Vaccine Hesitancy

According to a recent Pew Research Report, 39% of people questioned “definitely or probably would not get a coronavirus vaccine,” and only 37% are comfortable enough to be first in line to get the vaccine. Everyone has to make their own personal decision and that decision is based on facts, but also on emotions, worldviews, and values. Nurses General Nursing Article

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What’s behind the reluctance to take the Covid-19 vaccine? Anti-vaccination sentiment is nothing new. There are many reasons, including fringe conspiracies. The surrealness of our lives in 2020, a lack of hard information, skepticism and social media all gave rise to waves of conspiracies. 

One such conspiracy claims the vaccine contains microchips designed to alter our DNA and track our whereabouts. It even implicated Bill Gates in the narrative. But conspiracists and Covid-deniers are a small minority, as are ardent anti-vaxxers such as those who believe childhood vaccinations cause autism.

But now there’s a new group, who are neither conspiracists nor anti-vaxxers. To some, it’s a paradox that this group includes healthcare workers.

Anti-Covid-19 vaxxers

“I’m not an anti-vaxxer, but…”

The new group is anti-Covid-19 vaxxers. 

Reasons for Reluctance

It feels scary to inject an unknown substance into our bodies. Proponents are saying it’s safe now, but it’s understandable to worry about what’s as yet unknown.

Fear of adverse effects 

Some are not sure how the vaccine may affect their future fertility. Some say they do not want to be guinea pigs but might feel more comfortable in a few months after watching others and with real-world proof. Some believe the vaccine could cause future disease. It’s important for reporting agencies to be transparent about side effects.

Misinformation

One fear, that of being injected with the virus, is based on the understanding that most vaccines contain a version of the same germ or virus that causes the disease. But messenger RNA is not a germ or virus. mRNA teaches our cells to produce an immune response (antibodies).

Lack of information

Some who have been infected already believe it’s not needed because they have antibody protection. It’s not yet known how long antibody protection lasts. Can you be infected more than once? Cases have been recorded.

Novelty and rapid research and development 

Since vaccines typically take years, even decades, to develop, many are concerned at how fast the vaccines were rolled out and do not trust the accelerated process. Was safety compromised? Scientists say no. Researchers leveraged previous vaccine research and had newer technology as well as a lack of financial barriers.

Cultural mistrust of healthcare authorities

Mistrust in Latino and Black communities exists due to historic medical racism. Black males were lied to in the Tuskegee Syphilis Study for over 40 yrs, going back to 1932. 

According to a Pew Research Report here's the breakdown by race of who would definitely or probably get vaccinated:

  • 83% English-speaking Asian Americans 
  • 63% of Hispanic 
  • 61% of White adults. 
  • 42% of Black Americans 

The numbers speak volumes.

Herd immunity: What is it? 

Herd immunity is when a large percent of a population becomes immune to a disease, reducing the chance of person-to-person transmission by reducing the available hosts.

The more contagious a disease is, the more people in the community need immunity. Measles is one of the most contagious diseases, and according to the Mayo Clinic, 94% of the population must be immune, which is the threshold for measles. Polio, smallpox and diphtheria have been contained by herd immunity.

Originally the WHO said 60-70% but Dr. Anthony Fauci, head of the National Institute for Allergy and Infectious Diseases, has recently said herd immunity could take up to 85% vaccine coverage

If entire communities of people refuse the vaccine then theoretically they are susceptible to the disease spreading quickly.  It could predict future hotspots of an outbreak.

However, it has not been proven that the vaccine prevents transmission. It’s possible that immunized people can catch the virus, not become sick, but still pass it on to others.

nurses-against-the-covid-vaccine.jpg.2ff30bc37bb95ebdcd84d56f221cfb9f.jpg

Nurse Responsibility

What is important is that we as clinicians stay informed on the latest vaccine data. Our words and actions carry weight with others. Be a source of credible information, and articulate your point of view.

I am receiving my second dose in days, and it’s a personal risk/benefit decision. I am over 65, work in a hospital, and there’s a good chance I could get very, very sick if infected. 

Be Safe

Finally, be safe. I can’t recall the source, but somewhere in Europe, maybe France, a leader said “pretend you have the virus and act accordingly”  If everyone did that, we could reduce transmission by distancing and masking.

Are you planning to get vaccinated and why or why not?

Best wishes and stay healthy,

Nurse Beth

Author, "First-Year Nurse",  the ultimate insider's guide to helping new nurses succeed while avoiding first-year pitfalls.

References

Herd immunity and COVID-19 (coronavirus): What you need to know. nd. Mayoclinic.org Retrieved January 10 2021.

Funk, Cary. Tyson, Alec.  2020. Intent to Get a COVID-19 Vaccine Rises to 60% as Confidence in Research and Development Process Increases. Pewresearch.org Retrieved January 10, 2021.

McNeil Jr., Donald. How Much Herd Immunity Is Enough? 2020. nytimes.org. Retrieved January 10, 2021.

The Tuskegee Timeline. Reviewed 2020.  CDC.gov Retrieved January 10 2021.

