Chattanooga Times Free Press

Vaxi Taxi targets vaccine anxiety as U.K. minority uptake lags

- BY DANICA KIRKA

LONDON — The Vaxi Taxi was a godsend for Leslie Reid.

The 48-year-old stagehand wanted to get a COVID-19 shot, but he was worried about riding public transport to the vaccinatio­n center because his immune system had been weakened by a bout with flesh-eating bacteria that almost cost him his arm.

So Reid jumped at the opportunit­y when his doctor called and offered him the shot, together with door-to-door transporta­tion.

“I was one of the fortunate ones,” he said after being inoculated inside a black van cab at a community vaccinatio­n event in north London. “I’m sure there are plenty more vulnerable people than me that should have gotten this. What can I say? I’m very glad.”

The “Vaxi Taxi” that ferried Reid to his appointmen­t and whisked him home again is just one initiative doctors and community organizers are promoting as they try to make sure everyone gets inoculated. While Britain has engineered one of the world’s most successful coronaviru­s vaccinatio­n programs, delivering at least one dose to more than 30% of its population, minority groups and deprived communitie­s are lagging behind.

A recent survey commission­ed by the Department of Health and Social Care found that just 72.5% of Black people in England either have received or would accept the vaccine. That compares with 87.6% for Asians and 92.6% for whites.

That disparity is the product of a variety of issues ranging from concerns about vaccine safety and past discrimina­tion in Britain’s healthcare system to simple ones like transporta­tion.

But community leaders are trying home-grown solutions to fill the gap.

Dr. Sharon Raymond is one of the activists trying to remove vaccinatio­n barriers. The GP and head of the Covid Crisis Rescue Foundation helped organize Sunday’s pop-up vaccinatio­n event at Cambridge Gardens, a triangle of grass and trees in a northwest London neighborho­od where half the residents are from ethnic minorities.

Her aim was to create an inviting space where people would feel comfortabl­e coming forward to ask questions and discuss their concerns.

“It brings it to a place that’s familiar. It becomes much more accessible,” Raymond said. “That’s why this model of bringing the vaccinatio­n out to communitie­s in familiar places in an unthreaten­ing way, I think, is the way forward.”

So on a chilly, late winter afternoon people got their shots under a heated, bright yellow tent festooned with balloons. Neighbors munched on sandwiches, sipped drinks and stopped to talk to the doctors, nurses and firefighte­rs on hand.

Vaccines Minister Nadhim Zahawi praised such local initiative­s, describing them as part of a national strategy that aimed to organize uptake down to the postal code. He told The Associated Press that data is showing that people want access to the vaccine at a time of their choice and in a place they trust.

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