The Dose - Want People to Take the COVID-19 Vaccine? Confront Racism in Health Care
Episode Date: September 24, 2021Even as the Delta variant rages through the U.S., many Americans have not received a COVID-19 vaccine. The reasons are complex, but for Black and Latinx communities, a long history of poor access to h...ealth care has been a tall barrier. On the first episode of our brand-new season of The Dose podcast, host Shanoor Seervai talks to Rhea Boyd, M.D., a pediatrician and public health advocate, about what it takes to dismantle the historic racism that has long prevented people of color from getting the health care they need. Black and Latinx health care professionals like Dr. Boyd are answering questions about the COVID-19 vaccine online and in person. If we make it a national priority, she says, we can ensure Black and Latinx people get credible information about the vaccines and easy access to them.
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The Dose is a production of the Commonwealth Fund, a foundation dedicated to healthcare for everyone.
Welcome to our new season of The Dose, the Commonwealth Fund's podcast about what the
U.S. could do differently when it comes to healthcare. I'm your host, Shanwar Sirvai,
and I've spent a good part of
the summer thinking about how to make the conversations we have here meaningful to you.
As the COVID-19 pandemic lingers and continues to disrupt our lives, I want to share with you
my intention to feature emerging voices and focus on ideas for the future. It's a simple pledge,
but I think that while we have plenty of stories and data about the problems with our healthcare
system, it's time to get talking about the solutions. In that spirit, I am delighted to
be in conversation on this episode with Rhea Boyd, a pediatrician and public health advocate.
We're going to talk about how to counter mistrust about the COVID-19 vaccines and emerge from the
pandemic to a healthier future for everyone. Rhea was a Commonwealth Fund Fellow in Minority
Health Policy at Harvard University in 2017. More recently, she co-developed a national campaign called The Conversation to bring
credible information about the COVID vaccines directly to Black, Latinx, and Spanish-speaking
communities. Ria, welcome to the show. Thanks so much for having me. We now have an FDA-approved
COVID vaccine, and we even have mandates. We'll get to that later.
But some Americans are still reluctant to get vaccinated. Why?
You know, I might even describe that differently. I would say some Americans still have not been
vaccinated. Why? And the why includes some folks who have some reluctance to get vaccinated,
and it includes some folks who absolutely just don't have good access
to information about the COVID vaccines
or to actually get the COVID vaccines in a way that's cost neutral
and convenient for them.
And what do you mean when you say cost neutral?
Because they're supposed to be free, right?
Yeah, this is a huge point.
Even though the vaccines are free,
it doesn't mean that actually obtaining one of the COVID vaccines is cost neutral. So if we think about the cost that goes into obtaining any medical service or procedure in our country, we have to account for the travel costs to get there. honestly really incredible work to place more than 95% of Americans within five miles of a
COVID vaccine. But if you don't have a car, walking five miles is quite a tall order,
especially if you have any infirmity or disability. And then if you do have a car,
your gas tank has to be full, which costs money. If you are going to take the bus,
you have to buy a bus ticket or a bus fare or a train fare. That costs money. If you are going to take the bus, you have to buy a bus ticket or a bus fare or a train fare.
That costs money. If you have to park there when you get there because the site that you're going
to, you have to walk into, it costs money sometimes to park. And then that same transportation cost
exists on the return. So we have to take into account the cost simply just to show up and to
get back to where you were, and then the opportunity costs,
right? We're talking about foregone wages for time you took off work, depending on if you have a site
that's walk-in where you might have to stand in line. And so it's not something you could do on
your lunch break and just be back in time to continue your shift. But also the cost of child
care. If you are the primary caregiver to children who are too young to be alone at home,
how are you going to pay to have them watch while you get this service? Are you going to a site that allows you to bring multiple children with you? These are the costs that we have to account for
when we think about who is getting vaccinated and who has yet to be vaccinated. And Kaiser Family
Foundation has done some really incredible data that helps us better understand that a sizable
proportion of folks who have yet to be vaccinated are actually low-income Americans,
many of whom don't have access even to just health insurance. And so when you think about
people on a budget, then you have to say, well, it's not completely free, even if when you get
there, the service you're getting is free. So let's break that down a little bit. Which are the demographic groups
that are less likely to have received a vaccine? Data from Kaiser Family Foundation tells us that
folks who earn less than $40,000 a year per household are the least likely to have gotten a COVID vaccine. We see lower rates among young folks between 12 and 17
and in the ages of 17 to 35,
and then folks who lack health insurance.
