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Covid vaccine: Rumours thrive amid trickle of pandemic facts

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December 3, 2020
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Covid vaccine: Rumours thrive amid trickle of pandemic facts
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With a number of potential vaccines for Covid-19 now imminent, there are increasing concerns that misinformation online could turn some people against being immunized.

The World Health Organization (WHO) says the world’s not only fighting the pandemic, but also what it calls an “infodemic” – where an overload of information, some of it false, makes it difficult for people to make decisions about their health.

And it’s trying to answer people’s concerns about the vaccines – as well as helping people evaluate the information they see on social media.

Nina, who is 21 and lives in London with her 82-year-old grandmother, is one of those who has concerns,

She says she has “mixed feelings” about Covid vaccines.

Nina, who is a freelance producer, isn’t sure yet if she’ll be vaccinated in the future. But she thinks the amount of information around makes it harder to understand the science behind the vaccines.

“Obviously like everyone I want this virus to go away as quickly as possible,” she says.

“But at the same time, I’m not sure how much I trust the vaccine yet, because it’s happened so quickly.”

And her view is partly coloured by what she sees on social media, although she also says she seeks out information from “traditional” news sources.

“There are quite a lot of opinions flying around on Twitter, Instagram and TikTok. I think people are very easily influenced by that,” she says.

Oscar Hodgson, a trainee solicitor who is taking part in a coronavirus vaccine trial at Imperial College London, says: “It’s often very difficult with the amount of information that we are being bombarded with to make sense of what you should be doing.”

But he adds: “I think a vaccine is one of the only ways out of the situation if we want to get away from endless lockdowns and curfews.”

‘Managing hope’

Researchers have moved at record speed to develop vaccines, less than a year in to this pandemic,

The WHO is monitoring data from more than 200 vaccine trials.

“There are now several types of vaccine in the pipeline based on different technologies,” says Dr Sylvie Briand, the WHO’s director of pandemic and epidemic diseases.

They are going through the same safety tests as vaccines already used all around the world.

“It’s very expensive to do these phase three (human) trials. But many countries have come together to pay for it,” Dr Briand says. “When you have enough funds the process can go much faster.”

There are three key reasons it’s been possible to develop coronavirus vaccines so quickly:

  • New technologies which were being developed before Covid struck have been used to speed up the process
  • Billions of dollars have been ploughed into vaccine research. Securing funding can take years
  • Finding ways to fight Covid-19 has been a top priority for every government around the world

Part of the problem, is that information about this pandemic has been coming out in dribs and drabs, as scientists make new discoveries about the virus and how best to manage it.

This, researchers say, has created space for misinformation to thrive.

“People are looking for information, and they’re confronted with this confusing mix of some credible information, and then a lot of other very questioning, undermining or outright wrong information.” says Prof Heidi Larson who runs the Vaccine Confidence Project at the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine.

She has been studying vaccine confidence around the world for more than two decades.

While vaccine hesitancy has always been an issue, she is very concerned about the impact misinformation appears to be having on people’s intention to take coronavirus vaccines.

Her team carried out a recent study looking at vaccine confidence in the UK and US.

Of 4,000 people in the UK. 54% said they definitely would be vaccinated. But after they were shown inaccurate claims about vaccine safety that figure fell by over six percentage points

And people on lower incomes and from black and minority ethnic backgrounds were most likely to reject a Covid vaccine.

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