Chicago Tribune (Sunday)

Black, Latino communitie­s deal with vaccine hesitancy

- By Angie Leventis Lourgos, Laura Rodríguez Presa, Stacy St. Clair, Alice Yin and Darcel Rockett

The Rev. John Zayas says his congregant­s at Grace and Peace Church in the North Austin neighborho­od have been peppering him with questions about the new COVID-19 vaccine, some expressing unease or indecision about getting the shot once it’s available.

Is it safe? Would I be a lab rat?

Most importantl­y, many ask if the church leader intends to get the vaccine, once he’s eligible.

His response is always compassion­ate but firm: The vaccine is critical to ending the pandemic, which has disproport­ionately hit predominan­tly Black and Latino communitie­s like North Austin and other surroundin­g West Side neighborho­ods where the church’s faithful

live andwork.

“I would personally take it and be an example for the church,” he says. “As a pastor, you have to show by example.”

Yet Zayas and other leaders working to inoculate communitie­s of color are often battling an entrenched mistrust of science and medicine, the fallout of long-term systemic racial disparitie­s in health care and historical medical abuses of minority patients.

A Black physician and bioethicis­t on the city’s South Side says she has already had to reassure about a dozen of her patients — all health care workers — that the vaccine is safe and should be taken.

Leaders of a South Side hospital recently expressed alarm after about a quarter of staff members said they don’t intend to get the vaccine.

While distributi­ng hand sanitizer and masks in the Little Village neighborho­od, a university researcher talks to street vendors and community members about getting vaccinated against the virus, trying to dispel rumors and myths. But she worries that once mass distributi­on of vaccines begins, Black and brown communitie­s will be left behind.

Although vaccine hesitancy is reported across races, several recent polls show Black and Hispanic Americans are more likely to refuse to get a COVID-19 vaccine than other races.

Only 24% of Black respondent­s and 34% of Hispanics plan to get vaccinated against the new virus, compared with 53% of respondent­s who are white, according to a report released earlier this month from The Associated PressNORC Center for Public Affairs Research at the University of Chicago.

Minority races also expressed greater ambivalenc­e about getting immunized, with 41% of Hispanic Americans and37% of Black Americans saying they’re not sure about getting the shot, the survey found.

Broad distrust in government and medicine could contribute to these decisions: Fewer Black and Hispanic adults reported putting their trust in physicians, local hospitals and the health care system than white adults, according to an October survey on race and health by the Kaiser Family Foundation and The Undefeated.

The same poll found 70% of Black Americans and 43% of Hispanic Americans reported very often or somewhat often perceiving discrimina­tion in the health care system, compared with 40% of white Americans.

Roughly 1 in 5 Black and Hispanic adults “say they were personally treated unfairly because of their race or ethnicity when getting health care for themselves or a family member in the past 12 months,” compared with 5% of white adults, the report said.

Zayas, the clergyman, has been urging state leaders to prioritize the vaccinatio­n of communitie­s of color. He wants to hold vaccine drives at his house of worship, a place of comfort for those who might be vaccinewar­y.

And he would like to get the shot in front of his church members, to ease their concerns and encourage them to get inoculated too

Even as he clamors for COVID-19 vaccinatio­n trust and access, the clergyman says he understand­s someof the wariness surroundin­g health care in the United States.

The pastor’s mother was born and raised in Puerto Rico, and recounts the dark era of forced sterilizat­ions onthe island, fromthe 1930s to the 1970s. These medical atrocities are still fresh in the psyches of many immigrant families, he said.

“Don’t underestim­ate the fear, the fear is real,” Zayas says. “Because of the past, what has happened in our communitie­s of color, there’s reservatio­ns.”

Yet he notes that those with the greatest skepticism of COVID-19 vaccines are also at greatest risk of contractin­g— and dying from— the novel coronaviru­s.

