Las Vegas Review-Journal

MESSAGE GOING OUT IN MANY LANGUAGES

- Hillary.davis@gmgvegas.com / 702-990-8949 / @Hillarylvs­un

at school, injected in the upper arm. Filipino-americans will connect when they see each others’ telltale scars and ask if they received their bakunas in the Philippine­s.

“I think in our minds, we trust the people who are giving us the vaccinatio­n,” she said. “It’s supposed to be good for us.”

Marquez’s team at the Nevada Minority Health & Equity Coalition launched the One Community campaign earlier in the COVID-19 pandemic to encourage physical distancing, hand hygiene and masks. The group is now finalizing its vaccinatio­n materials in English and Spanish, and beginning the same work in Vietnamese, Korean, Chinese and Thai.

In a couple of weeks, it will release short videos featuring trusted local community leaders among the groups the coalition advocates for — the coalition engages with several partners to develop culturally relevant informatio­n for Black, Latino, Native American, Asian and Pacific Islander communitie­s, along with LGBTQ and deaf and hardof-hearing people, in English and heritage languages.

According to Southern Nevada health district statistics, COVID-19 infection is highest in ZIP codes in North Las Vegas and eastern Las Vegas. One of the hot spots, the 89030 swath of North Las Vegas, has a population that is 70% Latino, according to U.S. Census data. In another, the 89110 ZIP code, the population is 64% Latino, and only 40% of households solely speak English.

Joann Rupiper, the health district’s director of clinical services, suggested at a news conference this past week that future mass vaccinatio­n events could target geographic areas where infection was more prevalent, citing a successful targeted response to a recent Hepatitis A outbreak.

The federal Centers for Disease Control and Prevention took some media scrutiny over initially making vaccine informatio­n, including a postvaccin­e health tracker app, in English only.

Marquez said such criticism would not be fair now. Experts are still developing the structure of their messages after being kicked into high gear over the past few weeks, nearly a year into absorbing fast-moving updates and doing outreach in real time. Tailoring messages will be an ongoing effort, at least for the Nevada Minority Health and Equity Coalition.

More advanced questions from its focus groups — like the makeup of vaccine trial groups — will require reviews of research to answer.

Groups like hers have to make the science digestible, relatable and accurate, Marquez said.

“Our end goal here is to protect everyone in our community, and in order to do that and to make sure we address any of their concerns, it has to be multicultu­ral and multilingu­al,” she said.

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