Weekly Roundup
COVID-19 Vaccine Development, Policy, and Public Perception in the United States
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CommuniVax Corner
REMINDER: Please help us assess the utility, reach, and impact of CommuniVax and identify what work remains to advance equity in the COVID-19 response/recovery and beyond by completing this anonymous, 5-minute survey. Thank you for generously sharing your time and insights with us.
Some media updates:
- Our team leader in Alabama, Dr. Stephanie McClure, was quoted in this ABC11 story about vaccine hesitancy among Black Alabamians.
- The team in Idaho was recently profiled in the Idaho State Journal, where they discussed structural barriers to COVID-19 vaccination among Hispanic communities.
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People, Perceptions, and Polls
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NEWS
The South’s Resistance to Vaccination Is Not As Incomprehensible As It Seems. A thought experiment by Angie Maxwell, a professor of political science and director of the Diane Blair Center of Southern Politics and Society at the University of Arkansas, through a provocative analysis of Southern history and psychology, explores the idea that the white South has a collective “inferiority complex” that explains its very specific tendency toward backlash . (Slate, 10/1/21)
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OPINION
Anti-Vaxx Parents Don’t Care If You Get Sick. Central to true wellness is the notion of community care, the proverbial village raising the child. Community care revolves around the sentiment that, for better or worse, we are all interconnected. The anti-vaxx wellness folks seem to me less a network of diverse contributors, feeling responsibility toward one another in pursuit of a greater whole, and more a crowd of individuals who all have landed on the same philosophy for themselves, for their own self-interests. (The Cut, 9/30/21)
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NEWS
Hollywood Battle Lines Emerge in Simmering Vaccine War. Though Hollywood might appear unified when it comes to embracing such COVID-19 preventive measures as vaccines, the reality is more divided, mirroring the broader American population, where 44 percent are not fully vaccinated, according to the CDC. In the film and TV industry, there are no universal vaccine mandates in place, allowing for individual producers to determine whether those in Zone A — typically the project’s main actors, who cannot wear a mask because of storylines, as well as key crewmembers — require proof of vaccination . (Hollywood Reporter, 10/6/21)
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NEWS
Comedian Russell Brand Has Become a Powerful Voice for Anti-Vaxxers. For the past few weeks, Brand has taken issue with the vaccine, casting doubt on the trustworthiness of the FDA, asking if vaccine mandates are an assault on people’s bodily freedoms, calling the vaccine a “gold rush,” and pondering whether people could trust Bill Gates. Most recently, Brand declared that there was a “vaccine apartheid,” going after CNN anchor Don Lemon after he called out people who refused to get vaccinated . (Daily Beast, 10/3/21)
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NEWS
A Better Name for Booster Shots. The pandemic has, in effect, boosted boosters into the public sphere. And yet, we are still really bad at talking about them. In the top echelons of the CDC, in the back alleys of Twitter, no one can seem to agree on who needs boosters, or when or why, or what that term truly, technically means—even as additional shots that officials are calling boosters continue to enter arms. (The Atlantic, 10/5/21)
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NEWS
HHS vaccination ads use a new tactic to increase Covid-19 vaccination rates: fear. "When you pair that with optimism and a way to take action -- vaccination -- to avoid the negative consequences, you can really make a positive impact," said a senior official with the US Department of Health and Human Services who was involved with the ad campaign. Public opinion experts praised the advertisements, saying it was time to take a new approach -- one that uses the death and misery many Americans are witnessing firsthand . (CNN, 10/6/21)
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NEWS
The Geography of Vaccines. Vaccination is yet another dimension of America’s economic and geographic divides. Factors like class, race and the kinds of places we choose to live, which contribute to our political divide, also work to shape the rate of vaccination across different kinds of places. Correlation, of course, is not causation; yet it’s striking to see how unambiguously the associations line up . (Bloomberg, 10/4/21)
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RESEARCH
Parental consent for vaccination of minors against COVID-19. As of May 2021, emergency use authorization for Pfizer’s COVID-19 vaccine applies to minors at least 12 years of age—some 25 million adolescents across the United States. While this change marks a critical step towards herd immunity and return to normality in everyday life, it also raises a host of questions concerning parental consent for vaccination of minors in pandemic times, most notably: should parental consent be required for COVID vaccine administration? (Vaccine, 10/25/21)
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Law, Policy, and Politics
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Research, Development, and Clinical Practice
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This newsletter supports CommuniVax, a research coalition convened by the
Johns Hopkins Center for Health Security and the Texas State University Department of Anthropology,
with support from the Chan Zuckerberg Initiative and The Rockefeller Foundation.
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