Weekly Roundup
COVID-19 Vaccine Development, Policy, and Public Perception in the United States
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CommuniVax Corner
The second national CommuniVax report will be released this month. In the meantime, be sure to check out our previous reports and download our tools to support vaccine rollout efforts in your community.
Some updates from our local teams:
- The team in Prince George's County, MD is focused on establishing modules for the Shots at the Shop national initiative and conducting the second orientation/training virtual session. Read more about their work in NPR.
- The team in Alabama recently held its second advisory board meeting and planned a listening session to address local concerns around vaccination.
- The team in Baltimore held a joint food distribution/COVID-19 vaccination event at a local church serving the Latino immigrant community, held a photo-voice exhibit at a local church, and filmed short videos of Latino community members promoting vaccination in Spanish for dissemination on social media.
- The team in San Diego is seeking community funding to support hiring new community health workers and identifying community vaccination needs. They are also working with a local food pantry to set up a booth at a food distribution event and distributing fliers to promote teen vaccination.
- In Idaho, student researchers are receiving orientations at internship sites of Southeastern Public Health and Health West Clinics, performing data analysis, and continuing independent academic research projects.
- The team in Virginia is continuing its weekly community action board activities and engaging with teens living in Norfolk public housing. The team will also distribute 200 recruitment fliers throughout Eastern Shore public housing.
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People, Perceptions, and Polls
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POLL
Peer Pressure, Not Politics, May Matter Most When It Comes To Getting The COVID-19 Vaccine. Republicans are simply less likely to have friends who have been vaccinated. In a May survey conducted by the American Enterprise Institute’s Survey Center on American Life, less than half of Republicans (46 percent) said that most or all of their friends had received at least a single dose of the vaccine. For Democrats, meanwhile, vaccination is the norm among their peers. Two-thirds said that most or all of their friends had been at least partially vaccinated . (FiveThirtyEight, 6/29/21)
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NEWS
When Parents Forbid the COVID Vaccine. Young people rarely get severely ill from the virus, but, of course, they can transmit it to others. Recently, in a conversation for “The New Yorker Radio Hour,” I spoke about the vaccine with a teen-ager who wants to get it but whose parents are in thrall to anti-vaccine misinformation. (New Yorker, 6/28/21)
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NEWS
Amish put faith in God's will and herd immunity over vaccine. The vaccination drive is lagging far behind in many Amish communities across the U.S. following a wave of virus outbreaks that swept through their churches and homes during the past year. In Ohio's Holmes County, home to the nation's largest concentration of Amish, just 14% of the county's overall population is fully vaccinated . (ABC News, 6/28/21)
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NEWS
Same Vaccine, Different Effects: Why Women Are Feeling Worse after the Jab. Nicole Woitowich, a research assistant professor of medical social sciences at Northwestern University’s Feinberg School of Medicine, focuses on the intersections of sex and gender in medical research and practice. She points out that, when it comes to understanding the variations in immune responses, researchers should be looking at sex hormones. (She adds that it’s important to distinguish between sex and gender, which are not mutually exclusive.) . (The Walrus, 6/29/21)
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SURVEY
Long COVID Survey Report. Long-hauler stories prompt greater concern among 64% of Americans. After learning more about long COVID, particularly from people suffering from it, about 40% of unvaccinated people say they likely will consider getting the COVID-19 vaccine, including nearly a third of people who are vaccine hesitant . (Prevent Epidemics, 6/30/21)
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NEWS
Rush to close vaccination gap for Hispanics. Hispanic communities, even as they’re among the most eager to receive the shots, are still facing barriers to vaccination that could leave them vulnerable to the virus this summer, according to interviews with nearly two dozen people working on vaccination efforts, including state officials and community groups . (POLITICO, 6/27/21)
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NEWS
Something to celebrate: delivering vaccines to essential workers. Meatpacking plants, agriculture settings, and grocery stores are ideal workplaces to deliver vaccines based on Household Pulse Survey data showing that more than one-third of workers in these industries have not been vaccinated. These are many of the same workplaces in which many workers have died of Covid-19 and in which workers remain vulnerable, especially with the end of indoor mask orders and the spread of new variants . (STAT, 7/1/21)
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NEWS
As variant rises, vaccine plan targets ‘movable middle’. Thrown off-stride to reach its COVID-19 vaccination goal, the Biden administration is sending A-list officials across the country, devising ads for niche markets and enlisting community organizers to persuade unvaccinated people to get a shot. The strategy has the trappings of a political campaign, complete with data crunching to identify groups that can be won over. . (AP, 6/27/21)
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NEWS
Mobile Clinics Can Help Reduce Health Inequity. As the number of COVID cases falls in the United States, the frameworks used by mobile vaccine clinics should not be abandoned. Instead, these frameworks should be adopted and applied to health conditions that disproportionately impact communities of color. They provide health care delivery one path forward to achieving health equity . (Scientific American, 6/30/21)
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Law, Policy, and Politics
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Research, Development, and Clinical Practice
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This newsletter supports CommuniVax, a research coalition convened by the
Johns Hopkins Center for Health Security and the Texas State University Department of Anthropology,
with support from the Chan Zuckerberg Initiative and The Rockefeller Foundation.
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