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Fat Babes Club of Columbus hosts pool parties, yoga classes for people with marginalized bodies
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Plus-size community revels in Fat Babes Club of Columbus pool parties
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CHARLIE CURNIN/The Stanford Daily
an hour ago
Stanford Medicine researchers found that two-thirds of incarcerated residents in California who were offered a COVID-19 vaccine accepted at least one dose, an encouraging sign that other jails and prisons nationwide can offer the same protection for their vulnerable carceral populations.
The May 12 study, a part of the Stanford-CIDE Coronavirus Simulation Model team, examined both how the vaccine was rolled out in incarcerated populations and how many individuals chose to get the vaccine. The research started last December, when vaccinations began, with data collection cutting off in March of this year.
California prisons have rapidly rolled out the vaccines and achieved high uptake, the study showed. Two-thirds of 97,779 incarcerated residents were offered a vaccine dose, and 66.5% of them accepted at least one. There were especially high vaccine acceptance rates nearly 80% among the most medically vulnerable incarcerated res
E-Mail
Two-thirds of California prisoners who were offered a COVID-19 vaccine accepted at least one dose, according to a new study by researchers at the Stanford University School of Medicine. We found that many incarcerated people in California prisons were willing to be vaccinated for COVID-19, said Elizabeth Chin, the lead author of the study and a PhD candidate in biomedical data science. This is an encouraging sign for other states at an early stage of rolling out vaccination programs in their prisons and jails.
The researchers also found that nearly half of those who initially turned down a COVID-19 vaccine accepted it when it was offered to them again. The finding is an important indication that vaccine hesitancy is not necessarily fixed.
An interview by Eshe Lewis with anthropologist Camee Maddox-Wingfield for
Sapiens explores how practitioners of
bèlè on the island of Martinique find agency, healing, and connection. Lewis holds a Ph.D. in cultural anthropology and is the public anthropology fellow at SAPIENS.
As public discussions about social justice and Black resistance continue in the aftermath of the murder of George Floyd, an African American man, by a White, Minneapolis police officer last year, protestors around the world have filled city streets calling for structural changes that will protect and value Black lives. At the same time, Black communities are continuing conversations about creating safe spaces where members can continue to share knowledge, heal, honor their pasts, and build dignified futures.
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