His congregati­on at Grace and Peace Church is roughly 80% Latino and 10% Black — races that are roughly four times more likely to be hospitaliz­ed because of COVID-19 and 2.8 times more likely to die of the new virus than whites, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

“We are in a Black and brown community that has been hit tremendous­ly,” he says. “We need to make sure this vaccine comes to our communitie­s sooner rather than later. The people that I serve, the people I love, they are my mission. Whatever helps them, Iwant people to stay healthy and not get sick.”

Are you getting it?

On the city’s South Side, Dr. Monica Peek says about a dozen of her patients — who all work in health care — have been calling and texting the past week, expressing uncertaint­y about the newCOVID-19 vaccine.

Should I get it? My family’s worried, they don’t want me to get it. Are you getting it?

Even as the physician reassures them of the vaccine’s safety and efficacy — and that she’ll be getting her shot as soon as she can — Peek says she isn’t surprised by their concerns. She points to deep-seated fears of medical abuse in the Black community, stem

ming from historical horrors like unconsente­d surgeries on slaves and the Tuskegee Syphilis Study, a 40-year experiment where rural Black men were misled about the research and forced to suffer from untreated syphilis, despite the availabili­ty of penicillin.

“The virus will continue to decimate Black and brown communitie­s if it goes unchecked, and the vaccine is the one way we can stem this tide,” says Peek, an internist, bioethicis­t and health disparitie­s researcher at the University of Chicago. “The tool that we have to do so is one that people are afraid of because of the years of injustice that these communitie­s, that our communitie­s have had to endure becauseof structural racism.”

Dr. Anthony Fauci addressed this mistrust recently, while highlighti­ng that one of the scientists at the forefront of the Pfizer vaccine is a Blackwoman.

“So, the first thing you might want to say to my African American brothers and sisters is that the vaccine that you’re going to be taking was developed by an African American woman,” said Fauci, director of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases. “And that is just a fact.”

Locally, many Black and Hispanic health care workers were the first to get the vaccine last week, moments thatwere captured in newspaper photos and television newscasts. Peek says these diverse images could boost confidence in the vaccine for other people of color.

“I think that is part of the messaging, is to have Black people see themselves in these images and say, ‘I see mein that person,’” she said.

At the same time, even somein the medical field are reportedly declining the vaccine.

Skepticism has been particular­ly worrisome at Roseland Community Hospital on the city’s South Side, where an estimated 25% of staff members have indicated they don’t intend to get the shots.

This includes several nurses who have told supervisor­s that they intend to wait at least a year before getting vaccinated to see if any complicati­ons arise fromthe early rounds.

The reluctance alarms hospital leaders, who have begun an education campaign inside the hospital to sway doubters. Roseland executives, including CEO Tim Egan, have been passing out flyers about the importance of the vaccine in recent days to bolster confidence.

Beyond wanting to protect his staff, Egan worries about the message it would send to the neighborho­od if hospital workers are too scared to be vaccinated. He understand­s their fears — fueled by both the country’s history of inhumane experiment­s on Black Americans and distrust in a system that has allowed deadly health care disparitie­s — but he believes the vaccine is the only way to blunt the virus in the community, which is predominan­tly Black.

“Many of our employees live in the neighborho­od,” he says. “They have seen the decades of divestment and the health care world turn their back on them. There is an embedded mistrust of government. People in our community have been abandoned, and this is just a byproduct.”

Dr. Brandi Jackson, a psychiatri­st at Howard Brown Health and co-founding director of the Institute for Antiracism in Medicine, says the medical community has not done much historical­ly to earn the trust of Black patients.

She calls on trusted sources outside of medicine to spread the message of vaccine safety, such as Black churches, nonprofits and community activists. She also urges traditiona­lly powerful institutio­ns within medicine to make “a move of humility.”

“They’re used to being the authority,” Jackson said during a Tribune Facebook live event on Wednesday. “And I think the word ‘authority’ has been turned on

its head during this pandemic.”

‘Left behind’

Dolores Castañeda has spent the past few months walking the streets of the Little Village neighborho­od on the city’s West Side, talking to street vendors and passersby while distributi­ng hand sanitizer, masks and informatio­n on COVID-19 testing.

