The COVID-19 vaccine may be on the way, but some who belong to communities of color are reluctant to take it.
"Unfortunately, the communities of people who are most affected by the pandemic are also more likely to be the most hesitant about a vaccine," said Dr. Ana Núñez, vice dean for diversity, equity and inclusion at the University of Minnesota Medical School.
Black and Hispanic communities historically have had lower flu vaccination rates, driven partly by barriers to accessing medical care but also by a reluctance to trust institutions that have subjected minorities to unethical experiments and discrimination.
"There is definitely mistrust among the African American community in the health care system, clinicians and even the federal government," said Dr. LaPrincess Brewer, a preventive cardiologist and health disparities researcher at the Mayo Clinic in Rochester.
"This has now been manifested as the resistance that we are seeing with the COVID-19 vaccine."
Recently, 75 of 100 African Americans surveyed at churches in the Twin Cities and Rochester said they either wouldn't get the COVID-19 vaccine or were unsure they would, Brewer said.
"It really shows that we have much work to do around getting the vaccine and also addressing their concerns," she said.
For eight years, Brewer has been partnering with a network of over 120 African American churches in the Twin Cities and Rochester as part of an effort to improve heart health. The project quickly pivoted to COVID-19 education and prevention after the first cases hit the state in March.