Miami Herald

How Biden plans to fight COVID-19 vaccine skepticism in Black and Latino communitie­s

- BY FRANCESCA CHAMBERS fchambers@mcclatchyd­c.com

The White House is planning to launch a major paid media campaign aimed at convincing reluctant Americans — notably Black and Latino Americans — to receive a COVID-19

The Biden administra­tion will shift its focus from infection-prevention messaging to fighting vaccine reluctance in Black and Latino communitie­s.

vaccine.

President Joe Biden’s aides are working closely with Debra Fraser-Howze, the founder of the nonprofit group Choose Healthy Life, and the

Coalition Against COVID-19, which includes academic, civil-rights and faith-based organizati­ons, to develop ads and other messaging geared toward specific segments of

who are getting vaccinated at lower rates, including those in the Black, Latino and Hasidic Jewish communitie­s.

The move represents a shift in focus for the Biden administra­tion’s ongoing public education campaign from basic coronaviru­s-prevention meaBlack sures to combating vaccine skepticism in underserve­d population­s.

“They’re looking at all of them. And where there is hesitancy, they understand that they have to take a scientific approach and a cultural approach,” said Fraser-Howze, who served on former PresiAmeri­cans dent Bill Clinton’s advisory council on HIV/ AIDS. “They are partnering with people that they feel can meld those two approaches, so that when they do do a massive rollout, that it’s intact, and we’re not going back to say we missed the mark, because we can’t afford to miss the mark. We’re behind the eight ball.”

Dr. Marcella NunezSmith, who heads the White House COVID-19 Health Equity Task Force,

is leading the effort. Dr. Anthony Fauci has also been involved in discussion­s with communitie­s of color about coronaviru­s vaccines, participan­ts said.

Access to the vaccines, especially in communitie­s of color, has proved to be a significan­t problem, and sources familiar with the discussion­s said the White House did not want to prematurel­y generate demand until the vaccines became widely available.

Federal health officials now say the U.S. is on track to have enough supply for every American adult to be vaccinated in a little more than two months. Biden has said the milestone will be met by May 31, and that there is a “good chance” Americans will be able to safely gather in small groups by July 4.

But scaling access to vaccines and convincing skeptics on the timeline that Biden laid out will still be an uphill climb, Black leaders say.

“All of the king’s horses and all of the queen’s men. All the king’s women and all the queen’s men,” said Marc Morial, the president of the National Urban League, of what it will take. “It is doable, but it’s going to take a tremendous amount of work.”

OVERCOMING SKEPTICISM

Morial said the pressure is on cities, states, counties and the Federal Emergency Management Agency to set up as many vaccine

sites as possible before May 1, when Biden said every adult in America would be eligible to receive a shot.

“I think you can overcome some trust issues with access. I think you can overcome some trust issues with informatio­n,” said Morial, whose organizati­on is part of the Black Coalition Against COVID-19. “And I also think there’s peer acceptance. My family members, my friends, my coworkers are getting it, I may be more inclined to get it.”

The percentage of American Americans who said they were unlikely to get vaccinated was a stark 49% last fall. But recent surveys have shown that vaccine hesitancy in the Black community has waned, and it is relatively similar among white and non-white Americans.

An NPR/PBS/Marist poll conducted this month found that 28% of white respondent­s did not plan to get vaccinated compared with 31% of nonwhite survey participan­ts. Hesitancy was higher among Latinos (37%) and Republican men (49%) than Black Americans (25%).

Former Housing and Urban Developmen­t Secretary Ben Carson, a retired neurosurge­on, said the members of Trump’s White House Coronaviru­s Task Force, which he was a part of, sought to boost confidence by stressing in public appearance­s that vaccines approved by the FDA for emergency use were safe. He said they also ran ads in minorityfo­cused news media.

“You’re not going to eliminate decades of skepticism.

There’s no question about that,” Carson said. “The thing that probably is going to be the most helpful is just publicizin­g the results.”

White House officials said Biden’s COVID-19 Health Equity Task Force has been holding roundtable­s with people they have identified as “trusted messengers” in underserve­d communitie­s, including faith and rural leaders, as it develops its vaccine-confidence campaign.

“Some communitie­s —

due to a range of historical, as well as contempora­ry factors — are less inclined to believe that these vaccines are safe and effective, less inclined to trust the systems offering these vaccines, and less inclined to trust the government asking them to get vaccinated,” NunezSmith said during a news briefing by the White House COVID-19 Response Team this month. “So we still have some work to do to meet people where they are.”

Fraser-Howze said that

Black pastors who are sharing vaccine informatio­n with their congregati­ons have been particular­ly helpful in building vaccine confidence. Several high-profile faith leaders have also taken the vaccine publicly.

“I think that that has made a tremendous dent in the 65-and-over community for Black communitie­s and understand­ing that their pastors, the people that they respect and look up to, are willing to put themselves on the line,” Fraser-Howze said.

Al Sharpton is one of the ministers working with Fraser-Howze. He is cochair of the Choose Healthy Life Black Clergy Action Plan and received his vaccine publicly. He has been pushing for more vaccine access in Black communitie­s.

“They can escalate what they’re doing now,” Sharpton said of Biden’s timeframe for vaccinatio­ns. “Make it accessible and then have people in those communitie­s tell people that we need to do this, we need to do it for the safety of our loved ones, take one for our families,” he added. “So it must be a parallel strategy of making accessibil­ity a reality and at the same time have people directly deal with questions of hesitancy and skepticism.”

Carson said critical statements about vaccines contribute­d to vaccine hesitancy. He also said “absurd” conspiracy theories were unhelpful.

“People are hearing a lot of stuff that is not true,” Carson said. “You’ve got to be as persistent as the people who are presenting the rumors.”

 ?? PATRICK SEMANSKY AP ?? President Joe Biden says there will be enough vaccine doses for every U.S. adult by May 31.
PATRICK SEMANSKY AP President Joe Biden says there will be enough vaccine doses for every U.S. adult by May 31.
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