Truong Lina, Adams Alexandra K, Bishop Sonia, Dupuis Virgil, Garza Lorenzo, Quigley Thomas, Hassell Laurie, Drain Paul K, Ibarra Genoveva, Sorrell Anna Whiting, Warne Teresa, Gregor Charlie, Webber Eliza, Ko Linda K
Department of Health Systems and Population Health, University of Washington, Seattle, Washington, USA.
Department of Sociology & Anthropology, Center for American Indian and Rural Health Equity, Montana State University, Bozeman, Montana, USA.
J Rural Health. 2025 Jun;41(3):e70057. doi: 10.1111/jrh.70057.
While SARS-CoV-2 significantly impacts rural Native American and Latino communities, COVID-19 vaccines offer an effective and safe mitigation strategy. Vaccine uptake is disproportionately lower in rural communities than in urban communities across the nation. This study examined barriers and motivators of COVID-19 vaccine uptake in two Native American and Latino rural agricultural communities in eastern Washington and Montana.
We conducted 28 key informant interviews with trusted community members and six community focus groups with 39 participants from May 2021 to June 2021. Participants were from the Yakima Valley (WA) and Flathead Reservation (MT). The Social Cognitive Theory and Social Context Framework informed development of the interview and focus group moderator guides. We used deductive and inductive approach to code transcripts and thematic analysis to generate themes.
Barriers to COVID-19 vaccine uptake were misconceptions about COVID-19 vaccines shaped by misinformation, politicization of vaccines, historical trauma and mistrust in government, and structural barriers in rural agricultural communities. Having access to accurate and understandable COVID-19 vaccine information and receiving information from trusted sources were motivators of COVID-19 vaccine uptake. Protecting families, children, elders, and the community, and striving to return to normal life were also noted as motivators.
Understanding the community's perceptions and experiences around the COVID-19 vaccine is critical for successful implementation of strategies to increase vaccine uptake during future public health emergencies. Strategies for vaccine uptake among communities in the Flathead Reservation and Yakima Valley need to address barriers and highlight motivators of COVID-19 vaccine uptake.
虽然严重急性呼吸综合征冠状病毒2(SARS-CoV-2)对美国农村的原住民和拉丁裔社区产生了重大影响,但2019冠状病毒病(COVID-19)疫苗提供了一种有效且安全的缓解策略。在全国范围内,农村社区的疫苗接种率远低于城市社区。本研究调查了华盛顿州东部和蒙大拿州两个原住民和拉丁裔农村农业社区中COVID-19疫苗接种的障碍和动机。
2021年5月至2021年6月,我们对28名受信任的社区成员进行了关键信息访谈,并与39名参与者进行了6次社区焦点小组访谈。参与者来自亚基马山谷(华盛顿州)和弗拉特黑德保留地(蒙大拿州)。社会认知理论和社会背景框架为访谈和焦点小组主持人指南的制定提供了依据。我们采用演绎和归纳方法对转录本进行编码,并通过主题分析来生成主题。
COVID-19疫苗接种的障碍包括错误信息导致的对COVID-19疫苗的误解、疫苗政治化、历史创伤和对政府的不信任,以及农村农业社区的结构性障碍。获得准确且易懂的COVID-19疫苗信息以及从可靠来源获取信息是COVID-19疫苗接种的动机。保护家庭、儿童、老年人和社区,以及努力恢复正常生活也被视为动机。
了解社区对COVID-19疫苗的看法和经历对于在未来公共卫生紧急情况期间成功实施提高疫苗接种率的策略至关重要。弗拉特黑德保留地和亚基马山谷社区的疫苗接种策略需要解决障碍,并突出COVID-19疫苗接种的动机。