Home World Tokyo mom creates COVID-19 vaccination database amid information vacuum

Tokyo mom creates COVID-19 vaccination database amid information vacuum

Screenshot via听findadoc.jp

罢翱碍驰翱听听Balancing a new software programming job and caring for a toddler in Tokyo, LaShawn Toyoda saw increasing confusion in her social media feeds among non-Japanese speakers about how they could get a听coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19)听惫补肠肠颈苍别.

The 36-year-old, a former English teacher who had recently completed an intensive coding course as part of a pandemic-prompted career change, decided she had the skills to help ease concerns amid a lack of clear direction from officials.

鈥淭here was no news available in any language other than Japanese about when they would be able to get vaccinated, how they could get vaccinated or where,鈥澨齭aid听Ms.听Toyoda, who moved from Maryland in the United States to Tokyo a decade ago.

鈥淚 told my husband,听鈥榳atch our daughter, I听gotta听make something.鈥欌

Hours later,听Ms.听Toyoda launched her database听, a health database that helps non-Japanese speaking people find clinics with COVID-19 vaccine doses to spare after cancellations from prioritized elderly patients.

The database, which went live on June 13, quickly grew from just two clinics to almost 70 with information in 19 languages.

Ms.听Toyoda鈥檚 Twitter stream @theyokohamalife is filled with thanks and anecdotes of people who got their shots through the site, which she said has been used by more than 36,000 people.

The site鈥檚 popularity underscores nervousness about Japan鈥檚 sluggish vaccination rollout, particularly in Tokyo, where the Olympics Games are due to begin in less than a month.

Just 23% of the population have received at least one dose, according to a Reuters tracker, one of the lowest levels among major economies.

After a slow start with limited supplies prioritizing medical workers and older people, Prime Minister Yoshihide Suga has pledged to have the elderly population fully vaccinated by the end of this month and all other adults by November.

To speed up the process, the government handed over more control to municipalities and companies to set up their own systems and centers for administering shots.

That has meant that availability, particularly for the general public, has varied widely depending on where someone works and lives.

Ms.听Toyoda, who reskilled after the school she was teaching at part time shut down during a state of emergency in the capital last year, booked her own first shot through a clinic on her database last week.

The site has received wide support, with more experienced programmers from Alphabet Inc.鈥檚 Google, Mercari Inc.,听and Amazon.com Inc.听volunteering to add features and make it more secure.

The combined efforts echo online community activism in the wake of the 2011 Fukushima disaster when there was a similar perceived vacuum of official information.

鈥淲e take for granted that government will do everything and anything.听No they won鈥檛,鈥澨齭aid Pieter Franken, who co-founded volunteer group听SafeCast, which began by collecting radiation readings around Japan but has since expanded into tracking air quality and other quality-of-life factors.

鈥淵ou can fill the void by citizen action.鈥澨鈥斕Rocky Swift/Reuters