-19 vaccine education and outreach activities with the goal of increasing the number of people fully vaccinated for COVID-19 in Texas.
Preventing disparities in the uptake of COVID-19 vaccines is important to mitigate the disproportionate impacts of the virus. Reaching high vaccination rates across individuals and communities will be key for achieving broader population immunity through a vaccine. Lower vaccination rates among some groups will leave them at increased risk for infection, particularly as new variants spread.
Priority was given to applicants who focus on reaching:
- Rural communities
- Texans with disabilities
- Communities of color
For more information email us at vaccinegrant@tamu.edu.
Read the press release from Texas A&M Health and the Texas Department of State Health Services HERE.
Funded Organizations (Round 1)
Select organizations are listed multiple times because they had multiple, funded proposals for different geographic locations.
Adults and Youth United Development Association, Inc. (AYUDA) |
$150,000.00 |
Alivaine, Inc. |
$150,000.00 |
Alliance of Border Collaboratives |
$150,000.00 |
Asian American Resource Center, Inc. (Austin Asian Community Health Initiative) |
$118,362.00 |
Austin Area Urban League |
$150,000.00 |
Back to Eden |
$148,800.00 |
Bandera County Committee on Aging (DBA Silver Sage) |
$121,458.00 |
Bee Busy Wellness Center |
$150,000.00 |
Boys and Girls of Central Texas |
$76,963.00 |
Brave Communities |
$111,729.90 |
Change Happens |
$150,000.00 |
Children's Book on Wheels |
$82,500.00 |
City of Brownsville |
$150,000.00 |
Coastal Bend Wellness Foundation |
$150,000.00 |
Communication Service for the Deaf |
$140,192.00 |
Community Family Centers |
$154,059.25 |
Dia De La Mujer Latina, Inc. |
$126,545.00 |
DisABILITY SA |
$143,998.45 |
Eikon Church |
$122,017.00 |
El Buen Samaritano Episcopal Mission |
$150,000.00 |
Foundation Communities |
$126,365.00 |
Galveston County Community Action Council - Galveston County |
$150,260.00 |
Galveston County Community Action Council - Liberty County |
$150,000.00 |
Greater Houston Area Health Education Center, Inc. |
$150,000.00 |
HACA Scholarship Foundation (Austin Pathways) |
$64,468.50 |
Hail Mary Care Outreach |
$141,421.00 |
Houston Unity Lions Club |
$157,986.90 |
JFK Global Prayer Ministry |
$141,270.00 |
Manos Unidas |
$51,751.00 |
March of Dimes |
$68,236.00 |
Marcus D. King Ministries (Disciple Central Community Church) |
$149,945.40 |
Midland Memorial Foundation |
$125,841.38 |
My Health My Resources Tarrant County |
$143,796.00 |
National Black Nurse Practitioner Association |
$114,724.50 |
No Barriers Communications - Dallas |
$132,594.00 |
No Barriers Communications - Fort Worth |
$132,560.00 |
No Barriers Communications - Houston/Harris |
$147,410.00 |
North Texas Area United Way |
$46,552.00 |
Nueces County Texas |
$148,500.00 |
Nutrix Medical Worx, PLLC (Doctor Direct) |
$149,872.06 |
Piney Woods Area Health Education Center |
$150,425.00 |
Prairie View A&M University College of Nursing |
$132,609.00 |
Pro-Action, Inc. |
$165,000.00 |
Raymondville Independent School District |
$141,289.62 |
Special Health Resources for Texas, Inc. |
$150,000.00 |
St. Vincent's House |
$102,674.00 |
Texas A&M University College of Medicine |
$149,960.00 |
Texas A&M University College of Pharmacy |
$148,033.29 |
Tarleton State University |
$144,986.00 |
Texas Educational Broadcasting Cooperative (KOOP) |
$147,065.60 |
Texas Familias Council |
$65,738.00 |
Texas Muslim Women's Foundation |
$149,199.00 |
Texas Restaurant Foundation - Lubbock and HUB |
$209,960.00 |
Texas Restaurant Foundation - Midland |
$92,177.00 |
Texas Restaurant Foundation - Van Zandt |
$92,177.00 |
Texas Rio Grande Legal Aid, Inc. |
$150,000.00 |
Texas State Independent Living Council |
$99,583.00 |
Texas State University |
$150,000.00 |
The National Alliance on Mental Illness (NAMI) Texas |
$49,735.31 |
The Texas International Institute of Health Professions |
$135,161.68 |
The University of Texas at Tyler, Fischer College of Pharmacy |
$40,629.22 |
The University of Texas Health Science Center at Tyler |
$145,299.00 |
Triangle Area Network |
$149,999.00 |
Tyler Family Circle of Care |
$135,407.00 |
University of Incarnate Word |
$149,330.00 |
The University of Texas Health Science Center at Houston |
$139,113.00 |
The University of Texas Health Science Center at Houston School of Public Health at San Antonio |
$72,799.00 |
FREQUENTLY ASKED QUESTIONS
Based on current knowledge, experts believe that COVID-19 vaccines are unlikely to pose a risk to a person trying to become pregnant in the short or long term. Scientists study every vaccine carefully for side effects immediately and for years afterward, and people who get vaccinated track their symptoms. The COVID-19 vaccines are being studied carefully now, and the side effects data will continue to be studied for many years, similar to other vaccines.
There is currently no evidence that antibodies formed from COVID-19 vaccination cause any problems with pregnancy. In addition, there is no evidence suggesting that fertility problems are a side effect of ANY vaccine. People who are trying to become pregnant now or who plan to try in the future may receive the COVID-19 vaccine when it becomes available to them.
Relevant statistics
Moderna: 10 cases of allergic reaction with 4 million doses delivered (0.0003%). In 9 of those 10 cases, the reaction occurred within 15 minutes.