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How UNT Health Science Center Wants To Fight Pandemic Misinformation & Diversify Vaccine Trials

In this photo, a large concrete building with the words "UNT HEALTH" on it stands over an empty street and a full parking lot.
UNT Health Science Center
The University of North Texas Health Science Center.

The new project hopes to build trust in medical professionals, particularly in Black and Latino communities that have been greatly affected by COVID-19 and have traditionally been wary the healthcare system.

The UNT Health Science Center in Fort Worth to fight misinformation about COVID-19 and build trust in the medical community, especially among the people most vulnerable to the disease.

COVID-19 , and people of color are at greater risk than others, said Dr. Jamboor Vishwanatha, the head of the new project and the director of the Texas Center for Health Disparities.

"There are more African American and Latinx persons who are not only getting infected, but also if you start looking at mortality, the death rate has been high," Vishwanatha said.

People of color are overrepresented among workers in essential jobs who can鈥檛 work from home, so their risk of exposure to the coronavirus is higher. If people of color do get sick, existing inequities, like the lack of access to healthcare, .

UNTHSC's project will try to make sure people in Tarrant, Bexar, Dallas, Harris and Hidalgo counties are getting accurate public health information to stay safe during the pandemic.

Vishwanatha said UNTHSC is partnering with local organizations to help spread the word and build trust in medical professionals. In Tarrant County, the medical center will work with the , which could potentially bring in community groups to share health information that those groups can then spread on social media.

Another goal is to encourage people of color to participate in COVID-19 vaccine trials.

That could require the project to counter longstanding mistrust. Studies have shown that Black Americans in particular often have reservations about, in part because of .

Vishwanatha said these vaccine trials are part of a safe, rigorous scientific process, and to be a success, they need a diverse set of participants.

鈥淲hen any vaccine is developed, we want to make sure that the racial and ethnic groups are all included so that we know for sure that it is effective in all of the communities,鈥 he said.

It鈥檚 also important to spread the word that the eventual vaccine will be safe and effective once it is released, Vishwanatha said. He pointed to that found only about half of American adults would definitely or probably get vaccinated if a vaccine was available today.

鈥淐oncerns about side effects and uncertainty around the effectiveness of a vaccine are widely cited as reasons,鈥 the survey states.

Respondents also said they worried a vaccine would be pushed through federal approval before it is deemed fully safe and effective. Nine drugmakers vowing to prove their vaccines are safe in large clinical trials before submitting them to the Food and Drug Administration for review. The FDA , in an effort to boost public trust.

That trust is important, Vishwanatha said, because if not enough people take the vaccine, it won't help.

鈥淏asically, it鈥檒l still be going around, and that鈥檚 not going to help the pandemic to stop,鈥 he said.

Got a tip? Email Miranda Suarez at msuarez@kera.org. You can follow Miranda on Twitter .

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Miranda Suarez is an award-winning reporter who started at 四虎影院 in 2020. Before joining 鈥淣TX Now,鈥 she covered Tarrant County government, with a focus on deaths in the local jail. Her work drives discussion at local government meetings and has led to real-world change 鈥 like the closure of a West Texas private prison that violated the state鈥檚 safety standards. A Massachusetts native, Miranda got her start in journalism at WTBU, Boston University鈥檚 student radio station. She later worked at WBUR as a business desk fellow, and while reporting for Boston 25 News, she received a New England Emmy nomination for her investigation into mental鈥慼ealth counseling services at Massachusetts colleges and universities.