“My Business Challenges are Far Worse Right Now, I Will go for Covid-19 Vaccine Later”: Post-pandemic Lessons from the Covid-19 Vaccine Rollout in Informal Settlements in Harare, Kampala, Lilongwe and Nairobi
Date
2024-04Author
Lines, Kate
Dzimadzi, Stanley
Ernstson, Henrik
Kimani, Joseph
Koyaro, Michelle
Luka, Zilire
Manyowa, Tarisai
Masimba Nyama, George
Mudimu, Patience
Muganyi, Sheila
Isolo Mukwaya, Paul
Nuwahereza, Viola
Nyamangara, Teurai
Alves Sebbanja, Junior
Songoro, Elvira
Sseviiri, Hakimu
Sverdlik, Alice
Wairutu, Jane
Zidana, Happiness
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Abstract
This paper focuses on the immediate post-pandemic period (2021–23) to discuss how the Covid vaccination rollout offers insights into the pandemic’s longer-term socioeconomic, health and political consequences for marginalised residents of African cities. Our findings provide a snapshot of the local impact of global vaccine inequalities as these continued to play out in Harare, Lilongwe, Kampala and Nairobi. Structural barriers to vaccine deployment and access continued to be exacerbated by pre-pandemic inequities in infrastructure, basic services and local governance. Among low-income urban communities in the four cities, interest in getting vaccinated and vaccine accessibility have both declined despite improvements in global allocation and national availability. Drivers of hesitancy changed over time, as perceptions of risk shifted from the high potential harm of vaccination to the low severity of the Covid health threat, further influenced by limited availability of information from trusted sources. And Covid vaccination campaigns have largely been eclipsed by overlapping new crises, the effects of which have further compromised many people’s already slow recovery.