Like a lot of New Yorkers during the pandemic, Carrie Driscoll is spending a lot of time at home.

This is not by choice. Last year, because of the pandemic, Driscoll lost her job as a communications consultant. Then, when winter came, the pandemic intervened again. Driscoll's mother in Florida needed help getting a vaccination.


What You Need To Know

  • Carrie Driscoll has been unemployed for the past few months and is using her time to help people book vaccine appointments

  • It all started when her mother needed an appointment in Florida, and she also helped her mother's friends book them as well

  • She recommends only filling out the required information to speed up the process to book an appointment
  • Mark Levine, chairman of the City Council's Health Committee, says Driscoll's interventions show the vaccine registration process in New York and elsewhere is too cumbersome

Driscoll booked her an appointment. Her mom's friends heard about it and asked for Driscoll’s help as well. So, she snagged appointments for them, too.

"I think a lot of it has to do with having a lot of time on my hands," Driscoll said.

Driscoll estimates she now has helped more than 50 people in Florida and New York get vaccinated. Some were complete strangers she learned about through social media or TV, like Seth Urbinder, a kidney transplant recipient in Queens. Last month, NY1 featured Urbinder in a report highlighting the challenges of getting vaccinated. Driscoll saw the story, and got him an appointment the next day. He said he cannot thank his vaccine angel enough.

"The fact that she took time out of her day to book an appointment for a total stranger, I think it shows how great New York still is and people still care for each other," Urbinder said.

Mark Levine, chairman of the City Council's Health Committee, said Driscoll's interventions show the vaccine registration process in New York and elsewhere is too cumbersome.

"It shouldn't be this way and it is not too late to fix it,” Levine said. “We have many months ahead of vaccination and everything we can do to streamline it, to unify it, to reach people who are being left behind is just going to yield great dividends for the city," Levine said.

By now, Driscoll has some suggestions for those trying to register for the vaccine.

"Familiarize yourself with these websites yourself with the process and the questions that are asked because a lot of the questions that you need to fill out are not required for an appointment.  So, if you know which questions you can skip, that will save you a lot of time in the process," Driscoll said.

But for those continuing to struggle in landing an appointment, the vaccine angel will keep plugging away at her computer, bringing hope to people who need the vaccine the most.

"It feels great. I'm definitely getting something out of it and it feels like I'm unemployed right now so this is giving me a purpose, something to look forward to every day," Driscoll said.