Misinformation is killing people Heres the truth about COVID vaccines
U.S. Surgeon General Vivek Murthy issued his first formal health advisory last week, warning Americans that misinformation about COVID-19 vaccines poses an âimminent and insidious threat to our nationâs health.â
Such advisories are typically used to flag the dangers of tobacco use or the opioid epidemic. Murthyâs was the first to target vaccine disinformation.
âSimply put, health misinformation has cost us lives,â he said.
The surgeon generalâs warning came as many Americansâ reluctance â" and sometimes downright refusal â" to roll up their sleeves for the vaccination has left wide swaths of the country vulnerable to the more contagious Delta variant.
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âThe only pandemic we have is among the unvaccinated,â President Biden lamented last week.
Now, the overwhelming majority of COVID-19 deaths are among those who havenât gotten the vaccination.
âItâs really sad and tragic that most all of these are avoidable and preventable,â Dr. Anthony Fauci, the nationâs top infectious disease expert, said this month on NBCâs âMeet the Press.â
Yet the misinformation continues to circulate, and vaccine doses remain unused. So we asked to two experts to evaluate four common arguments and explain why theyâre wrong.
âIâve already had COVID, so I donât need the vaccine.âSurviving a bout of COVID-19 probably wonât protect you as effectively as a full course of COVID-19 vaccine, experts say.
âWe know that the level of antibodies one gets from natural infection varies depending on the severity of their infection,â said Mercedes Carnethon, an epidemiologist at Northwestern University Feinberg School of Medicine. On the other hand, âwe get a more robust and consistent response from the vaccine.â That makes it a better bet âfor immunity over a long period of time,â she said.
Itâs also unclear whether the antibodies you developed in response to a coronavirus infection will be able to recognize other variants of the virus.
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âSomebody who had COVID at the beginning of the pandemic may have had a very different variant than whatâs circulating right now,â Carnethon said. âThe vaccines are demonstrating that they protect against the new variants.â
Even if youâve had COVID-19, getting those shots is well worth it. Scientists have found that even a single dose of vaccine gives the immune system of a COVID-19 survivor a big boost.
âWe donât know the vaccineâs long-term side effects.âHistorically, the vast majority of vaccine side effects occur not long after getting the shot, said Dr. Gabor Kelen, head of the emergency medicine department at Johns Hopkins University. Allergic reactions, which are rare, happen within moments; most other side effects emerge and dissipate within weeks.
âPeople need to chill about the long-term impact,â Kelen said. âThe way immunology works is [if] somethingâs gonna happen, itâs gonna happen fairly soon,â he said.
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What you really should be worried about are the long-term effects of a coronavirus infection, Carnethon said. She ticked off a few of the problems that plague the unfortunate people who suffer from long-haul COVID, including heart inflammation, fatigue and cognitive difficulties.
Throughout history, she said, âthereâs been no vaccine that had worse side effects than the disease that it was developed to fight.â
âI donât need to be vaccinated because Iâm young and healthy.âYoung people may be less likely to become seriously ill compared with senior citizens or people already dealing with chronic health problems, but it does happen. Young people end up in the hospital. They die. If they survive, they often have to live with debilitating symptoms for months, if not longer.
Itâs not worth taking that chance â" particularly when vaccinations are free to recipients and readily available, experts said.
âYouâll be fine â" unless youâre not,â Carnethon said. âAnd itâs young adults who are seeing a little more of the long-haul COVID, which can interfere with your quality of life massively.â
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In some ways, the bigger problem is that younger adults with mild symptoms can spread the virus to others â" especially elderly and vulnerable loved ones, who are more likely to develop severe COVID-19 and die from it.
âYouâre ultimately going to give it to a friend [who] is going to get very, very sick, or make their grandmother very, very sick,â Kelen said. In the end, âyou have no idea who you kill.â
âItâs a personal choice to get vaccinated.ââIf that was all there is to it, I think all of us could shake our heads and say, âOK, youâre right, we canât stop you from making bad decisions, we can just give the facts and advice,ââ Kelen said.
But the problem with that argument is that âthis is an infection where itâs not only about you,â he said. âIf you donât get vaccinated, itâs not only you who takes the risk. You risk a lot of people around you, including people you like and love.â
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Vaccine âobstinanceâ is fueling Delta variantâs spread across America
The Delta variant of the coronavirus has taken on a decidedly American feel, mainly targeting those who just wonât get vaccinated.
Plus, folks who donât get vaccinated are providing the coronavirus with more opportunities to evolve in ways that make it better at spreading, better at making people seriously ill, and better at evading our medicines and vaccines. If any of those things happen, it will prolong the pandemic.
âWe all want to get back to normal. We all want to be able to do the things that we used to be able to do regularly,â Carnethon said. âBut by not getting vaccinated, now thereâs someone else it can spread to and change itself further.â
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