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UNM Offers $100 To Students Who Get Vaccinated

UNM medical student Jeremy Dean getting a COVID-19 vaccine in December 2020.
UNMH
UNM medical student Jeremy Dean getting a COVID-19 vaccine in December 2020.

The University of New Mexico Thursday announced an incentive program to encourage students and staff to get vaccinated against COVID-19 as it prepares to open for more normal, in-person, instruction next month.

UNM will award$100 credits to registered students’ bursar accountsafter they submit proof online of receiving a complete course of COVID-19 vaccine. That’s either a copy of a CDC COVID-19 Vaccination Record Card or a department of health vaccination record uploaded to UNM's "Vax the Pack" website. 

 

The incentives are available to people who are already vaccinated as well as those who still need a vaccine.

The money is from the third round of the federalHigher Education Emergency Relief Fund(HEERF), part of the American Rescue Plan Act.

The program comes just weeks after theWhite House announced an effortto get more vaccines into people under age 30, a population withvaccination ratesaround 40%, compared toabout 60% of all adultsin the U.S.

UNM spokesperson Cinnamon Blair said the university decided this week to incentivize vaccination rather than require it. "With an announcement earlier this week that we wouldn’t mandate the vaccine, we still want to get our students in particular, but our whole campus, vaccinated," she said.

Blair pointed tostudies showingsmall gifts and the promise of reduced restrictions aregood motivators for younger peopleto get vaccinated. She stressed that COVID-19 vaccines are free and easy to get by registering online with the New Mexico Department of Health.

   

Faculty and staff are also being targeted with the incentives with drawings for fifty $1,000 prizes. 

Enrollment at UNMhas been in decline, down nearly 20% from 2017 to about 23,500 students last semester. The largest recent enrollment drop came in Spring 2020, at the same time New Mexico was hit hardest by COVID-19. 

  

Copyright 2021 KUNM

Kaveh Mowahed wears several hats in KUNM’s news department, while working toward a PhD in the History of Medicine at UNM. He started here as an intern in 2013 and has been a reporter, production assistant, host, and data analyst over the years. Kaveh studied print journalism at Arizona State University, but soon after earning his bachelor’s degree he found his love for radio. Kaveh thinks hearing is the most valuable of the senses because of how it engages the imagination. When he’s not reading about 19th century medical treatments or editing audio for the radio, he’s usually home listening to records on a very old stereo that he insists sounds better than a newer one.