London, United Kingdom — When year-old Shenaz Sajan, a British woman from the English Midlands, learned more about COVID, she was hesitant about the vaccines on offer, and hoped that if she needed to, she could fight off the virus with a plant-based diet.
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Sajan is among the dozens of people who have received the Oxford-AstraZeneca vaccine at the centre, which is in inner-city Birmingham, since January Vaccination centres have been set up in expected locations such as pharmacies but also in cinemas, a London football ground and other places of worship such as a Hindu temple. The mosque expects to vaccinate up to people in the upcoming weeks.
Several studies in the UK have shown that vaccine hesitancy is more prevalent among people from ethnic minority backgrounds, with fears driven in part by a mistrust of the health system. Black, Asian and other ethnic minority Britons are less likely to take up an offer of the vaccine, as conflicting information swirls around on social media networks and within some communities.
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They have been talking to us, telling us why we should take the vaccine, and explaining that all these myths have no basis. Tasnim Nazeer.
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