If you look along racial and ethnic lines,
Black folks in this country as a population
have the lowest rates of vaccine uptake.
And the second are Hispanic or Latinx populations.
So are the income barriers you described truly the main barrier, or are they racial,
or is it a combination? I think this is what has been so hard about the vaccination effort. I think
it's that it's a combination, which means no single silver
bullet will actually ensure that everyone in this country can get vaccinated. For example,
making the vaccine free is not going to overcome, as we were talking about, the other costs to
actually get the vaccine that are more burdensome to families who live on a tighter budget. And then layered atop these multiple access factors
is this massive international disinformation campaign that is targeting all Americans,
but specifically folks of color. We saw this early before any of the vaccines were even released.
There were posts on social media sites that catered
towards communities of color, that catered towards social justice causes, that were already trying to
undermine people's confidence in the scientific process to create the vaccines that have just
continued to spew disinformation about the vaccine's safety and efficacy.
So that's one factor that's contributing to lower vaccination
rates in Black and Latinx communities. But what are the other factors? So the other thing I like
to talk about is what it means that the country was trying to embark on such an ambitious goal.
What does it mean when you actually try to make sure every single person right now, age 12 and above, receives a medical procedure or makes a medical decision?
What that means is we now have to look at our infrastructure in this country that supports people making medical decisions.
And we know that infrastructure is not evenly distributed. One of the main things that helps people make medical decisions is access
to medical providers, preferably that they trust and that they've had a long-term relationship,
but just generalized access to a medical provider who can give you credible information about the
medical decision that you're making and give you information within the specific context of your
health history so that they can say, well, you are
immunocompromised.
This vaccine is safe for you.
You should receive it, and you can get it right in our office today.
So what I've been talking about is what does it mean that we have populations that we know
are uninsured and underinsured, populations who don't just forego the COVID vaccine,
they forego all manners of recommended medical care,
regular screening procedures,
even getting checked out when they have pain or infirmity.
People don't do that because they hate medical care.
People do that because medical care
is insanely expensive in this country.
As we all know,
it's one of the leading drivers of bankruptcy
in households. And so people are making real choices about where they can afford to spend time
and what medical care they can afford to receive. And I think what we're seeing is that particularly
for low income communities and populations of of color that people who don't traditionally
have access to our healthcare system don't have a way in to actually counter the disinformation
they're hearing.
They can't run that by a provider because they're less likely to have a regular provider.
And they don't have a way in to actually receive the vaccine in a way that's familiar to them.
I go to this clinic once a year.
I come to this clinic for my diabetes care,
and I'm up to date on my diabetes management.
So it's easy for me to also receive the vaccine here.
If people don't have those pathways in place,
it makes it much more challenging then
for people to, out of the blue,
then decide to make such a serious medical decision.
So then could we interpret the decision
not to get vaccinated
as informed skepticism? I think I interpret it as an inaccessible healthcare system that is
actually unwilling to change its structural model to serve everybody in this country. And instead,
on top of an inaccessible system, is now trying to levy mandates on people to receive a service as if people are
simply choosing not to receive it. And I just want to say to everybody listening, this is critical.
Please do not talk about black folks trust or low income folks trust when we talk about whether or
not they choose to get medical procedures in this country, especially because we know the history of the inaccessibility of our
healthcare system to these communities. If we look from slavery times and reconstruction,
what was one of the main pillars of reconstruction? Healthcare for newly freed slaves. If we look at
the civil rights movement, what did black folks ask for? Healthcare. If we look at post the LA riots and other major
uprisings and rebellions across the country, what is always a tenant, including of Black Lives
Matters and the movement for black lives, healthcare is. Black people have been asking
for healthcare again and again and again. And instead, at a time when our country wants to
give people healthcare, the only thing we're willing to give them is the COVID vaccine.
