RT Journal Article SR Electronic T1 Models of COVID-19 Vaccine Delivery for Refugees in Calgary, Canada JF The Annals of Family Medicine JO Ann Fam Med FD American Academy of Family Physicians SP 4927 DO 10.1370/afm.22.s1.4927 VO 21 IS Supplement 3 A1 Aghajafari, Fariba A1 Weightman, Amanda M. A1 Ness, Alyssa A1 Wall, Laurent A1 Kuk, Bryan A1 Anupindi, Krishna YR 2023 UL http://www.annfammed.org/content/21/Supplement_3/4927.abstract AB Context: Refugees and migrants globally face inequities to healthcare and COVID-19 vaccination access, calling for tailored approaches to ensure equitable vaccine allocation. This research explored refugee specific models of COVID-19 vaccine delivery.Objective: The purpose was to understand the barriers and strengths of each model to support access to COVID-19 vaccination for refugees.Study Design and Analysis: The project used a mixed method approach that included secondary vaccination data of refugees and primary interview data. A mixed method data analysis approach was adopted to explore the research questions, and thematic analysis was conducted on qualitative data.Setting or Dataset: This study examined COVID-19 vaccination systems for refugees in the Calgary, Canada area.Population Studied: Research participants were identified through purposive sampling and include settlement and healthcare organization staff involved in vaccination pathways for refugees, sponsors of refugees, and refugees that were processed in Calgary.Intervention/Instrument: A database of refugee COVID-19 vaccinations was used to inform findings. Structured and semi-structured interview data was collected with settlement and healthcare organizations stakeholders (N=13), refugee sponsors (N=3) and refugees (N=45).Results: The research explored COVID-19 models of vaccine delivery for refugees, including: mobile vaccine clinics, temporary based community clinics, on-site vaccination clinics in refugee processing hotels, mainstream vaccination clinics and pharmacies. Models of vaccination delivery were not static. They evolved as a result of contextual factors, such as refugee needs, shifts in demographics, changes in public health policy and funding mandates. As a result, the impact on refugee health also evolved. Most models provided services in a culturally responsive manner and also served newcomers. Models created positive and culturally safe contexts through partnerships where barriers were mitigated and patients could access vaccinations. Partnerships provided health navigators, outreach, translation, built trust and helped models form new partnerships to address the emerging needs of patients.Conclusions: This project demonstrated that public health systems can adapt through partnerships and provide culturally responsive ways delivering vaccines. This has implications for the approach to health care service delivery for specialized populations.