“Black People Listen to Black People”: Strategies to Improve COVID-19 Vaccine Confidence Among Black People Living in Canada
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Materials and Methods
3. Results
3.1. Demographic Data
3.2. Strategies to Improve Vaccine Confidence and Uptake
3.2.1. Addressing Mistrust Through Public Education
‘Education would be one of the strategies and making the community to trust the government too and not hiding any—I’m not saying that they’ve [government] been hiding, just be open to them [Canadians], let them see what is going on’.[P12–32—Male]
‘The first step is to identify which proportion of the population has misinformation about COVID-19. Then the second step would be, [to ask] what can we do? The things that the government can do. It could arrange for providing free education on issues about COVID-19.’.[P21–48—Female]
‘I think more transparency was more important for me and I think it would have been better had people just said we don’t know everything. And if that messaging had come through clearer and louder, you know at this moment—those are the things that I think would have made a difference’.[P3–49—Female]
3.2.2. Building Trust Through Black-Led Community Engagement
‘We have a multicultural association in Fort McMurray; you can contact them and they will disseminate the information to the members of the community. So that people will be able to be aware of the importance of getting vaccinated. For some people, they are not going to get it whatsoever. Because of what they believe or what their experiences have been. When those fears can be allayed, they will get vaccinated’[P18–35—Male]
‘But the better approach, in my opinion, is have a Black person who is qualified who also goes to that church, a trusted member of the community to speak to them. Because you might not necessarily have a lot of faith in the random person that the government sends to speak to you but the person that you grew up with, you know, the person that you see every Sunday you might have a little bit more patience with them to hear what they have to say, and you might feel more comfortable asking them questions’.[P2–44—Female]
‘But if there’s a way that we could reach out to the African Centre to say the African Centre can you reach out to the all the African descent communities and let them have representation in the African Centre and bring them to a consortium to say come we need you, we need people from Nigeria, we need people from Cameroon, we need people, now go and reach out so we form a strong consortium. Now bring all the doctors, all the Nigerian doctors, all the Cameroonian doctors, everyone, to say hold a consortium of doctors of African descent and let us talk to our people, you understand, that is vaccine is good, take the vaccine. I am a medical doctor and I have taken it’.[P13-PNTS—Male]
3.2.3. Addressing Barriers to Vaccine Convenience—Health Literacy and Communication
‘I really want you to recommend, [that] each community have their own, you know, there is a specific language that they understand, right? There is a way that you can communicate with the different communities. So that doctor influenced me because she was Black. She was a Muslim. She is actually a Somali person.’[P29–30—Male]
‘We’ve been hosting [control] information sessions where we hired activists to explain [about COVID to] our communities in their own languages. For example, in the Somali community session, we had an interpreter and a doctor. They [people] were asking the doctor a lot of questions. Like, for example, I have asthma, can I take the vaccine? I am an elderly person, and I have diabetes. I have all these health issues. Can I take? I am a pregnant woman; can I take? So, it really helped us to help and convince the community to take the COVID-19 vaccine…. we were distributing translated posters as well, to the community. For example, Swahili, Somali, Arabic and Ethiopian, Tigrinya, different kind of languages. So, it helped us actually to sit and explain to the community…’.[P29–30—Male]
‘We have to start at the grassroots level. Right, go into the malls, go into the community centers, get local musicians you know, just get to where the people are– because some people don’t want to know they’re in their own bubble. Go into the churches, go into places where people congregate and have the message without being preachy, right, dumb it down’.[P36–50—Female]
‘I think educating themselves. Let’s say a white provider, a white health care provider might not be aware of where Black people are coming from when it comes to their concerns. So, if we see let’s say a Black woman in her sixties who’s highly religious comes into her white doctor to, you know, talk about the vaccine, he might think she’s been absolutely ridiculous because he doesn’t fully understand the role that religion plays in the Black community or how deep it goes, especially in the older generations. So as a white health care provider understanding the different demographics of the people you treat not only on a medical level but on a cultural level so you can kind of get—you can kind of see where they’re coming from and not brush it off as, “Oh, you’re being ridiculous. It just makes sense’.[P2–44—Female]
‘Because sometimes, you know, some people just need that assurance or to see it from—to have it explained from a cultural level. To fully understand where your patients are coming from and not just brush it off as, “Oh, you’re being ridiculous” or “Don’t believe that” because it’s not that simple. I think some [practice of] cultural competence from health care providers, from non-Black health care providers would help’.[P2–44—Female]
4. Discussion
Limitations
5. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Characteristics | Count (%) | |
---|---|---|
Gender | Male | 15 (42%) |
Female | 21 (58%) | |
Marital Status | Married | 15 (42%) |
Single | 16 (44%) | |
Common law | 1 (3%) | |
In a relationship | 3 (8%) | |
Separated | 1 (3%) | |
Religion | Christian | 29 (81%) |
Muslim | 1 (3%) | |
Atheist | 1 (3%) | |
Prefer not to say | 3 (8%) | |
Spiritual but not affiliated | 2 (6%) | |
Immigration Status | Permanent resident | 6 (17%) |
Canadian citizen | 20 (56%) | |
Temporary resident | 10 (28%) | |
Ethnic Origin | Black African | 27 (75%) |
Black American | 1 (3%) | |
Black Caribbean | 8 (22%) | |
Province | Alberta | 13 (36%) |
British Columbia | 4 (11%) | |
Nova Scotia | 3 (8%) | |
Ontario | 11 (31%) | |