And we want to make it seem as if that makes it totally open that you receive healthcare.
And people have questions about that.
What if they have a side effect from the COVID vaccine that actually requires they receive
more medical care?
Is that going to be covered right now?
Right?
These are the questions and calculations that people are taking and why talking about trust
is completely inadequate for us to understand the barriers that marginalized communities,
particularly Black folks in this country, have faced for centuries just getting any
type of health care, let alone a vaccine.
I'm really glad you said this because we hear the terms around trust.
We hear the term most often vaccine hesitancy. And I appreciate the way that you've
reframed that because it points to this history of centuries really of systemic racism.
Boom. You got it. We have to account for the fact that Black folks are up against centuries of institutionalized racism, where the systems
that we all pay money into as members of society and as just civilians in this country,
it has not benefited every racial group evenly.
And our healthcare system is one of those systems.
And so when people don't access our healthcare system when we want them to,
we have to ask how that history has contributed to people's healthcare choices and how they
manage and make those choices. And now in the face of that history, I want to talk about what
you mentioned a few minutes earlier, vaccine mandates.
You have been campaigning to get people vaccinated ever since the beginning.
And now President Biden is mandating vaccines for most federal employees.
And we're seeing some private employers are requiring vaccines too.
Is it a good idea in the face of this history of systemic racism to be mandating something?
It's a complicated question because what our government, what our nation is facing is a tall order that they need to get every single person who's at least right now age 12 and above to make
a medical decision. And they need to get them to make that medical decision on a short order. That said, because of what we've now said about how structural racism
shapes how accessible our healthcare system is, including how accessible the COVID vaccines are,
mandates alone are insufficient and likely to be ineffective. What was keeping people wasn't that
we weren't forcing them. It's that there are still barriers that keep them from obtaining it. And so if you're going to institute a mandate, for example, at an employer level, then it's also the employer's responsibility to make sure that they have had multiple opportunities for all of their staff and employees to learn credible information about the COVID vaccines.
And multiple ways to learn that because we know learning styles vary and health literacy levels
vary by individual, often by their own educational background and perhaps even their own income
level. And so if employers are going to do it, for example, then you need to give people paid
leave to get that vaccine. Then you need to make sure that you can offer vaccination at your work site if possible so that when people come in, they can
just get it there. And sometimes that might even mean closing offices for a day. Like this is our
day of vaccination for the entire workplace. And tomorrow, because there may be side effects,
we will be closed. So there will be no catch-up work. There will be no penalties.
Everyone will be paid for that day off, and we will do this together.
Things like that can help ensure that people actually really do have access to receive it on top of the new expectation that they choose to receive it.
So you've just talked about what is needed in addition to a mandate to make this work.
But I wanted to ask about your work now.
What is the best way to convince people that this is different?
Let's talk about the conversation.
Yeah, thanks.
I would love to talk about the conversation.
So first, I want people to understand kind of the origins of this project.
So the vaccines were first received emergency use authorization back in December.
And we, Black providers across the country, started chatting informally back in November before any of the vaccines were authorized to say, what is this we see on social media?
And what are these things we hear from people
about the vaccines before they're even out? What should we do to make sure our communities know
all the credible information that's going to come out about these vaccines?
And so this project started really early, acknowledging the structural constraints
that limit the spread of credible information to communities of color about healthcare,
healthcare options, and our health in general. And so we started early, which allowed us to be
ready as soon as the vaccines came out. And so what we've created now is both a digital and
on-the-ground community outreach to ensure that Black and Spanish-speaking or Latinx or Hispanic
communities have credible information about the COVID vaccines. And they can hear that information
directly from Black, Spanish-speaking, Latinx, and Hispanic healthcare workers, doctors, and nurses,
and some of the scientists who worked in the clinical trials, folks who people, we hope,
recognize. You started your career as a doctor,
and now a lot of what you're doing is about communication and talking to people.
So I have two questions. What is it like to be a Black woman doing this work? And when it comes
to communication, what is effective in counterbalancing and combating
the theories that we hear about vaccines and sterility or zombies and microchips?
I'll start with the second one first.
I think what's working is going directly to people.
So some of the most impactful kind of ground level outreach we've had have been these
teletown halls that we've had across the South.
