Weekly Roundup
COVID-19 Vaccine Development, Policy, and Public Perception in the United States
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CommuniVax Corner
Some media updates from our local teams:
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People, Perceptions, and Polls
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OPINION
The Choice to Vaccinate Has Never Been Free. Common parlance, including the ire of at least a few public officials, might lead some to assume “the unvaccinated” are a self-selecting, selfish gaggle of anti-vaxxers. But the truth is that when compared to those have received a Covid vaccine, those who have not are more likely to be children, working-age adults who earn less than $40,000 per year, Black or Hispanic folks, and the uninsured. (The Nation, 8/11/21)
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OPINION
Relax, America: The Vaccines Are Still Working. Pfizer says its vaccine becomes less effective with time. Moderna says its doesn’t. And Johnson & Johnson says its vaccine holds up against the Delta variant, but not everyone agrees. For anyone perplexed by what this all means for your own safety, the main takeaway hasn’t changed: The vaccines are still miraculous. And they’re still doing exactly what we need them to do . (The Atlantic, 8/6/21)
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NEWS
‘Everybody I Know Is Pissed Off.’ The vaccinated, across party lines, have kind of had it with the unvaccinated, an array of new polls suggests. While most state and national GOP leaders are focused on defending the rights of unvaccinated Americans, new polling shows that the large majority of vaccinated adults—including a substantial portion of Republicans—support tougher measures against those who have refused COVID-19 shots . (The Atlantic, 8/12/21)
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NEWS
The GOP’s top vaccine skeptics have lost the plot. Increasingly, prominent Republican skeptics of vaccines and mandates are going well beyond raising concerns. In the service of denouncing mask and vaccine mandates, they’re trading in misinformation, faulty absolutist logic and other highly dangerous rhetoric that suggest the vaccines themselves don’t really work . (Washington Post, 8/11/21)
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OPINION
Vaccine mandates are coming. Catholics have no moral reason to oppose them. Individuals who object to such a mandate and seek an exemption, due to moral qualms that have already been addressed by the church’s highest magisterial authorities, are exhibiting scrupulosity: the unreasonable fear that they are committing a sin when they are not. While, according to Aquinas and as the church continues to teach, every individual should follow their conscience, even if their conscience is in error, doing so does not excuse one’s subsequent behavior if one’s conscience is misinformed by voluntary ignorance . (America Magazine, 8/10/21)
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GUIDANCE
Where to Get a Covid-19 Vaccine, and What to Expect. States, territories, and our one state-like district (DC) all have wide latitude to set their own Covid-19 policies and procedures. Advice and paths to a Covid-19 vaccine are going to differ based on which part of the US you live in, but we've put together a guide that should give you an accurate overview of how to get the jab . (Wired, 8/6/21)
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NEWS
Kansas, Missouri could take months to reach key vaccination threshold as delta surges. An analysis of Centers for Disease Control and Prevention vaccination data by The Star suggests it will still take months — even at the more recent, accelerated pace of shots — to get at least one dose to 70% of the population in both states. Kansas could take 128 days and Missouri 141 days to reach what has previously been thought to be a possible herd immunity threshold, based on the average daily number of first doses in late July . (Yahoo! News, 8/8/21)
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NEWS
Asian Americans have high vaccine rates, but it hasn’t come easy, nonprofit groups say. “If people are looking at these numbers and saying, ‘Asians are just easier, more compliant, more willing to get vaccinated,’ that’s just not true,” Jack Cheng, Chinatown Service Center's director of operations, told NBC Asian America. “Most of our seniors had no resources to do that. It has to be the strong work of community-based organizations.” (NBC, 8/11/21)
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NEWS
Fake COVID-19 vaccination cards worry college officials. Both faculty and students at dozens of schools interviewed by The Associated Press say they are concerned about how easy it is to get fake vaccine cards. Across the internet, a cottage industry has sprung up to accommodate people who say they won’t get vaccinated for either personal or religious reasons . (AP News, 8/9/21)
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NEWS
Why Only 28 Percent of Young Black New Yorkers Are Vaccinated. “Since when does America give anything good to Black people first?” said an activist, Hawk Newsome, a 44-year-old Black Lives Matter leader who is unvaccinated. This vaccination gap is emerging as the latest stark racial disparity in an epidemic full of them. Epidemiologists say they expect this third wave will hit Black New Yorkers especially hard. (New York Times, 8/12/21)
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DOCUMENTARY
An Alabama Woman's Neighborly Vaccination Campaign. Panola follows the efforts of a retired Black woman, Dorothy Oliver, and the county commissioner, Drucilla Russ-Jackson, to bring the vaccine to her isolated hamlet of about four hundred residents in rural Alabama, and to persuade enough of her community to take it. “I just felt like I had to do it because the government, nobody does enough in this area,” she says. “This area here is majority Black. Kind of puts you on the back burner. That’s just it. I mean, you don’t have to put nothing else with that. That’s just it. I don’t have to elaborate on that one.” (New Yorker, 8/11/21)
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Law, Policy, and Politics
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OPINION
See also:
- Vaccinations, Unions and the Law (Inside Higher Ed, 8/9/21)
- The Supreme Court won’t block Indiana University’s vaccine mandate. (New York Times, 8/12/21)
- Hundreds Protest Vaccine Mandates at Michigan Capitol (Daily Beast, 8/6/21)
- Delta variant drives wave of US employers to mandate vaccines (Financial Times, 8/12/21)
- As vaccine mandates spread, protests follow — some spurred by nurses (NBC News, 8/11/21)
- A Quarter of US Hospitals, and Counting, Demand Workers Get Vaccinated. But Not Here. (KHN, 8/10/21)
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TYPE
Headline Link. Article Blurb. (Publication, Date)
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Research, Development, and Clinical Practice
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GUIDANCE
COVID-19 Vaccines While Pregnant or Breastfeeding. COVID-19 vaccination is recommended for all people aged 12 years and older, including people who are pregnant, breastfeeding, trying to get pregnant now, or might become pregnant in the future. Pregnant and recently pregnant people are more likely to get severely ill with COVID-19 compared with non-pregnant people . (CDC, 8/11/21)
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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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