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Published in: Archives of Public Health 1/2024

Open Access 01-12-2024 | Vaccination | Research

An exploration of COVID-19 vaccination models for newcomer refugees and immigrants in Calgary, Canada

Authors: Fariba Aghajafari, Laurent Wall, Amanda M. Weightman, Alyssa Ness, Deidre Lake, Krishna Anupindi, Gayatri Moorthi, Bryan Kuk, Maria Santana, Annalee Coakley

Published in: Archives of Public Health | Issue 1/2024

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Abstract

Background

The World Health Organization stresses the need for tailored COVID-19 models of vaccination to meet the needs of diverse populations and ultimately reach high rates of vaccination. However, little evidence exists on how COVID-19 models of vaccination operated in the novel context of the pandemic, how vulnerable populations, such as refugees, experience COVID-19 vaccination systems in high-income countries, and what lessons may be learned from vaccination efforts with vulnerable populations. To address this gap, this study explored COVID-19 vaccine delivery models available to newcomer refugees and immigrants, and refugee experiences across different COVID-19 vaccine delivery models in Calgary, Canada, and surrounding area in 2021 and 2022, to understand the barriers, strengths, and strategies of models to support access to COVID-19 vaccination for newcomer refugees and immigrants.

Methods

Researchers conducted structured interviews with Government Assisted Refugees (n = 39), and semi-structured interviews with Privately Sponsored Refugees (n = 6), private refugee sponsors (n = 3), and stakeholders involved in vaccination systems (n = 13) in 2022. Thematic analysis was conducted to draw out themes related to barriers, strengths, and strategies of vaccine delivery models and the intersections with patient experiences.

Results

Newcomer refugee and immigrant focused vaccination models and strategies were explored. They demonstrated how partnerships between organizations, multi-pronged approaches, and culturally responsive services were crucial to navigate ongoing and emergent factors, such as vaccine hesitancy, mandates, and other determinants of under-vaccination. Many vaccination models presented through interviews were not specific to refugees and included immigrants, temporary residents, ethnocultural community members, and other vulnerable populations in their design.

Conclusions

Increasing COVID-19 vaccine uptake for newcomer refugees and immigrants, is complex and requires trust, ongoing information provision, and local partnerships to address ongoing and emerging factors. Three key policy implications were drawn. First, findings demonstrated the need for flexible funding to offer outreach, translation, cultural interpretation, and to meet the basic needs of patients prior to engaging in vaccinations. Second, the research showed that embedding culturally responsive strategies within services ensures community needs are met. Finally, collaborating with partners that reflect the diverse needs of communities is crucial for the success of any health efforts serving newcomers.
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Metadata
Title
An exploration of COVID-19 vaccination models for newcomer refugees and immigrants in Calgary, Canada
Authors
Fariba Aghajafari
Laurent Wall
Amanda M. Weightman
Alyssa Ness
Deidre Lake
Krishna Anupindi
Gayatri Moorthi
Bryan Kuk
Maria Santana
Annalee Coakley
Publication date
01-12-2024
Publisher
BioMed Central
Published in
Archives of Public Health / Issue 1/2024
Electronic ISSN: 2049-3258
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1186/s13690-024-01255-y

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