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MivacunaLA (MyshotLA): A Community-Partnered Mobile Phone Intervention to Improve COVID-19 Vaccination Behaviors among Low-Income, Spanish-Speaking, and Immigrant Latino Parents or Caregivers.

Yelba M Castellon-LopezAlexandra M KlomhausCruz GarciaDenise MarquezHilda AvilaHannah GravetteRay Lopez-ChangBrenda OrtegaKeith C NorrisArleen F BrownLuisa Blanco
Published in: Vaccines (2024)
We developed and tested MivacunaLA/MyshotLA, a community-informed mobile phone intervention, to increase COVID-19 vaccination among Latino parents/caretakers of minors in under-resourced areas of Los Angeles by addressing misinformation and building trust. We recruited Latino parents/caregivers with at least one unvaccinated child in East and South Los Angeles in the summer of 2021 and evaluated MivacunaLA as a randomized controlled trial with a wait-list control group. A difference-in-difference analysis showed Latino parents/caregivers that participated in MivacunaLA ( n = 246), in comparison to the control group, were 15 percentage points more likely ( p = 0.04) to report vaccination of minors aged 12-17 years, and 12 percentage points more likely ( p = 0.03) to report a positive intention to vaccinate minors aged 2-11 years (when COVID-19 vaccines became available). Mobile phone-delivered digital interventions using videos and culturally tailored educational material to promote COVID-19 vaccine confidence can be an effective way to combat misinformation and deliver timely information to marginalized communities. Community-based participatory research approaches are crucial to advance health equity among minority communities, especially immigrant Spanish-speaking underserved communities.
Keyphrases
  • coronavirus disease
  • sars cov
  • mental health
  • healthcare
  • palliative care
  • randomized controlled trial
  • social media
  • african american
  • health information
  • public health
  • smoking cessation