Vaccine Hesitancy Is a Scapegoat for Structural Racism
Organization: JAMA NetworkPublished: 2021
"This article discusses the importance of addressing disparities in vaccine uptake and emphasizes the need to provide multipronged approaches centered on the needs of historically marginalized communities. The approach must recognize that vaccine deliberation is rooted in structural racism and be designed to clearly demonstrate the trustworthiness of medicine, public health, and the health care system." - JAMA Network
Resource Group:
Background Knowledge
Product Type: Article
Sub Topics: Vaccination Decision Making
Understanding Vaccine Hesitancy
Vaccine Acceptance and Uptake
Understanding Vaccine Acceptance and Uptake
Monitoring and Surveillance
Outbreaks and Pandemics
COVID-19
Product Type: Article
Category:
Vaccination Decision Making,Sub Topics: Vaccination Decision Making,Understanding Vaccine Hesitancy,Vaccine Acceptance and Uptake,Understanding Vaccine Acceptance and Uptake,Monitoring and Surveillance,Outbreaks and Pandemics,COVID-19 Vaccination Decision MakingSub Topics: Vaccination Decision Making
Understanding Vaccine Hesitancy
Vaccine Acceptance and Uptake
Understanding Vaccine Acceptance and Uptake
Monitoring and Surveillance
Outbreaks and Pandemics
COVID-19
Audience:
Health Care Professional
Policy Makers
Population: Black, Indigenous, and People of Color (BIPOC) Communities
Region: United States
Policy Makers
Population: Black, Indigenous, and People of Color (BIPOC) Communities
Region: United States
Language:
English
Resource Rating Breakdown
Ratings submitted by CANVax users for this resource are tallied to provide an average resource rating per category.
0 Comments
Using the comment box below, provide your feedback for this resource. Tell the immunization community how you used the resource, what worked, what didn't and the changes you made. The feedback provided will help inform the immunization community and improve upon the resource made available on CANVax.
All comments are anonymous. Submitted comments will be reviewed for approval by the CANVax team to ensure it meets content submission guidelines. Please note that although CANVax aims to approve comments in a timely manner, volume may result in delays.
You must login or register before you can submit a comment.