Doshi, Peter. Will Covid-19 vaccines save lives? Current trials aren’t designed to tell us. 2020. Retrieved January 13, 2020.

I'm interested in knowing where my tax dollars went when Trump stated that he had bought enough vaccines ahead of everyone? Now we are finding out that there's barely enough for even the first dose. 

 

Specializes in clinic nurse.
43 minutes ago, DallasRN said:

Why is that?  I had #1 Pfizer last Sunday and not a single thing. Not even soreness at injection site.

Because your immune system is reacting at full (or near full?) capacity unlike after vaccine number 1 which is kind of like a priming or introductory dose. Others may be able to explain it better.

Specializes in ICU/ER/Med-Surg/Case Management/Manageme.
Just now, JVBT said:

Because your immune system is reacting at full (or near full?) capacity unlike after vaccine number 1 which is kind of like a priming or introductory dose. Others may be able to explain it better.

Thanks! I was amazed at the lack of anything after #1. Maybe I'll be lucky with #2.

Specializes in Med-Surg, NICU.

I plan on becoming pregnant later this year, so I declined the vaccine. I also have an autoimmune disorder, so I think it is best that I hold off. I have been working the COVID floor since March and have been fortunate enough not to get sick. If I can prevent getting COVID19 for 10 months, I think I can go a little longer.

On 1/20/2021 at 7:32 PM, vintagegal said:

Why does everyone insist on this “government tracking” conspiracy theory? Bill Gates and the other ultra rich super elite of society already have all the information they could ever want- too many peoples’ lives laid out entirely on social media. 

On the website Gab, there is a video of Gates talking about the fundvax.  unless it has already been taken down.

It is a vaccine that can cause zealots to calm down and not pursue pushing or trying to achieve their fundamentalist agenda.

Fundamentalists might include those with certain religious views or certain political views or anyone who disagrees with whoever is currently in power.

Just sayin'

On 1/29/2021 at 6:10 AM, Kooky Korky said:

On the website Gab, there is a video of Gates talking about the fundvax.  unless it has already been taken down.

It is a vaccine that can cause zealots to calm down and not pursue pushing or trying to achieve their fundamentalist agenda.

Fundamentalists might include those with certain religious views or certain political views or anyone who disagrees with whoever is currently in power.

Just sayin'

Do you, a nurse, actually believe that a mind-altering vaccine exists that changes how people think and behave and that can be used to change a person’s religious or political views? Seriously, you really need to be more critical of information found on the internet. To me, it’s scary that you believe this is real.
 


https://www.snopes.com/fact-check/bill-gates-brief-cia-in-2005/

On 1/29/2021 at 12:10 AM, Kooky Korky said:

On the website Gab, there is a video of Gates talking about the fundvax.  unless it has already been taken down.

It is a vaccine that can cause zealots to calm down and not pursue pushing or trying to achieve their fundamentalist agenda.

Fundamentalists might include those with certain religious views or certain political views or anyone who disagrees with whoever is currently in power.

Just sayin'

In Psych we use anti psychotics for delusional thinking. 

Just saying. 

Like Macawake says, you honestly don't believe this stuff, do you? 

As nurses we are exposed to lab values daily depicting the fine balances sustaining our lives on a physical level and exquisite functioning of our systems to maintain those fine balances. Just a little too much potassium and we know what happens.

And, yet we fill our minds with such claptrap. Even a few moments of critical thinking and you will know what nonsense it is. 

Comm'on peeps, ours is a science based profession! Space laser rays and lizard people shouldn't even have a toe hold in our domain. 

7 hours ago, macawake said:

Do you, a nurse, actually believe that a mind-altering vaccine exists that changes how people think and behave and that can be used to change a person’s religious or political views? Seriously, you really need to be more critical of information found on the internet. To me, it’s scary that you believe this is real.
 


https://www.snopes.com/fact-check/bill-gates-brief-cia-in-2005/

How can any thinking person not realize that there is a lot that the average outsider doesn't know?  Nurse or jockey or gardener or farrier?

I didn't say I believe it or not.  As an outsider re: Gates, Snopes, the CIA, etc., I don't quite know what to make of it.

Folks, don't be so quick to condemn, poke fun, and otherwise express that you really don't 100% know what to make of things like this either.

6 hours ago, Curious1997 said:

In Psych we use anti psychotics for delusional thinking. 

Just saying. 

Like Macawake says, you honestly don't believe this stuff, do you? 

As nurses we are exposed to lab values daily depicting the fine balances sustaining our lives on a physical level and exquisite functioning of our systems to maintain those fine balances. Just a little too much potassium and we know what happens.

And, yet we fill our minds with such claptrap. Even a few moments of critical thinking and you will know what nonsense it is. 

Comm'on peeps, ours is a science based profession! Space laser rays and lizard people shouldn't even have a toe hold in our domain. 

Science is always right, of course.  

Your mind is filled with sarcasm, Curious, and venom.  You are too angry to convince me that you are right, on just your word.

I am not at all certain that you couldn't perhaps benefit from some of those meds you think fix everything.

Please never look beyond the obvious, Dude.  You might discover something you don't know.

