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Community-based Strategies to Engage Pastors Can Help Address Vaccine Hesitancy and Health Disparities in Black Communities
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How behaviors can inform COVID-19 health campaigns | Penn State University
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Bridging gaps: How technology is improving health access for deaf community
Juana Poareo, American Heart Association News
July 24, 2021
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A study published in the Journal of Health Communication found people who are deaf are seven times more likely to have inadequate health literacy compared to people who can hear. Getty Images/iStockphoto
Early in Dr. Michael McKee’s career, one of his patients, who was deaf, died from a heart attack.
It led the doctor to study how to prevent it from happening to others.
That tragic event might not have happened, he said, if there had been “accessible community health education programs to allow for deaf individuals to learn ways to improve their health and to recognize common danger signs of serious health conditions.”
Integrating Reasoned Action Approach and Message Sidedness in the Era of Misinformation: The Case of HPV Vaccination Promotion
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More safeguards are needed to monitor the use of J&J’s COVID-19 vaccine | Opinion
Today 9:48 AM
Two medical experts say they still advocate strongly for the safe use of the Johnson & Johnson vaccine, but they now believe that additional safeguards should be used to monitor its safe use. AP photo.
AP
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By Scott Ratzan and Kenneth Rabin
For the past two years, we have both been involved in extensive U.S. and international social research programs on vaccine confidence generally and COVID-19 vaccine hesitancy in particular. Our goal is to convince people worldwide to accept COVID-19 vaccination as our best hope to control the pandemic, restore economic growth and rebuild social connectedness.