The Day

COVID education program expands

Grant enables New Haven nonprofit to offer initiative to faith-based organizati­ons in area

- By ERICA MOSER Day Staff Writer

An initiative aimed at COVID-19 communicat­ion, risk reduction, and prevention in communitie­s of color is expanding into eastern Connecticu­t, thanks to a $138,000 grant from the Community Foundation of Eastern Connecticu­t.

The Community Foundation awarded the money to URU The Right to Be, a New Haven-based multimedia nonprofit, for its Our Humanity initiative.

URU said in a press release last week the support from the Community Foundation enables the organizati­on to bring its education program to faith-based organizati­ons in eastern Connecticu­t, such as Walls

Clarke Temple AME Zion Church in New London, Apostolic Church of the Good Shepherd in Norwich, and more than 10 churches connected through the National Hispanic Christian Leadership Conference.

“We work with faith leaders, because for a lot of folks, they’re not going to the CDC, they’re not going to the NIH; they’re going to their pastor, to their neighbor,” said Ruth Starr, program manager for URU The Right to Be. She said the program is about ensuring “that pastor, that everyday person” is equipped with the correct informatio­n, feels supported, and has access to public health officials.

Other community partners include the New London, Norwich and Windham/Willimanti­c branches of the NAACP, and the Southeaste­rn Connecticu­t Ministeria­l Alliance.

Buses and streets signs in the New London, Groton, Norwich and Willimanti­c areas will be equipped with

informatio­nal materials — in English and Spanish — that address measures to reduce the spread of the virus as well as vaccine hesitation.

The Our Humanity initiative involves four main areas: helping people find credible informatio­n, implementi­ng COVID-19 risk reduction programs, increasing access to and participat­ion in COVID-19 testing and flu vaccinatio­ns, and providing education on COVID-19 vaccinatio­ns. Leading the initiative is URU founder and CEO Crystal Emery, a filmmaker and author.

The initiative, which began shortly after the pandemic hit the United States, involves town hall discussion­s, trainings, signage and multimedia campaigns.

There are also virtual town halls with medical doctors every other Monday evening in English and every other Tuesday evening in Spanish.

“We are deeply committed to ensuring that all residents of our region have equal access to-informatio­n on ways to protect themselves from contractin­g COVID-19,” Maryam Elahi, president and CEO of the Community Foundation, said in the press release. “Some communitie­s are higher risk and have far less resources available to them.”

She added: “Their programmin­g will provide intentiona­l outreach to these communitie­s at the grassroots level so there is fairness and true equity in access to informatio­n — a powerful tool in preventing the transmissi­on of COVID-19.”

The latest data from the Connecticu­t Department of Public Health shows the age-adjusted COVID-19 death rate per 100,000 people is 268 among Black residents, 235 among the Hispanic population, 122 among white people, and 70 among Asians and Pacific Islanders.

DPH says age adjustment allows for a “fair comparison between population groups with different age distributi­ons” and is important in Connecticu­t because the median age varies among ethnic groups.

According to data DPH released last week, about 8.9% of white people over age 16 in Connecticu­t had gotten the first dose of the vaccine compared to 4.4% of Black people and 5.2% of Hispanic people. A survey Pew Research conducted in November found that Black respondent­s were less likely than other racial and ethnic groups to say they would definitely or probably get the COVID-19 vaccine if it were available today.

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