SBVC Launches COVID-19 Forums to Inform and Empower Local Community
San Bernardino Valley College (SBVC) recently hosted a series of informational forums
that address COVID-19 and the racial, ethnic and cultural disparities in public health
and vaccination.
The COVID-19 forums were an effort spearheaded by the SBVC Biology Department to provide
a space for San Bernardino community members to have conversations about the unique
concerns of minority groups while also providing factual information.
Tatiana Vásquez, associate professor of biology at SBVC, has been involved in organizing
the forum. She said she and her fellow organizers felt compelled to put together the
COVID-19 series after recognizing the concerns within the local community about vaccination
and mistrust of the medical establishment and governmental bodies.
“We want to have different perspectives and voices to bring up something informative,
but also this presents an opportunity to have conversations about sensitive issues,
and those sensitive issues, I think, haven’t been addressed very well on the national
level,” Vásquez said.
Fellow organizer and assistant professor in Student Health Services (SHS) Laura Estrada
said the goal was to provide factual information while providing a safe space for
people in the community to air their concerns about how the pandemic is affecting
their specific communities.
“We want to make sure that our students are going to be well informed to make decisions
in regards to their health,” Estrada said. “Being in SHS, that’s our primary goal:
providing preventative health education and making sure that we’re bringing awareness
to our students and that we also acknowledge and be transparent about the process
of this information.”
The first session, “Medical Apartheid on Black Americans” was hosted by author Harriet
Washington, and centered around the medical establishment’s abuse of Black Americans
and how that has potentially affected their ability to trust advancements in medicine,
including the distribution of the COVID-19 vaccine.
Other sessions centered around the biology of viruses, development of vaccines, and
how San Bernardino County and the surrounding counties are distributing the inoculations.
The last forum of the series included a segment for sharing personal stories and collective
grieving about COVID-19.
Associated Student Government Vice President Deja Holland and vice president of the
Program Board said these forums were necessary to help close the gaps in how the pandemic
is negatively affecting communities of color. Holland, who is a nursing student at
SBVC, said she has seen the distrust among her nursing student peers.
“We saw that information was not relayed transparently from the last presidential
administration, and then understanding that medical-industrial complex hasn’t ever,
for people of color, proven themselves trustworthy,” she said. “And so there are so
many layers to this and we don’t really have these transparent conversations where
we can bring our stories of what’s happened to us or what we’ve experienced in healthcare.
We’re also trying to make sure (our community) has factual information so that, at
the end of the day, they can make this judgment call with the right information in
hand.”
The ultimate goal, according to Estrada, was to develop trust within the local community
via sharing factual information and encourage individuals to get the vaccine and ultimately
help curb the virus.
“A lot of our students are Hispanic - SBVC is a Hispanic-serving institution and this
is an information piece that has not been addressed very well for the students at
large, in the community or even in the nation,” she said. “So we want to provide a
lens for this issue. When it comes to your health, it’s not just an individual, it’s
a whole community. We want to make sure that the students and the community are informed
so that they can share this information within their own homes and that communication
can keep expanding.”
For more information about how to attend the COVID-19 forum series, or to watch past
recordings, visit valleycollege.edu/covid-forums.