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Hispanics are the most eager for vaccines, survey says — but face obstacles

The numbers highlight a need to remove barriers for working people who don’t always have time for a shot or have other questions.
 
COVID-19 vaccine is administered at Sadye Gibbs Martin Community Center in Plant City in March as part of an effort to make shots more accessible for Hispanic farm workers. A new survey says one-third of unvaccinated Hispanics say they want the shots, compared with 17 percent of Blacks and 16 percent of whites.
COVID-19 vaccine is administered at Sadye Gibbs Martin Community Center in Plant City in March as part of an effort to make shots more accessible for Hispanic farm workers. A new survey says one-third of unvaccinated Hispanics say they want the shots, compared with 17 percent of Blacks and 16 percent of whites. [ IVY CEBALLO ]
Published May 17, 2021|Updated May 17, 2021

Hispanics who have yet to receive a COVID-19 shot are about twice as likely as non-Hispanic whites or Blacks to say they’d like to get vaccinated as soon as possible, according to a survey released last week. The findings hint at fixable, though difficult, vaccine access problems for the population.

One-third of unvaccinated Hispanics say they want the shots, compared with 17 percent of Blacks and 16 percent of whites, according to the survey released Thursday by the Kaiser Family Foundation. (Kaiser Health News is an editorially independent program of the foundation.)

The results reflect an opportunity for public health departments and local governments to reach out to Hispanics with information and vaccinating teams, said Liz Hamel, vice president and director of public opinion and survey research at Kaiser Family Foundation and director of the organization’s monthly COVID-19 vaccine surveys.

“There definitely is a large chunk of the Hispanic population that’s eager to get it, but they just have either not been able to fit it into their schedule, or they have some concerns or questions or they haven’t been able to access it,” Hamel said.

According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, only about 13 percent of people in the U.S. who have received at least one vaccine dose are Hispanics, though they make up about 17 percent of the overall population. (Only about half of the CDC’s data includes the race or ethnicity of vaccinated individuals.)

Among unvaccinated Hispanics, 64 percent were worried about missing work because of vaccine side effects, and 52 percent were concerned about having to pay for the shots — although the shots are offered at no cost. These numbers are even higher for Hispanics who lacked lawful permanent resident status.

“It’s hard for somebody who lives day-to-day to take off half a day to come to a clinic and try to get a vaccination,” said Dr. José Pérez, chief medical officer of the South Central Family Health Center, a nonprofit health organization with clinic locations throughout South Los Angeles. “If they don’t work that day, they don’t earn a living and they don’t eat.”

Those facing immigration issues were more likely to be worried about being asked to show government-issued ID or a Social Security number, according to the foundation survey.

The Trump administration’s anti-immigrant policies scared people away from seeking any public health services, for fear it could jeopardize their immigration status, Pérez said.

“For Americans who are used to having order in their life, and don’t have to be fearful of this or that, this may seem a little bit foreign,” he said. “But for the immigrant community in South L.A., these are factors that they deal with on an everyday basis.”

Despite the survey’s hopeful message, Pérez’s organization has administered only a fraction of the doses it has on hand, although it has expanded vaccination sites and now offers a shot to anyone who walks into one of its clinics, Pérez said.

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“All we can do is continue to push, educate and continue to put our name out there,” he said. “Hopefully, we’ll catch up.”

The Biden administration recently announced tax credits for small businesses that give their workers paid time off to get the shot and recover in case of side effects. Providers are not allowed to charge people for the COVID-19 vaccine, and must give out shots regardless of immigration status or health insurance coverage.

In California, where Hispanics make up nearly 40 percent of the population, 48 percent of COVID-19 deaths and 63 percent of COVID-19 infections, about 32 percent have received vaccinations. Cases and deaths are especially concentrated in dense, low-income neighborhoods that are majority Latino.

Community health clinics and organizations throughout the state are taking the case for vaccinations to sidewalks, supermarkets and anywhere else people gather, seeking to ensure people know how to sign up for a shot.

In the ZIP code around South Central Family Health Center’s main site, only 16 percent of eligible residents had at least one shot as of May 7, according to the California Department of Public Health’s vaccine tracker. Five months into the nation’s vaccination campaign, as the CDC relaxes mask recommendations, the clinic is still pushing the importance of masks because of how few people have been vaccinated, Pérez said.

“Vaccine hesitancy” has become a catch-all excuse to explain low rates of vaccinations among minority populations, but the problem is complex, said Nancy Mejía, chief program officer of Latino Health Access in Santa Ana, California, a nonprofit that contracts with Orange County to bring COVID-19 vaccine to Latinos.

Her group’s community health workers, or promotoras, encounter people who face a wide variety of obstacles to get the shot, she said.

“We hear all of these questions about, ‘Well, I don’t have health insurance,’ or ‘Do I have to pay?’ or ‘I don’t have email, how do I register?’” Mejía said. “When folks talk about hesitancy, we really have to ask what it is that we’re talking about, and not continue to place blame on individuals who actually have really good questions.”

Now that demand for vaccine appointments has plunged, Mejía and her group are focusing more on mobile vaccine events at condominium buildings, swap meets and parking lots where pedestrians and residents can simply walk up. The events are happening in the evenings after work or on the weekends to make the decision to get vaccinated as easy as possible.

“We’re seeing other places that have been open the entire day and gotten only five people in,” she said. “So, for us being open just a few hours in the evening, and getting over 100 people — that’s a success story.”

Carmelo Morales, a 35-year-old Los Angeles resident, used to count himself among the vaccine skeptical. After talking to friends and seeing posts on Instagram, he feared the shots might be a plot to make people sick. He didn’t see the urgency of getting a shot.

But Morales, who works in a meatpacking plant, has been deeply affected by the cases and deaths he has seen among colleagues and their families over the past year. One day in late April, as he was walking home from work, he noticed health care workers at a church near his house packing up after a COVID-19 vaccine event.

He asked if there were any leftover doses, and because his house was nearby, nurses waited for him to run home to get his ID so he could get his first shot.

“I just thought about it and was like, hey, it’d be better just to be maybe on the safer side.”

KHN (Kaiser Health News) is a national newsroom that produces in-depth journalism about health issues. Together with Policy Analysis and Polling, KHN is one of the three major operating programs at KFF (Kaiser Family Foundation). KFF is an endowed nonprofit organization providing information on health issues to the nation.)

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