Humble Robin M, Lee Janet Sau Wun, Du Crystal, Driedger S Michelle, Dubé Eve, MacDonald Shannon E
Faculty of Nursing, University of Alberta, Edmonton, Alberta, Canada.
School of Public Health, University of Alberta, Edmonton, Alberta, Canada.
Ann Med. 2025 Dec;57(1):2445777. doi: 10.1080/07853890.2024.2445777. Epub 2024 Dec 27.
Despite high COVID-19 vaccine coverage in Canada, vaccine acceptance and preferred delivery among newcomers, racialized persons, and those who primarily speak minority languages are not well understood. This national study explores COVID-19 vaccine acceptance, access to vaccines, and delivery preferences among ethnoculturally diverse population groups.
We conducted two national cross-sectional surveys during the pandemic (Dec 2020 and Oct-Nov 2021). Binary logistic regression analysis investigated the association between newcomer, language, and racialized minority respondents' perceptions and acceptance of COVID-19 vaccines, experiences of discrimination when accessing health services, and sociodemographic characteristics. McNemar-Bowker tests were used to assess changes in responses collected at two time points.
Among 1630 respondents, 30.8% arrived in Canada within the last five years, 87.4% self-identified as a racialized minority, and 37.2% primarily spoke languages other than English or French. Although single dose COVID-19 vaccine uptake was at 92.7% among respondents, 14.8% experienced difficulty accessing vaccines, citing a need for translated resources or multi-lingual personnel. In longitudinal analysis, respondents were increasingly motivated over time to overcome barriers to accessing vaccines (61.4% to 69.6%, p = <.001). Fifty-nine percent (59.9%) of respondents would accept annual vaccination and over half would accept co-administration with routine (56.2%) or influenza (52.3%) vaccines. Experiences of racism/discrimination upon health service access were reported by 12.3% of respondents, who recommended increasing culturally safe practices and community involvement at vaccination sites.
Understanding how newcomers, racialized peoples, and minority language speakers perceive and access COVID-19 vaccines will support vaccination campaigns to optimize equitable access.
尽管加拿大的新冠疫苗接种率很高,但新移民、有色人种以及主要说少数族裔语言的人群对疫苗的接受程度和偏好的接种方式仍未得到充分了解。这项全国性研究探讨了不同种族文化群体对新冠疫苗的接受程度、获取疫苗的途径以及接种偏好。
在疫情期间(2020年12月和2021年10月至11月),我们进行了两项全国性横断面调查。二元逻辑回归分析调查了新移民、语言以及有色少数族裔受访者对新冠疫苗的认知和接受程度、获取医疗服务时的歧视经历以及社会人口学特征之间的关联。McNemar-Bowker检验用于评估在两个时间点收集的回答的变化。
在1630名受访者中,30.8%在过去五年内抵达加拿大,87.4%自认为是有色少数族裔,37.2%主要说英语或法语以外的语言。尽管受访者中一剂新冠疫苗的接种率为92.7%,但14.8%的人在获取疫苗方面遇到困难,他们表示需要翻译资源或多语言工作人员。在纵向分析中,随着时间的推移,受访者克服获取疫苗障碍的积极性越来越高(从61.4%升至69.6%,p =<.001)。59.9%的受访者愿意接受年度疫苗接种,超过一半的人愿意接受与常规疫苗(56.2%)或流感疫苗(52.3%)同时接种。12.3%的受访者报告了在获取医疗服务时遭受种族主义/歧视的经历,他们建议在疫苗接种点增加文化安全措施和社区参与。
了解新移民、有色人种和说少数族裔语言的人如何看待和获取新冠疫苗,将有助于疫苗接种运动优化公平获取。