A multi-component, community-based strategy to facilitate COVID-19 vaccine uptake among Latinx populations: from theory to practice

التفاصيل البيبلوغرافية
العنوان: A multi-component, community-based strategy to facilitate COVID-19 vaccine uptake among Latinx populations: from theory to practice
المؤلفون: Diane Jones, Susy Rojas, Douglas Black, Diane V. Havlir, Valerie Tulier-Laiwa, Salustiano Ribeiro, Andrew D. Kerkhoff, Jon Jacobo, Luis Rubio, Susana Rojas, Jacqueline Martinez, Rafael González, Maya L. Petersen, James Peng, Joseph L. DeRisi, Maria G. Contreras, Gabriel Chamie, Jonathan D. Fuchs, Edgar Castellanos Diaz, Jen Nossokoff, Genay Pilarowski, Carina Marquez, Jamie Naso
المساهمون: Garcia, Jonathan
المصدر: PloS one, vol 16, iss 9
PLoS ONE
PLoS ONE, Vol 16, Iss 9, p e0257111 (2021)
بيانات النشر: Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory, 2021.
سنة النشر: 2021
مصطلحات موضوعية: Male, Viral Diseases, and promotion of well-being, Time Factors, Immigration, Ethnic group, Social Sciences, Multilingualism, Social Geography, Medical Conditions, Sociology, Residence Characteristics, Medicine and Health Sciences, Ethnicity, Psychology, Medicine, Public and Occupational Health, Misinformation, Virus Testing, Language, media_common, Vaccines, education.field_of_study, Multidisciplinary, Geography, Continental Population Groups, Vaccination, Hispanic or Latino, Middle Aged, Health Services, Vaccination and Immunization, Outreach, Infectious Diseases, Treatment Outcome, Social Networks, 3.4 Vaccines, Neighborhoods, Female, Hispanic Americans, Network Analysis, Research Article, Adult, Computer and Information Sciences, COVID-19 Vaccines, Infectious Disease Control, Adolescent, Coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19), General Science & Technology, Science, media_common.quotation_subject, Immunology, Population, Ethnic Groups, Human Geography, Microbiology, Vaccine Related, Diagnostic Medicine, Clinical Research, Virology, Behavioral and Social Science, Humans, education, Viral vaccines, business.industry, Prevention, Racial Groups, HIV vaccines, Cognitive Psychology, Biology and Life Sciences, COVID-19, Covid 19, Prevention of disease and conditions, Good Health and Well Being, Earth Sciences, Cognitive Science, Household income, San Francisco, Immunization, Preventive Medicine, business, Neuroscience, Demography
الوصف: Author(s): Marquez, Carina; Kerkhoff, Andrew D; Naso, Jamie; Contreras, Maria G; Castellanos Diaz, Edgar; Rojas, Susana; Peng, James; Rubio, Luis; Jones, Diane; Jacobo, Jon; Rojas, Susy; Gonzalez, Rafael; Fuchs, Jonathan D; Black, Douglas; Ribeiro, Salustiano; Nossokoff, Jen; Tulier-Laiwa, Valerie; Martinez, Jacqueline; Chamie, Gabriel; Pilarowski, Genay; DeRisi, Joseph; Petersen, Maya; Havlir, Diane V | Abstract: BackgroundCOVID-19 vaccine coverage in the Latinx community depends on delivery systems that overcome barriers such as institutional distrust, misinformation, and access to care. We hypothesized that a community-centered vaccination strategy that included mobilization, vaccination, and "activation" components could successfully reach an underserved Latinx population, utilizing its social networks to boost vaccination coverage.MethodsOur community-academic-public health partnership, "Unidos en Salud," utilized a theory-informed approach to design our "Motivate, Vaccinate, and Activate" COVID-19 vaccination strategy. Our strategy's design was guided by the PRECEDE Model and sought to address and overcome predisposing, enabling, and reinforcing barriers to COVID-19 vaccination faced by Latinx individuals in San Francisco. We evaluated our prototype outdoor, "neighborhood" vaccination program located in a central commercial and transport hub in the Mission District in San Francisco, using the Reach, Effectiveness, Adoption, Implementation and Maintenance (RE-AIM) framework during a 16-week period from February 1, 2021 to May 19, 2021. Programmatic data, city-wide COVID-19 surveillance data, and a survey conducted between May 2, 2021 and May 19, 2021 among 997 vaccinated clients ≥16 years old were used in the evaluation.ResultsThere were 20,792 COVID-19 vaccinations administered at the neighborhood site during the 16-week evaluation period. Vaccine recipients had a median age of 43 (IQR 32-56) years, 53.9% were male and 70.5% were Latinx, 14.1% white, 7.7% Asian, 2.4% Black, and 5.3% other. Latinx vaccinated clients were substantially more likely than non-Latinx clients to have an annual household income of less than $50,000 a year (76.1% vs. 33.5%), be a first-generation immigrant (60.2% vs. 30.1%), not have health insurance (47.3% vs. 16.0%), and not have access to primary care provider (62.4% vs. 36.2%). The most frequently reported reasons for choosing vaccination at the site were its neighborhood location (28.6%), easy and convenient scheduling (26.9%) and recommendation by someone they trusted (18.1%); approximately 99% reported having an overall positive experience, regardless of ethnicity. Notably, 58.3% of clients reported that they were able to get vaccinated earlier because of the neighborhood vaccination site, 98.4% of clients completed both vaccine doses, and 90.7% said that they were more likely to recommend COVID-19 vaccination to family and friends after their experience; these findings did not substantially differ according to ethnicity. There were 40.3% of vaccinated clients who said they still knew at least one unvaccinated person (64.6% knew ≥3). Among clients who received both vaccine doses (n = 729), 91.0% said that after their vaccination experience, they had personally reached out to at least one unvaccinated person they knew (61.6% reached out to ≥3) to recommend getting vaccinated; 83.0% of clients reported that one or more friends, and/or family members got vaccinated as a result of their outreach, including 18.9% who reported 6 or more persons got vaccinated as a result of their influence.ConclusionsA multi-component, "Motivate, Vaccinate, and Activate" community-based strategy addressing barriers to COVID-19 vaccination for the Latinx population reached the intended population, and vaccinated individuals served as ambassadors to recruit other friends and family members to get vaccinated.
وصف الملف: application/pdf
URL الوصول: https://explore.openaire.eu/search/publication?articleId=doi_dedup___::bffe3c747c5d64c0cead0b784c466d04
https://doi.org/10.1101/2021.06.07.21258230
حقوق: OPEN
رقم الأكسشن: edsair.doi.dedup.....bffe3c747c5d64c0cead0b784c466d04
قاعدة البيانات: OpenAIRE