“The System Doesn’t Let Us in”—A Call for Inclusive COVID-19 Vaccine Outreach Rooted in Los Angeles Latinos’ Experience of Pandemic Hardships and Inequities

Author:

Castellon-Lopez Yelba M.ORCID,Carson Savanna L.,Mansfield LisaORCID,Garrison Nanibaa’ A.ORCID,Barron Juan,Morris D’Ann,Ntekume EjiroORCID,Vassar Stefanie D.,Norris Keith C.ORCID,Brown Arleen F.ORCID,Casillas Alejandra

Abstract

Objective. Latino adults in Los Angeles have experienced disproportionate cases, deaths, and socioeconomic impacts from the COVID-19 pandemic. This qualitative study aimed to explore community perspectives on readiness for COVID-19 vaccination and to identify culturally tailored vaccine outreach strategies. Methods. We conducted virtual focus groups with Los Angeles County Latino/a residents via Zoom between December 2020 to January 2021, as the first COVID-19 vaccines were receiving Emergency Use Authorization (EUA). Focus groups were facilitated in Spanish and English by bilingual members of the research team. Discussions were analyzed via Atlas.ti software using reflexive thematic analysis. Results. Three focus groups (n = 15; four to six people each; two Spanish focus groups; one English) were conducted. Thematic findings centered on Latino COVID-19 vaccine equity: (1) Disproportionate infection risk due to essential worker status and socioeconomic burdens, misinformation, and familial or cultural tensions (2) Concerns for inequitable vaccine access due to immigration fears and limited healthcare access, and (3) A need for community-centered COVID-19 vaccine outreach and access. Conclusions. Our study on early Latino adult reactions to vaccine roll-out suggests the need for outreach strategies centering on validating community hardships, combating dis-/misinformation through trusted sources, and addressing socio-economic needs impacted by the pandemic.

Funder

National Institutes of Health

CEAL/STOP COVID-19 CA

University of California, Los Angeles

Publisher

MDPI AG

Subject

Health, Toxicology and Mutagenesis,Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health

Reference46 articles.

1. Hispanics Have Accounted for More than Half of Total U.S. Population Growth Since 2010;Krogstad,2020

2. Policy Brief: In a Vulnerable State: Hispanic Essential Workers in California;Misael Galdamez,2020

3. Risk of COVID-19 due to Shortage of Personal Protective Equipment

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