We have been calling up hundreds of thousands of people week after week in states across the South.
We get the phone rolls from voter rolls, and we focused on Black folks age 18 to 35
in Spanish-speaking populations in probably about one-tenth of the calls.
And what's effective about that is, one, we knew that the South is an area of the country
where insurance rates are the lowest.
KFF has some data that says 97% of adults who live in the coverage gap, which means
your income is too high to qualify for Medicaid, but too low to qualify for any
premiums, insurance premiums. And so you don't get any of the tax credits for the marketplace,
and then you can't qualify for Medicaid, and so you're uninsured. The South is also where
most Black people in this country live. So we wanted to make sure that we had a concentrated
effort to go to folks in the South. But one in 10 residents across the South don't have the internet.
And so although we've created all these glossy videos and we have
ad buys on Google and YouTube to make sure people can see these videos,
we know that some of our communities who are the most disenfranchised don't have access to them.
And so we needed to just go to people and call them up on the phone.
This is also a method that was used for census outreach that was really effective. And so we call hundreds of
thousands of people, about 5,000 people, 5,000 to 7,000 people stay on the line every time.
And we talk directly to people. And in hearing people's questions is how I came to understand
the actual barriers that people are facing. People aren't calling up bringing up conspiracy theories. People are calling up saying, I have diabetes. Is it safe for me to get this? Or
one man called up and said, y'all told me to get this COVID vaccine. So me and my wife did.
My wife got COVID two weeks ago and she died. What happened to her? You told us this vaccine
was going to save her life. And it was this chilling moment where we could talk about how vaccination works and how,
although these vaccines are incredibly effective, some of the most effective vaccines maybe
ever to hit the market, at the same time, your individual protection is linked to community
protection and community spread.
And what does it mean that you live in an area of
your state that has incredibly low vaccination rates and high levels of community spread?
It means even though you and your wife made this critical choice, if all of the rest of the people
on the call with us and all of your neighbors, your coworkers, the people at the grocery store
and the post office, if they haven't similarly made that choice, then every time you encounter them, it places you potentially at risk. And so it
allowed us to have a conversation essentially with strangers. I mean, we don't know any of
these people calling in, but it's incredibly intimate and it's incredibly personal because
that concern about people dying either from the COVID vaccine or despite having
the COVID vaccine is rampant. People have heard stories and they want to share these negative
stories to understand if they're true. And we're able to give people the evidence so that they can
shift to understand if it's true. We've had similar experiences talking in churches to
hundreds or sometimes even a handful of people. So I think
that's what works. And I led with that question because I think what this means to me as a Black
woman is essentially everything. I've described this as the most important work I've done in my
career. And I think it may be the most important work I ever do, which is the opportunity to go
and talk to Black people across the country, knowing that only 5% of our workforce who are
physicians in this country are black. There's not enough of us to talk to everybody. And so through
these opportunities, I get to speak to people I would never otherwise meet. You're not going to
come to California to hear what I have to say when you live in rural Mississippi, but I can meet you
over the phone and tell you everything I know. I can tell you what people asked about in Alabama. I can tell you what they asked about in
South Carolina. And we can talk through what's working in Georgia, what's working in Mississippi.
We can share the fact that all of us are concerned about the same things. Is it safe? How do I get it?
And is it going to work if I choose to get it? I feel really honored, honestly,
to be able to do that. It feels like a service to a community and populations who have nurtured me
and cared for me my whole life. For the few of us who are in this system who are Black, who also
feel like we want to make sure we are narrowing health inequities for Black communities or for the
few folks who are Latinx and want to make sure they're narrowing health inequities for
Latinx communities, I can participate in building projects that enable us to do that.
