Alein Y. Haro-Ramos is with the Department of Health, Society, and Behavior, UC Irvine Program in Public Health, Irvine, CA. Gabriel R. Sanchez is with the Department of Political Science, University of New Mexico, Albuquerque. Matt A. Barreto is with the Departments of Political Science and Chicana/o and Central American Studies, University of California, Los Angeles.
Am J Public Health. 2024 Jul;114(S6):S505-S509. doi: 10.2105/AJPH.2024.307668.
To examine the relationship between health care discrimination and COVID-19 vaccine hesitancy attributed to fears of immigration status complications among unvaccinated Latino adults and to determine whether the association differs among immigrants and US-born individuals. After universal adult eligibility for the COVID-19 vaccine, a nationally representative sample of 12 887 adults was surveyed using online and mobile random digit dialing from May 7 to June 7, 2021. The analytic sample (n = 881) comprised unvaccinated Latino adults. We examined the association between individual and cumulative health care discrimination measures and COVID-19 vaccine hesitancy assignable to immigration-related fears. Using a cumulative measure of health care discrimination, each additional experience corresponded to a 28% higher odds of reporting vaccine hesitancy Because of immigration-related fears. Findings were consistent across US-born and immigrant Latino adults. Four of the 5 discriminatory experiences were positively associated with vaccine hesitancy, including the absence of optimal treatment options, denial or delayed access to necessary health care, physician communication barriers, and lack of specialist referrals. Findings confirm a positive association between health care discrimination and COVID-19 vaccine hesitancy attributable to immigration-related fears among Latino adults, regardless of immigration status. (. 2024;114(S6):S505-S509. https://doi.org/10.2105/AJPH.2024.307668) [Formula: see text].
为了研究医疗保健歧视与 COVID-19 疫苗犹豫之间的关系,这种关系归因于未接种疫苗的拉丁裔成年人对移民身份相关并发症的担忧,以及确定这种关联在移民和美国出生的个体之间是否存在差异。在 COVID-19 疫苗对所有成年人普遍适用后,于 2021 年 5 月 7 日至 6 月 7 日使用在线和移动随机数字拨号对 12887 名成年人进行了一项全国代表性抽样调查。分析样本(n=881)包括未接种疫苗的拉丁裔成年人。我们研究了个体和累积医疗保健歧视措施与归因于移民相关恐惧的 COVID-19 疫苗犹豫之间的关联。使用医疗保健歧视的累积衡量标准,每增加一次经历,报告因移民相关恐惧而犹豫接种疫苗的几率就会增加 28%。这些发现在美国出生和移民的拉丁裔成年人中是一致的。五种歧视经历中有四种与疫苗犹豫呈正相关,包括缺乏最佳治疗选择、拒绝或延迟获得必要的医疗保健、医生沟通障碍以及缺乏专科转诊。这些发现证实了在拉丁裔成年人中,医疗保健歧视与 COVID-19 疫苗犹豫之间存在正相关,这种关联归因于与移民相关的恐惧,而与移民身份无关。