Perceptions of COVID-19 risk, vaccine access and confidence: a qualitative description of South Asians in Canada

Author:

Kandasamy SujaneORCID,Manoharan Baanu,Khan Zainab,Stennett RosainORCID,Desai Dipika,Nocos Rochelle,Wahi Gita,Banner Davina,de Souza Russell JORCID,Lear Scott AORCID,Anand Sonia SORCID

Abstract

ObjectivesIn the first full year of the COVID-19 pandemic (2020), South Asians living in the Greater Toronto and Hamilton Area (GTHA) and Greater Vancouver area (GVA) experienced specific barriers to accessing SARS-CoV-2 testing and reliable health information. However, between June 2021 and February 2022, the proportion of people having received at least one COVID-19 vaccine dose was higher among this group (96%) than among individuals who were not visible minorities (93%). A better understanding of successful approaches and the challenges experienced by those who remain unvaccinated among this highly vaccinated group may improve public health outreach in subsequent waves of the current pandemic or for future pandemic planning. Using qualitative methods, we sought to explore the perceptions of COVID-19 risk, vaccine access, uptake and confidence among South Asians living in Canada.DesignSemistructured interviews conducted with 25 participants analysed using thematic analysis. Throughout this process, we held frequent discussions with members of the study’s advisory group to guide data collection (community engagement, recruitment and data analysis).SettingCommunities of the GTHA and GVA with interviews conducted virtually over Zoom or telephone.Participants25 participants (15 from Ontario and 10 from British Columbia) were interviewed between July 2021 and January 2022. 10 individuals were community members, 9 were advocacy group leaders and 6 were public health staff.ResultsAccess to and confidence in the COVID-19 vaccine was impacted by individual risk perceptions; sources of trusted information (ethnic and non-ethnic); impact of COVID-19 and the pandemic on individuals, families and society; and experiences with COVID-19 mandates and policies (including temporal and generational differences). Approaches that include community-level awareness and tailored outreach (language and cultural context) were considered successful.ConclusionsUnderstanding factors and developing strategies that build vaccine confidence and improve access can guide approaches that increase vaccine acceptance in the current and future pandemics.Visual abstract can be found athttps://drive.google.com/file/d/1iXdnJj9ssc3hXCllZxP0QA9DhHH-7uwB/view

Funder

COVID-Immunity Task Force

Immunization Partnership Fund

McMaster University

Publisher

BMJ

Subject

General Medicine

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