COVID-19 Vaccine Skeptics-Answers to Your Hesitations


 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

The worldwide COVID-19 scourge has caused more deaths and despairs than any pandemic for a century and is continuing with no end in sight. Such happenings go away only when a large enough percentage of the population is immune and cannot be infected to infect others. The immune proportion necessary is about two-thirds of the people. Currently, just over 50% of Americans are fully vaccinated.

COVID-19 is much more infectious than influenza and 20 times as deadly. Hospitals presently are filled with those suffering. CDC currently estimates that over 200,000 are requiring hospital care. Only 3% of those suffering COVID-19 were vaccinated.

Being unvaccinated tremendously increases the chances to become extremely sick and perhaps dying. Even more, downsides are possible because an infected individual can infect many others – perhaps loved ones and friends. Imagine the abysmal sadness of knowing loved ones are suffering because you did not get immunized. Also, unlike other viral diseases, some infected are permanently damaged.

Let’s examine the reasoning that triggers others to hesitate to get the protection of the COVID-19 vaccine. There is a strong relationship between social media news and COVID-19 vaccine hesitancy. Initially, the belief was that the vaccine was rushed because the FDA did not give full approval until August 23, 2021. FDA Emergency Use Authorization was approved on December 11, 2020, and widespread vaccinations began starting with vulnerable populations.

The emergency approval was after several phases of testing were completed. First, healthy people were injected with monitoring of side effects and certainty that sufficient protective antibodies were produced. Next, hundreds were selected based on age and ethnicity and then vaccinated.

Upon Emergency Approval, Acting FDA Commissioner Janet Woodcock, M.D. said, “the public can be very confident that this vaccine meets the high standards for safety, effectiveness, and manufacturing quality the FDA requires of an approved product.”

Perhaps vaccine skeptics are concerned this is the first vaccine to use the genetic system to make us immune. After all, our genes put together our bodies and will allow future generations to exist. The possibility modifications could occur is concerning.

The vaccine is injected into the muscle cells, where it places messenger RNA. Then it instructs their RNA to make a viral protein which stimulates the bodies’ immune cells. People who don’t understand our genetic system’s workings could easily conclude that they don’t want their genes altered and mistakenly hesitate to be injected.

Our cells have two major sections: the nucleus and the rest of the cell composed mainly of cytoplasm. The mastermind DNA resides in the nucleus and the RNA in the cytoplasm. The DNA tells the RNA what molecules to make. DNA does this by creating and sending messenger RNA. Messenger molecules cannot do anything else. They are errand molecules. They also are eliminated when their messages are processed.

Those opposed to vaccination on a genetic bias frequently consider the erroneous conclusion that vaccines can cause autism and other genetic defects. This has been misinterpreted because most vaccines in children are given in early childhood when the signs of autism first appear. It is just a false correlation.

There have been a few of those vaccinated that have had severe initial reactions. Still, in the studies, an equal number of participants were injected with harmless placebos and a similar number had the same severe initial reactions. People can have underlying conditions that can cause their bodies to react to excessive breathing or an extremely fast heartbeat.

Bias is an often-present source of human error mainly concentrated in the COVID-19 vaccine denial debacle. A biased one can choose to disregard facts that disagree with their preferred conclusions. The risk-benefit ratio is overwhelmingly in favor of getting vaccinated. The decision to be vaccinated is critical because it can save your life or health and that of your loved ones.

 

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