And then that we can then turn to the rest of the system and advocate for bigger changes
that allow what is now just a project around COVID vaccines to be a model for
how we increase health literacy around other screenings, like screening for colorectal cancer
or breast cancer or other medical issues like diabetes and heart disease that are major killers
of Americans and disproportionately claiming the lives of folks of color in this country, that
this is a model you
can use to communicate to those communities to make sure that people have the information they
need to make decisions that are in their best interest. And then beyond that, I think the work
is then to shift our field so that we stop harming people, right? Like we refer back to the Hippocratic
Oath that says like, first do no harm. We need more
than just not wanting to hurt people. And so I think there's a number of us, and it's a growing
interest across medicine, thankfully, that medicine has to become an anti-racist endeavor,
not just one that's passive in the face of other forms of racism, but one that's actively seeking
to dismantle other forms of racism and ensure that everyone
has access to our care, everyone benefits from our care, and everyone lives longer, healthier,
you know, happier lives. Undoing harm and also making sure that people can live healthier and
happier lives, that's a long project that's going to take a long time. But if we think about
specific strategies being deployed now to reach people, one of our producers in LA told me that
she's seeing billboards and signs on buses around town that feature black and brown patients and say
your questions matter. Or looking at stuff you've been tweeting, for example,
you're not a guinea pig, 150 million Americans beat you to it. Does that have an impact?
The mass calls where we try to just reach everybody with shouting one thing out,
I think probably has some impact. But if I had to guess its size, I would say it's probably minimal. I think the much more high
touch I'm going to try to talk to every single person and at least have that person maybe share
the information we share with somebody else who has a similar question, I think is probably the
most effective and the most expensive way to do the work. I still try to use Twitter mostly to shape how the media talks about
Black people and our choices around the vaccine and to talk to legislators about what needs to
be done. Saying rapid tests need to be free for everybody all the time and sent to our houses and
we need to know how to use them. And then we should create guidelines around how schools use them and how employers use them so that we can, at the same time that we have a
really robust vaccination effort, have a robust effort to make sure that we're trying to control
community spread using all of the tools in our disposal, including masks and distancing and all
of these things that we know would help limit spread. And finally, Rhea, you've talked about such a wide range of strategies for addressing the
concerns that people have around vaccines. But if you could pick just one thing,
wave a magic wand to make it happen tomorrow, what would you do?
I want to respond with something that also takes on this underlying
assumption that you shared that like doing this work so that our system doesn't harm people takes
a long time. I think if anything, the pandemic has shown how short a time we can do a ton of work
over and how much money we can pour into something. We've been fighting over whether our country can
have universal health care for decades, at least throughout my lifetime.
And here we are pouring billions of dollars into a single medical intervention for people.
Billions of dollars.
And to see that happen over months tells us that if people want to get it done and we
are all aligned politically that this is a top priority in this country,
we will do it.
That is the blueprint.
I'm not asking for people to trust our healthcare system or have our healthcare system be better
a generation from now.
I'm saying fix our mess today.
Hire new people.
If you have an executive at your hospital
or at your clinic site
who doesn't know anything about racial equity, they don't have the qualifications to be an executive and they need to be let go.
Like there are so many people who do this research, who do this work, who understand what it would take to do this at scale across our medical system that all we need is a go and we are ready to go.
And I think projects like ours are one example of how ready people were.
Those vaccines weren't even out. And Black doctors were like, what are we about to do about this
very predictable problem that's going to come up in access to information about the vaccines?
Like, let's fix it before it even comes up. We can predict all of the problems that are coming.
Like another problem that's coming that we should have some plan for that I have not yet seen plans
for is the chronic disability that our nation will be facing from
folks who have long COVID across age groups. People will need insurance to get the care that
they need to deal with that. People will need other providers outside of clinical medicine to
deal with their cognitive delay, their challenges completing their schoolwork, their challenges
going to work. That is a problem that we could be addressing now
and thinking of the racial groups who are most likely to be affected by that in school and in
the workplace if we just all get aligned that that's a top priority in the country right now.
Dr. Rhea Boyd, thank you so much for being here today.
Oh, of course. Thank you for having me and asking what I thought.
This episode of The Dose was produced by Jodi Becker, Carl T. Wright,
Naomi Leibovitz, and Joshua Tallman.
Special thanks to Barry Scholl for editing,
Jen Wilson and Rose Wong for our art and design,
and Paul Frame for web support.
Our theme music is Arizona Moon by Blue Dot Sessions.
Our website is thedose.show.
There you'll find show notes and other resources.
That's it for The Dose.
I'm Shanur Sirvai.
Thanks for listening.