Purvis Rachel S, Moore Ramey, Rojo Martha O, Riklon Sheldon, Alik Eldon, Alik Derek, Maddison Benetick Kabua, McElfish Pearl A
College of Medicine, University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences Northwest, Springdale, AR, USA.
College of Nursing, University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences, Little Rock, AR, USA.
J Public Health Res. 2024 Mar 4;13(1):22799036241231549. doi: 10.1177/22799036241231549. eCollection 2024 Jan.
COVID-19 has disproportionately affected Pacific Islander communities, with disparities in the prevalence of infection, serious illness, and death compared to non-Hispanic whites in the US. Marshallese Pacific Islanders face significant COVID-19 disparities.
This exploratory study aimed to understand Marshallese community attitudes about the COVID-19 vaccine to identify and implement culturally relevant strategies to encourage vaccine uptake. Data were collected from 17 participants in three focus groups.
Using content analysis, researchers identified two global themes: (1) barriers to vaccination and (2) facilitators of COVID-19 vaccine uptake. Within these themes, participants described fear, lack of knowledge about vaccines, negative perceptions of the COVID-19 vaccine, health concerns, and transportation as barriers to vaccination. Participants described several factors influencing vaccine behavior, including location of and personnel at vaccine clinics, vaccine experiences, the need for trusted information, positive perceptions, cultural leaders, and mandates.
The qualitative study makes a significant contribution as the first to report community perceptions and experiences related to the COVID-19 vaccine in Marshallese participants' own words. Findings show that cultural influencers and brokers are crucial bridges for public health messaging related to COVID-19 vaccination targeted to this vulnerable and underserved population. Culturally appropriate and effective public health messaging can help achieve vaccine equity and improve COVID-19-related health disparities in the Marshallese community.
新冠疫情对太平洋岛民社区的影响尤为严重,与美国非西班牙裔白人相比,在感染率、重症率和死亡率方面存在差异。马绍尔群岛的太平洋岛民面临着显著的新冠疫情差异。
这项探索性研究旨在了解马绍尔群岛社区对新冠疫苗的态度,以确定并实施与文化相关的策略来鼓励疫苗接种。通过三个焦点小组收集了17名参与者的数据。
通过内容分析,研究人员确定了两个总体主题:(1)疫苗接种的障碍和(2)新冠疫苗接种的促进因素。在这些主题中,参与者将恐惧、对疫苗缺乏了解、对新冠疫苗的负面看法、健康问题和交通描述为疫苗接种的障碍。参与者描述了几个影响疫苗接种行为的因素,包括疫苗接种诊所的地点和工作人员、疫苗接种经历、对可靠信息的需求、积极看法、文化领袖和强制规定。
这项定性研究具有重要意义,它首次用马绍尔群岛参与者自己的话报告了与新冠疫苗相关的社区看法和经历。研究结果表明,文化影响者和传播者是针对这一弱势群体和服务不足人群的与新冠疫苗接种相关的公共卫生信息传递的关键桥梁。符合文化特点且有效的公共卫生信息传递有助于实现疫苗公平,并改善马绍尔群岛社区与新冠疫情相关的健康差异。