Skip to main content
×
Home
  • About
    • Mission, Vision, & Strategic Themes
    • Leadership, Governance, & Professional Staff
    • Center Structure
    • Our Impact
      • Impact Report 2025
    • Giving
    • Get Involved
  • Research
    • Funding Pathways
      • Data Collaborative Pilot Funding
      • Impact Accelerator Grants
      • Seed Grants
    • Data Collaborative
    • Supported Projects
  • Education & Training
    • Seminars
    • Impact Scholars Program
    • Student Programming
  • Membership
    • Become A Member
    • Member Search
    • Member Communities
  • News & Events
    • Events
    • News
Subscribe to Our Newsletter
+
Subscribe to Our Newsletter
+

Breadcrumb

  1. Home
  2. Research
  3. Supported Projects
  4. TABRIE: Familiar Spaces, Trusted Faces
Project Investigators
Abram Wagner, PhD, MPH
Assistant Professor
Epidemiology
Daniel Birchok, PhD
Associate Professor
Anthropology
Jason Pogue, PharmD
Clinical Professor
Pharmacy
Rahul Ladhania, PhD
Assistant Professor
Health Management and Policy
Collaborating Organizations
University of Syiah Kuala
Narra Sains Indonesia

TABRIE: Familiar Spaces, Trusted Faces

Start Date: 
January 2023
End Date: 
December 2025
Project Affiliation: 
Faculty

The Trusted Faces, Familiar Places project, a collaborative effort between the University of Michigan and Universitas Syiah Kuala, aimed to enhance vaccine equity in Aceh, Indonesia by addressing trust and accessibility issues around vaccination services. Led by Abram Wagner and Harapan, the initiative deployed innovative methods to increase vaccination uptake in communities with low pediatric vaccination rates. The project's central strategy involved engaging local religious and community leaders in health conferences to promote vaccine information and culturally appropriate counseling. In tandem, a "vaccine-in-a-van" concept was implemented, bringing vaccination services to social and religious spaces to increase convenience and visibility. Over three years, districts in Aceh were randomized into different intervention groups, with a focus on training community health workers in vaccine administration and communication skills. The project sought to create a sustainable, community-integrated vaccination network by systematically approaching vaccine hesitancy and leveraging trusted local figures, ultimately aiming to establish a scalable model for other LMICs.

Link to clinical trials page (clinicaltrials.gov)

In the News

  • Making Vaccination “Easy” in Indonesia with Trusted Faces and Familiar Places
Themes
Vaccine Equity
Locations
Indonesia
U-M Center for Global Health EquitySubscribe to Our Newsletter
  • Twitter
  • LinkedIn
  • YouTube

We bring people together globally across disciplines to co-create bold solutions that improve health where resources are limited.

Sitemap:

  • About
  • Research
  • Education & Training
  • Membership
  • News & Events
  • Giving

Quick Links:

  • Contact Us
  • Branding
  • Resources for Vendors
  • Videos & Recordings
©2026 The Regents of the University of Michigan Produced by Michigan Creative, a unit of the Office of the Vice President for Communications