Hindustan Times ST (Jaipur)

Vaccine lessons from Black America

Those hesitant to take vaccines are often those whom social health systems have harmed and historical­ly failed to heal

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According to recent data by the Kaiser Family Foundation, which analyses racial health disparitie­s in the United States (US), White adults are nearly twice as likely than Black adults to have received at least one Covid-19 vaccine dose. Over a third of Black adults prefer to “wait and see” how vaccines will work for others before getting vaccinated. Almost four in ten Black adults (38%) are concerned they won’t get vaccines from a place they trust, and one in five Black adults (20%) are concerned they will have difficulty travelling to vaccinatio­n sites.

Such data, which reveals that Black Americans face access barriers and are less willing than others to get Covid-19 vaccines, adds a nuance to mounting evidence since early 2020 that Blacks are nearly three times more likely to die from Covid-19, and suffer disproport­ionately more Sarscov-2 infections than White Americans.

The reasons are amply clear. Blacks are likely to be poorer; live in crowded spaces; work in occupation­s that routinely expose them to the virus; face mass incarcerat­ion; and have an overwhelmi­ng burden of cardiovasc­ular and respirator­y diseases, diabetes, obesity and HIV. Racial health disparitie­s in the US are based on entrenched histories of structural discrimina­tion against Blacks by White health providers and policies, medical experiment­ation on Black bodies and everyday forms of racial and police violence, which puts Black lives at greater risk in the pandemic, and engenders deep-seated distrust in modern medical systems.

In this light, Black America’s “vaccine hesitancy” today rests on a carefully preserved living archive of personal stories and is a mindful reaction against the unaccounte­d harms on their bodies through history. Ask about vaccine uptake and Blacks will cite the infamous “Tuskegee Experiment”, in which 600 poor black men from Alabama were recruited to a government-run study of syphilis in 1932 without informed consent; the men were flagrantly “studied” over 40 years and left to die without any treatment, compensati­on or justice (despite the availabili­ty of penicillin).

Contempora­ry incidents such as the murder of George Floyd trigger Black memory about figures such as Henrietta Lacks, a Black woman seeking cancer treatment at Johns Hopkins Hospital in 1951, whose cells were stolen and used in medical research without consent for decades after her death. These stories inform everyday health experience­s of Blacks – including their hesitancy towards vaccines. This drew official acknowledg­ment too, with Anthony Fauci saying that Covid-19 exposes the “undeniable effects of racism” on health systems.

What can India learn from these experience­s of Black America?

First, India needs its own real-time vaccine hesitancy data, especially as the pandemic afflicts and ravages the rural poor who routinely face disabling barriers to health care.

Data should be gathered after empiricall­y and ethically identifyin­g communitie­s where vaccine hesitancy exists. Further, vaccine hesitancy needs to be treated as a part of a broader vaccine decision-making rather than as a stigmatisi­ng subject that (re)produces disparagin­g stereotype­s against the rural (and urban) poor.

Second, vaccine hesitancy data must be textured to reflect granular socio-cultural realities of rural (and urban) life. In bio-statistica­l terms, it must be “thick data” (qualitativ­e observatio­ns, feelings, reactions and stories). Thick data alongside statistics can play a vital role in documentin­g why vulnerable communitie­s are hesitant to take vaccines in their own terms and using their evidence can substantiv­ely involve local communitie­s in finding solutions. It is callous and insufficie­nt to impose top-down “explanatio­ns” (such as illiteracy, backwardne­ss) and diminish people’s experienti­al beliefs against biomedicin­e, as biased urban citizens (and netizens) do.

Third, data must be transparen­t and shared with key stakeholde­rs. Along the lines of Black clergy and cultural icons, local “vaccine ambassador­s” from panchayats or other grassroots networks trusted by rural communitie­s must decentrali­se and facilitate data-based vaccinatio­n drives alongside health workers. Data shows Black vaccine hesitancy reduced significan­tly when Blacks realised they were adequately represente­d in vaccine trials or received trusted messengers. Indian vaccine manufactur­ers and the State must also make public phase III trial data along with side-effects and efficacy data, which must be shared with vaccine hesitant communitie­s.

Fourth, India needs more nuanced overall health metrics. The demands of Black Americans for racial health justice exist alongside published government data on racial health disparitie­s. Health metrics in India must likewise be expanded to explicitly reflect categories such as caste, class, gender, ethnicity and religion. On the ground, barriers to health care in India are conditione­d by unique structural markers of difference. The reasons for vaccine hesitancy among a poor, rural Dalit woman and a middle-class Brahmin man are very different. Indian data must transparen­tly capture nuances of the socio-cultural determinan­ts of health.

Fifth, public health systems need to be overhauled and make last-mile vaccinatio­ns accessible and equitable. In India, mistrust in vaccines for the marginalis­ed is grounded in everyday experience­s of being misled, misinforme­d and maimed by malpractis­ing and fractured health systems. This includes experience­s of neglect and abandonmen­t faced by the rural poor. To address vaccine hesitancy, we must first acknowledg­e — as Black America’s experience­s indicate — that people who are hesitant to take vaccines are often those whom social health systems have categorica­lly harmed and historical­ly failed to heal.

 ?? REUTERS ?? Data should be gathered after identifyin­g communitie­s where vaccine hesitancy exists. Vaccine hesitancy needs to be treated as a part of broader vaccine decision-making rather than as a stigmatisi­ng subject
REUTERS Data should be gathered after identifyin­g communitie­s where vaccine hesitancy exists. Vaccine hesitancy needs to be treated as a part of broader vaccine decision-making rather than as a stigmatisi­ng subject

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