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COVID-19 Vaccines: Studying Historical Successes (and Failures) for Equity-Centered Approaches to Vaccinating Indigenous Communities, Undocumented Immigrants, and Communities of Color: Proceedings of a Workshop - in Brief
Pages 1-7

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From page 1...
... This webinar focused on previous historical efforts to vaccinate individuals, what This webinar builds upon two previous webinars hosted proved successful, and what proved unsuccessful. by the Roundtable on the Promotion of Health Equity, Pursuing Data on COVID-19: The Health Inequity Communities of color experience significantly higher Multiplier, and Contact Tracing and the Challenges of rates of infection from COVID-19 and significantly higher Health Equity in Vulnerable Latino and Native American mortality rates when compared to White Americans Communities.
From page 2...
... The incident command team decided from the beginning Sams explained that his people, now based in northeast to use the best available science and relevant data, such Oregon and southeast Washington State, traditionally as weekly case counts and testing counts. He noted roamed areas now known as Montana, Wyoming, that the tribe was fortunate to work early on with the southern Idaho, Nevada, northern California, and federal government to get access to testing equipment.
From page 3...
... The traumatic history of the pandemic enduring context of systemic racism and the marginalization resulted in entire cultures, communities, and languages of vulnerable communities historically affected the current being lost. Additionally, mistrust of traditional Western moment of the COVID-19 vaccine?
From page 4...
... do not receive the same support" that the population as a whole The key to this success, said Zink, is that tribal leaders does. There are several challenges faced by farmworkers: and the state tribal health consortium members were responsible at every step, from communications to • In Florida, the farmworker population includes actions.
From page 5...
... Faith leaders organization using to show that you and/or your organization are also used as trusted messengers, particularly for are trustworthy, and so that the community feels it can trust African American and Latino communities, Abdulwhat you/your organization is saying? Mutakabbir said.
From page 6...
... Zink responded that in Alaska, the Department of Corrections was "at the table with us at every single step." In fact, sewing machines were provided to incarcerated individuals, and they helped make masks. Some sovereign nations' supplement of vaccine doses went to vaccinate the entire prison system very quickly.
From page 7...
... vaccinating Indigenous communities, undocumented immigrants, and communities of color: Proceedings of a workshop -- in Brief. Washington, DC: The National Academies Press.


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