Working together toward better community health is the core mission of all Community
Health Workers and the COVID-19 pandemic has shown us all both how important and how
difficult that work really is. Especially among communities that were used to feeling
excluded from the medical system, the call for trusting each other and working together
seemed half-hearted and one-sided. The Community Health Workers Initiative has always
fought for better outcomes through community and understood that you can't take trust
for granted in any community - it must be earned!
We continued our ongoing work as advocates for the community through the Trust & Learn
and worked to provide concrete resources for better surviving the pandemic. In the
early spring of 2021, UH CHWs/Promotores de Salud and students supported some of the
first community vaccine events in the Greater Houston Area and we continue to work
hard informing people that the vaccines are one of the best methods to provide health
equity going forward.
Even before the vaccines became widely available, it was clear that outcomes were
deeply effected by the long-term effects of widespread disaffection from the health
system - either because of lack of access or lack of engagement, many people had no
history of working with the healthcare system to solve problems.
In a Rockefeller Foundation funded collaboration with Bread of Life and other partners
around the Houston area, we moved our focus to the long-term relationships that convince
people that they should work with the healthcare system. Now expanding to partnerships
with Community Family Centers, Vecino Clinics, and Kids Lives Matter, we help CHWs
form a network of individually responsive health advocacy, which includes vaccination
as part of the larger picture of good health.