A pharmacist administers the newest COVID-19 vaccine during a clinic for seniors at the Southwest Senior Center earlier this month in Chicago.
A pharmacist administers the newest COVID-19 vaccine during a clinic for seniors at the Southwest Senior Center earlier this month in Chicago. E. Jason Wambsgans/Chicago Tribune/Tribune News Service via Getty Images
A pharmacist administers the newest COVID-19 vaccine during a clinic for seniors at the Southwest Senior Center earlier this month in Chicago.
A pharmacist administers the newest COVID-19 vaccine during a clinic for seniors at the Southwest Senior Center earlier this month in Chicago. E. Jason Wambsgans/Chicago Tribune/Tribune News Service via Getty Images

Nearly 1,200 migrants have arrived in Chicago in the last month and more are expected to come in the coming weeks and months. And when they get here, they have needs that just can’t wait. They need somewhere to stay. They need to eat. They sometimes need clothes. And — often the most urgent — they need medical attention.

And Chicago healthcare professionals are rallying to meet the moment.

Reset talks with a medical worker from Erie Family Health Center for what she’s seen on the ground, and what more is needed.

GUEST: Natalie Raghu, Erie Family Health Centers’ Medical Director of Advanced Practice Providers, and a Family Nurse Practitioner who helped care for families seeking asylum recently at Erie

A pharmacist administers the newest COVID-19 vaccine during a clinic for seniors at the Southwest Senior Center earlier this month in Chicago.
A pharmacist administers the newest COVID-19 vaccine during a clinic for seniors at the Southwest Senior Center earlier this month in Chicago. E. Jason Wambsgans/Chicago Tribune/Tribune News Service via Getty Images
A pharmacist administers the newest COVID-19 vaccine during a clinic for seniors at the Southwest Senior Center earlier this month in Chicago.
A pharmacist administers the newest COVID-19 vaccine during a clinic for seniors at the Southwest Senior Center earlier this month in Chicago. E. Jason Wambsgans/Chicago Tribune/Tribune News Service via Getty Images

Nearly 1,200 migrants have arrived in Chicago in the last month and more are expected to come in the coming weeks and months. And when they get here, they have needs that just can’t wait. They need somewhere to stay. They need to eat. They sometimes need clothes. And — often the most urgent — they need medical attention.

And Chicago healthcare professionals are rallying to meet the moment.

Reset talks with a medical worker from Erie Family Health Center for what she’s seen on the ground, and what more is needed.

GUEST: Natalie Raghu, Erie Family Health Centers’ Medical Director of Advanced Practice Providers, and a Family Nurse Practitioner who helped care for families seeking asylum recently at Erie