She is a research associate at the Center for Healthy Work at the University of Illinois at Chicago, and much of her study focuses on the health needs of street vendors.

On a recent weekday, she talks with 74-year-old José Carmen Camacho, who is huddled in brown insulated overalls, a scarf, black gloves and a face mask, as he sells bread baked by his wife.

While he and his wife are hopeful the vaccine will help quell the pandemic, he adds that “we’re not entirely sure that we would get it. Not nowat least.”

“It scares me a bit; that instead of doing good to me, it makes me more sick,” he says in Spanish. “We have to wait and see what reactions people have to it.”

Castañeda says that most of the skepticism in the Latino community is based on misinforma­tion or lack of attention and messaging from local organizati­ons and the government.

Some people she speaks with have concerns about their immigratio­n status, and need to be reassured that their informatio­n won’t be given to Immigratio­n and Customs Enforcemen­t. Language barriers can also be a challenge; even if informatio­n is available in Spanish, many organizati­ons share it on social media or websites, and those without smart phones and computers can be at a disadvanta­ge, Castañeda says.

“We’re looking at the same pattern that we saw when COVID-19 hit,” she said. “Our communitie­s of colorwere left behind.”

As the first COVID-19 vaccines in Chicago were administer­ed at Loretto Hospital on Tuesday, Mayor Lori Lightfoot pledged the process of distributi­ng immunizati­ons would be equitable.

“Equity isn’t part of our COVID-19 strategy, it is our strategy,” she said. “And when it comes to our vaccine rollout, we will be leaving no one behind. … There is an unfortunat­e trust deficit nationwide when it comes to taking this vaccine, particular­ly among predominan­tly African American and Latinx communitie­s. This is a challenge we must meet and we must conquer.”

The city is crafting a marketing plan to spread the message that COVID-19 vaccines are safe and effective, says Chicago Department of Public Health spokesman Andrew Buchanan.

This will include a campaign similar to existing door-knocking efforts to hand out masks and informatio­nal flyers on safe practices. As of this week, the city and its partners are on track to reach 1 million phones through phonebanki­ng and texting, and deliver care kits to 400,000 households around the end of January, he says.

The city plans to spread vaccinatio­n sites fairly throughout the city, Buchanan says, which includes working with City Colleges of Chicago campuses and community groups in neighborho­ods with high positivity rates.

“We are working hard to push messaging and outreach to the areas that have been hardest hit by COVID-19 and who may have a historical distrust of the health care community,” he said.

Last week, Ald. Byron Sigcho-Lopez, 25th, sponsored a resolution for permanent COVID-19 testing and vaccine sites in African American and Latino neighborho­ods. He argues the measure is critical to ensure Black and Latino communitie­s receive care after being disproport­ionately affected by the pandemic.

Castañeda, a Little Village resident, said the government has failed to protect Black and brown communitie­s from COVID-19, and that she expects that once full rollout of the vaccine begins, those same neighborho­ods will once again be without access.

“Because we are often thrown to the side,” she says.

Abraham Valdez, 67, whose livelihood depends on collecting recyclable aluminum cans, sayshe is eager to get the vaccine. He says he doesn’t want to get sick and not be able towork.

“Having this vaccine is better than nothing,” he says in Spanish. “I’ll trust God about it. But even if itworks, who knows when I’ll be able to get it?”

 ?? YOUNGRAE KIM/CHICAGO TRIBUNE ?? Dolores Castaneda waves at a friend in the Little Village neighborho­od of Chicago on Friday.
YOUNGRAE KIM/CHICAGO TRIBUNE Dolores Castaneda waves at a friend in the Little Village neighborho­od of Chicago on Friday.
 ?? ANTONIO PEREZ/CHICAGO TRIBUNE ?? The Rev. John Zayas, right, of Grace and Peace Church in Chicago, and other volunteers load a truck at a food drive at the church on Dec. 18.
ANTONIO PEREZ/CHICAGO TRIBUNE The Rev. John Zayas, right, of Grace and Peace Church in Chicago, and other volunteers load a truck at a food drive at the church on Dec. 18.

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