Prog Community Health Partnersh. 2024;18(3):381-387.
The COVID-19 pandemic disproportionately impacted culturally and racially marginalized (CARM) migrants in Australia, with communities having varying levels of accurate knowledge about COVID-19 vaccines. At the height of the pandemic, public health programs that prioritized colonial knowledge and practices resulted in negative social, economic, and health outcomes for CARM communities. To support access to COVID-19 vaccinations and equity in delivery, therefore, it is critical that awareness-raising programs are tailored to meet all communities' intersecting needs. In this paper, we share our reflections on a community-led COVID-19 vaccination awareness program designed specifically for CARM migrant women in Perth, Western Australia. The program was led by CARM migrant women who delivered five public information sessions for women in the Pakistani, Iraqi, Chin, and Indonesian communities. This paper offers an overview of the program and critical reflections on the challenges involved in community-led programs that are underpinned by a commitment to decolonization.
COVID-19 大流行不成比例地影响了澳大利亚在文化和种族上处于边缘地位的移民(CARM),不同社区对 COVID-19 疫苗的准确知识水平存在差异。在大流行高峰期,优先考虑殖民知识和做法的公共卫生计划导致 CARM 社区遭受负面的社会、经济和健康后果。因此,为了支持 COVID-19 疫苗的接种并实现公平分配,至关重要的是,提高认识的计划应根据所有社区的交叉需求进行定制。在本文中,我们分享了对专门为西澳大利亚珀斯的 CARM 移民妇女设计的社区主导的 COVID-19 疫苗接种宣传计划的反思。该计划由 CARM 移民妇女领导,她们为巴基斯坦、伊拉克、中国和印度尼西亚社区的妇女举办了五次公共信息会议。本文概述了该计划,并对以去殖民化为基础的社区主导计划所涉及的挑战进行了批判性反思。