1. Strategies and action points to ensure equitable uptake of COVID-19 vaccinations: A national qualitative interview study to explore the views of undocumented migrants, asylum seekers, and refugees
- Author
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Osama B Hassan, Sandra Mounier-Jack, Rachel Burns, May Rowland-Pomp, Yasmin Farah, Sally E Hayward, Sally Hargreaves, Felicity Knights, Anna Miller, Anna Deal, Monika Hartmann, Kieran Rustage, Azeem Majeed, Mashal Huda, Lucy Goldsmith, Yusuf Ciftci, Fatima Wurie, Ines Campos-Matos, Jessica Carter, and Alison F Crawshaw
- Subjects
medicine.medical_specialty ,Government ,Economic growth ,Data collection ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Refugee ,Immigration ,Ethnic group ,Entitlement ,Article ,Vaccination ,Family medicine ,ESCMID Study Group for Infections in Travellers and Migrants (ESGITM) ,Political science ,JV1-9480 ,medicine ,Relevance (law) ,Public aspects of medicine ,RA1-1270 ,Colonies and colonization. Emigration and immigration. International migration ,media_common - Abstract
IntroductionEarly evidence confirms lower COVID-19 vaccine uptake in established ethnic minority populations, yet there has been little focus on understanding vaccine hesitancy and barriers to vaccination in migrants. Growing populations of precarious migrants (including undocumented migrants, asylum seekers and refugees) in the UK and Europe are considered to be under-immunised groups and may be excluded from health systems, yet little is known about their views on COVID-19 vaccines specifically, which are essential to identify key solutions and action points to strengthen vaccine roll-out.MethodsWe did an in-depth semi-structured qualitative interview study of recently arrived migrants (foreign-born, >18 years old; ResultsWe approached 20 migrant support groups nationwide, recruiting 32 migrants (mean age 37.1 years; 21 [66%] female; mean time in the UK 5.6 years [SD 3.7 years]), including refugees (n = 3), asylum seekers (n = 19), undocumented migrants (n = 8) and migrants with limited leave to remain (n = 2) from 15 different countries (5 WHO regions). 23 (72%) of 32 migrants reported being hesitant about accepting a COVID-19 vaccine and communicated concerns over vaccine content, side-effects, lack of accessible information in an appropriate language, lack of trust in the health system and low perceived need. Participants reported a range of barriers to accessing the COVID-19 vaccine and expressed concerns that their communities would be excluded from or de-prioritised in the roll-out. Undocumented migrants described fears over being charged and facing immigration checks if they present for a vaccine. All participants (n = 10) interviewed after recent government announcements that COVID-19 vaccines can be accessed without facing immigration checks remained unaware of this. Participants stated that convenience of access would be a key factor in their decision around whether to accept a vaccine and proposed alternative access points to primary care services (for example, walk-in centres in trusted places such as foodbanks, community centres and charities), alongside promoting registration with primary care for all, and working closely with communities to produce accessible information on COVID-19 vaccination.ConclusionsPrecarious migrants may be hesitant about accepting a COVID-19 vaccine and face multiple and unique barriers to access, requiring simple but innovative solutions to ensure equitable access and uptake. Vaccine hesitancy and low awareness around entitlement and relevant access points could be easily addressed with clear, accessible, and tailored information campaigns, co-produced and delivered by trusted sources within marginalised migrant communities. These findings have immediate relevance to the COVID-19 vaccination initiatives in the UK and in other European and high-income countries with diverse migrant populations.FundingNIHR
- Published
- 2021
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