Meredith Lisa S, Tobin Jonathan N, Cassells Andrea, Howell Khadesia, Hernandez Helin G, Gidengil Courtney, Williamson Stephanie, Dong Lu, Timmins George, Alvarado Gabriela, Holder Tameir, Cortez Lainez Jacqueline, Lin T J, Lara Marielena
RAND, Santa Monica, CA, United States of America.
Clinical Directors Network (CDN), New York, NY, United States of America; The Rockefeller University Center for Clinical and Translational Science, New York, NY, United States of America.
Contemp Clin Trials. 2025 Jun;153:107848. doi: 10.1016/j.cct.2025.107848. Epub 2025 Feb 16.
Low-income and underserved populations, especially racial and ethnic minorities, experience health disparities linked to social determinants. The COVID-19 pandemic amplified these disparities, necessitating effective strategies to address structural racism and related factors. Vaccination, crucial for mitigating infectious diseases, including COVID-19 and influenza, remains challenging among underserved populations. Community health worker (CHW) interventions show promise in addressing these disparities but have not undergone rigorous evaluation with a randomized controlled trial to increase vaccination uptake among underserved populations. This study develops and evaluates a CHW vaccination behavior (CHW-VB) intervention to increase COVID-19 and influenza vaccination among adult patients in primary care settings.
Tailoring of the Boost Your Health (Refuerza tu Salud) intervention is grounded in behavior change theory and integrates input from a Community Advisory Board. The study employs a patient randomized controlled trial design to test the effectiveness the CHW-VB intervention compared with usual care across six Federally Qualified Health Centers (FQHCs) in New York. Patients are being screened for eligibility (vaccinated but not up to date with the COVID-19 vaccine and have at least one of seven common chronic illnesses) and 800 are assessed at baseline and three months. Outcomes include COVID-19 vaccine (primary) and influenza vaccine (secondary) uptake. The study also evaluates intervention implementation using the RE-AIM model.
Boost Your Health aims to increase COVID-19 and influenza vaccination among racially/ethnically diverse, underserved populations with chronic illness through the CHW-VB intervention, targeting critical gaps in vaccination uptake to reduce health disparities and increase health equity.
(ClinicalTrials.govNCT06156254).
低收入和服务不足的人群,尤其是少数种族和族裔群体,面临着与社会决定因素相关的健康差距。新冠疫情加剧了这些差距,因此需要有效的策略来应对结构性种族主义及相关因素。疫苗接种对于减轻包括新冠和流感在内的传染病至关重要,但在服务不足的人群中仍然具有挑战性。社区卫生工作者(CHW)干预措施在解决这些差距方面显示出了前景,但尚未通过随机对照试验进行严格评估,以提高服务不足人群的疫苗接种率。本研究开发并评估了一种社区卫生工作者疫苗接种行为(CHW-VB)干预措施,以提高初级保健机构成年患者的新冠和流感疫苗接种率。
“增强你的健康(Refuerza tu Salud)”干预措施的制定基于行为改变理论,并整合了社区咨询委员会的意见。该研究采用患者随机对照试验设计,在纽约的六个联邦合格健康中心(FQHCs)测试CHW-VB干预措施与常规护理相比的有效性。正在对患者进行资格筛查(已接种疫苗但未接种最新的新冠疫苗且患有七种常见慢性病中的至少一种),并在基线和三个月时对800名患者进行评估。结果包括新冠疫苗(主要)和流感疫苗(次要)接种率。该研究还使用RE-AIM模型评估干预措施的实施情况。
“增强你的健康”旨在通过CHW-VB干预措施,提高患有慢性病的不同种族/族裔、服务不足人群的新冠和流感疫苗接种率,针对疫苗接种率的关键差距,以减少健康差距并提高健康公平性。
(ClinicalTrials.govNCT06156254)。