ABSTRACT
People with criminal legal system involvement (CLSI) have experienced five times as many COVID-19
infections and have three times the risk of death compared to general population in the U.S. Heavily impacted
by COVID-19 and squarely within NIH health disparities populations, people with CLSI are often poor and
disproportionately from racial and ethnic minority groups. Despite the increased risk of COVID-19, we expect
that only one-half of people with CLSI will get vaccinated. Ongoing COVID-19 testing in communities and among
groups that are not vaccinated will be key to containing the pandemic. The messaging that COVID-19 testing
will still be important may not be getting through to people who are at risk – a critical driver of disparities.
Our team has a unique opportunity to boost testing literacy, access, and uptake using mobile health
(mHealth) technologies (text and Web) to reach women with CLSI in community settings who are part of the
existing Tri-City Cohort drawn from geographically and socio-politically diverse cities: Birmingham, AL, Kansas
City, MO/KS, and Oakland, CA. This application is highly responsive to the RADx-UP Phase II call for research
that tests interventions to reduce COVID-19 disparities among underserved populations. Our team is positioned
to embed the proposed study into an existing Web-based women’s health literacy intervention platform
(www.shewomen.org, 2R01CA181047) for women leaving jail. We are also able to immediately push the
mHealth COVID-19 testing literacy intervention to 508 women we have already recruited to a three-city cervical
health study of women with CLSI (R01CA226838), and to promptly make this scalable intervention widely
available to people with CLSI.
We will engage the women as stakeholders to study regional and individual differences in COVID-19 testing
and vaccine literacy, access, and uptake. We will use findings to rapidly develop an mHealth intervention focused
on COVID-19 literacy, and then push the intervention to CLSI women in the three cities to boost COVID-19
literacy, testing, access, and uptake, and vaccination. Findings will be used to develop dissemination strategies
with stakeholders to push the mHealth intervention to the two million women and 11 million men who interface
with the criminal legal system annually in the U.S.