38 minutes ago, Kooky Korky said:

Science is always right, of course.  

Your mind is filled with sarcasm, Curious, and venom.  You are too angry to convince me that you are right, on just your word.

I am not at all certain that you couldn't perhaps benefit from some of those meds you think fix everything.

Please never look beyond the obvious, Dude.  You might discover something you don't know.

Kooky, Curious is in the name. I'm always open to ideas just they must have a logical progression before I explore them. For example, Gates gives so much of his money to charitable causes.... What does that say about his character?

If it was possible to alter someone's thinking through a vaccine, can it be areosolized? Can it be weaponized? Knowing how the human mind works, do you think that the evolution of memory works that way? There are so many variables and so many impossible hindrances especially when we know how memory mostly works! 

Do you not think the first thing he would do if he was that nefarious and such a vaccine was possible, would be to seek an audience with the wealthiest, infect them, modify their memory and take their money making him the most powerful man in the world? Pure science fiction! Outrageous and outlandish! 

You have to, using your fund of knowledge, be able to see contextually how these outrageous ideas doesn't make sense, just like my idiotic suggestions above. 

It reflects upon your character what you put out and is an excellent indicator of what you input! You represent NURSES DUDE, and we have to continue to display that we aren't Kooky! 

Specializes in Trauma, Teaching.

My hospital was the first in our state to get Pfizer vaccines; I got mine on the 2nd day it was offered, and the repeat in early January.

Why?  I have a personal hx of getting things!  PEs postop, HepB while volunteering overseas, Breast cancer despite not having the gene, Flu A the only year I skipped my shot (septic, week in hospital) (okay, so I was having chemo at the time, still...).

I am in the high risk group, resp. issues, over 60 (but not 65 yet, LOL), only 6 years out of tx for the CA.  And I work in the ER.  

Developing the vaccine isn't a "new science"; they didn't have to start from scratch.  Besides, if they give it to all the health care workers first and we die, who will be left to take care of them?  Okay, spurious but humerous logic.

First shot, sore arm and heavy fatigue, so I never got around to going on the website to report sxs.  Second shot, hot and flushed for 18 to 24 hours, fatigue, then some mild cold sxs.  Some few  at work missed some time from their reactions (feeling lousy), on the whole, nothing serious.

Now we are getting reports of people's longer term problems even after recovering from covid: no thanks, not if I can avoid it.

 

17 hours ago, Kooky Korky said:

How can any thinking person not realize that there is a lot that the average outsider doesn't know?  Nurse or jockey or gardener or farrier?

There are a lot of things I don’t know but that doesn’t mean that I can’t use what I do know to interpret and evaluate claims, data and information. 

Let’s say that you are the triage nurse at the local ER. A patient presents with xyz complaint and then tells you to please tell the nurse who will draw her blood that she is a bit unusual and doesn’t want the nurse to freak out when the blood comes out green.

According to the patient this will happen because she claims to not have blood in her circulatory system, but Type IV Aircraft Deicing Fluid instead. Would you give your coworker the headsup that the blood sample will be green or will you correctly deduce that ethylene glycol couldn’t support human life and the patient’s belief is wrong? 

The next patient you see claimed that when he went to the bathroom to urinate, a violin ”came out” and that it was quite a painful experience. (Knowing the diameter of the urethra we obviously realize that must have hurt. A lot.) So do you the triage nurse suspect some kind of psychiatric illness, head trauma or drug intoxication? Or do you send them off for a CT scan because you are dying to know exactly how many violins can fit into a human bladder? 

I don’t think you’d have any problems figuring out the above patients. Why aren’t you also able to apply your knowledge as a nurse and realize right away that the mind-altering vaccine baloney is just that? Baloney. 

Even without being a specialist in neuroscience I’m sure that you realize that the process that takes place when we feel things, remember things and make decisions is very complex.

What would be this vaccine’s mechanism of action? Targeting what exactly? With what? How would this vaccine work pharmacologically and physiologically? And what on earth would the vaccine maker be hoping to accomplish? It just doesn’t make sense. 
 

17 hours ago, Kooky Korky said:

Folks, don't be so quick to condemn, poke fun, and otherwise express that you really don't 100% know what to make of things like this either.

I’m not poking fun. I just find it deeply troubling that you would even entertain the concept of Gates or anyone else having created a vaccine that can change people’s political or religious views. 
 

17 hours ago, Kooky Korky said:

I didn't say I believe it or not.  As an outsider re: Gates, Snopes, the CIA, etc., I don't quite know what to make of it.

You didn’t have to say that you believe it. The fact that you made a post mentioning this tells me that you don’t think it’s impossible. Personally, I dismissed it out of hand. I’m an ECREE (extraordinary claims require extraordinary evidence) kind of person. You see, I don’t think that either Gates or anyone else has either the means nor the motive to do this. It’s as much fantasy as a person walking into an ER with deicing fluid coursing through their arteries and veins. 

Kooky Korky, you appear to believe that all claims no matter how illogical, outrageous and most importantly unsubstantiated, have equal value and should be afforded the same consideration. To me, that’s not a rational approach to interpreting the world we live in.