Saskatchewan | 2 (6%) | |
Manitoba | 3 (8%) | |
Education | College | 2 (6%) |
High school | 2 (6%) | |
Master’s | 1 (3%) | |
University (Bachelor’s) | 30 (83%) | |
Vocational school | 1 (3%) | |
Annual Household Income | <CAD 60,000 | 17 (47%) |
>CAD 60,000 | 13 (36%) | |
N/A | 2 (6%) | |
Prefer not to say | 4 (11%) | |
Age | 18–24 | 6 (17%) |
25–34 | 10 (28%) | |
35–44 | 4 (11%) | |
45–44 | 11 (31%) | |
55–64 | 2 (6%) | |
65 and above | 0 | |
Prefer not to say | 3 (8%) | |
Average # of years living in Canada | 18 |
Theme 1—Public Education Is a Key Health Promotion Strategy for Building Trust in Black Communities. | ||
---|---|---|
Code | Sub Code | Illustrative Quotes |
Public Education (n = 22) |
| “Education would be one of the strategies and making the community to trust the government too and not hiding any—I’m not saying that they’ve been hiding, just be open to them, let them [people] see what is going on. A lot of people, they don’t really put on US news, when I’m going to work, I’m putting on CBC, I’m hearing the news. So, we need to disseminate the information more. Information dissemination is key” [Participant 12] “It’s more about education. So, some of us have group pages, WhatsApp pages, Facebook groups, community meetings, community centres. So still education. If you have a program, sometimes because of COVID we have online Zoom meetings, Black Caribbean meetings, online. So even if the meeting’s purpose was not a COVID-related meeting, at the end the closing remarks you can just chip in, say let’s all stay safe, put on your mandate and be healthy, live healthy for your family.” [Participant 30] |
| “They need to be straightforward. Take the vaccine, and these are the possible side-effects. Let’s discuss, let’s discuss the side-effects. Because it is a fact of life, you know.” [Participant 11] | |
Theme 2—Community engagement, particularly engagement activities led by Black people, is critical to reducing disparities in health, including COVID-19 health literacy. | ||
Community Engagement—Black-led (n = 19) |
| “Get people of colour in the medical community to come to you know, make a video or go to church, right. Show people OK, this is what the vaccine looks like, this is what it’s made of. It’s not made from fetal aborted tissue, this is an MRNA vaccine this is another vaccine. This is what it does to the body, this is how it—etc. Maybe use visual aids or an animation or clay or something to say this is what vaccines do.” [Participant 36] “When I go there, I see my kind. They will take the time to explain to me the benefit of it. Some people don’t, and I don’t even trust whether they’re telling me the truth anyways.” [Participant 17] “Community leaders. Because the black community, we are not isolated at all. We may be isolated are physically, we are also, we’re always connected. And the information can be passed down through the various community leaders. Because we have quite a number of them, either in the council or in the church or the association.” [Participant 18] |
| “I feel that maybe [pause] Black medicals practitioners should be encouraged to have constant communication with the community…maybe that can guarantee more trust” [Participant 1] “we do have black people in healthcare and if we can communicate this and—you know, I think that—OK, this has kind of two effects; one, actually educating the black community in ways that they understand… On the other hand, I think that that will really show a lot of younger people that “Hey, there are tons of black people in healthcare; I can do it too”. And all that does is continue to build the repertoire of black people we have in healthcare and the amount of black people who are able to contribute to conversations regarding healthcare in Canada” [Participant 23] “Like, for people who are deciding to take the vaccine, if their pastors say today that they should take the vaccine, they will take it without asking any questions.” [Participant 25] | |
Theme 3—Communication as a strategy for building COVID-19 vaccine confidence among Black people in Canada is multifaceted and emphasizes the importance of using plain language for effective communication. | ||
Communication (n = 28) |
| “When you are talking about antibodies, some people they didn’t do school, so you are talking antibodies, they don’t know what you are talking about…. So speak current languages with people. Like, not everyone has the same level of education, level of background, level of understanding. Because when you are coming for a workshop or with people, try to use the word that’s [pause] speak child words, that even a five-year-old child who is here will understand what you’re doing, what you’re saying” [Participant 24] “To deploy more settlement workers who speaks different languages, so that they can at least help the community. Because some people, they feel like, oh, maybe they will not understand me. Or if I call them, they give me a wrong, because we have this, you know, communication barrier, they may give me, you know, different dose that I didn’t want. That was the fear that I have seen. Some people think, I want to get the Pfizer, and they don’t know how to pronounce Pfizer. Maybe then, you know, the healthcare worker may give them Moderna. And then when they come home, they will get upset. Oh, they give me the wrong one. I didn’t ask them this. It’s, you know, a language barrier. So yeah.” [Participant 29] |
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Giwa, A.; Mullings, D.V.; Renazho, A.M.N.; Salami, O. “Black People Listen to Black People”: Strategies to Improve COVID-19 Vaccine Confidence Among Black People Living in Canada. COVID 2025, 5, 45. https://doi.org/10.3390/covid5040045
Giwa A, Mullings DV, Renazho AMN, Salami O. “Black People Listen to Black People”: Strategies to Improve COVID-19 Vaccine Confidence Among Black People Living in Canada. COVID. 2025; 5(4):45. https://doi.org/10.3390/covid5040045
Chicago/Turabian StyleGiwa, Aisha, Delores V. Mullings, Andre M. N. Renazho, and Oluwabukola Salami. 2025. "“Black People Listen to Black People”: Strategies to Improve COVID-19 Vaccine Confidence Among Black People Living in Canada" COVID 5, no. 4: 45. https://doi.org/10.3390/covid5040045
APA StyleGiwa, A., Mullings, D. V., Renazho, A. M. N., & Salami, O. (2025). “Black People Listen to Black People”: Strategies to Improve COVID-19 Vaccine Confidence Among Black People Living in Canada. COVID, 5(4), 45. https://doi.org/10.3390/covid5040045