To stop the pandemic, people will need to get vaccinated
By Jill Richardson for OtherWords
With the new COVID-19 vaccine available, Dr. Anthony Fauci says Americans can begin to achieve herd immunity by next summer.Herd immunity occurs when so
many people are immune to the virus that it can’t spread, because an infected
person won’t have anyone left to spread it to.
Yet
as of November, four in ten Americans said they definitely or probably won’t get the vaccine (although about
half of that group said they would consider it once a vaccine became available
and they could get more information about it).
Why,
after living in quarantine for nine months while the economy and our mental
health crashes around us, after over 300,000 Americans are dead, is getting the
vaccine even a question?
There
are two ways to approach this question. The first is to dismiss it: Call
vaccine skeptics derogatory names, post memes on social media about how stupid
they are, and make rules requiring the vaccine.
The
second way to approach the question is to try to understand vaccine skepticism
in order to address Americans’ concerns.
In
this view, everyone must look out for themselves so they can get ahead, and
that’s more important than doing your part to achieve herd immunity for our
collective wellbeing.
Reich’s
research on anti-vaxxers comes from before the current pandemic. She studied
parents who refused to vaccinate their children for preventable diseases like
measles. But it’s still worth considering in this new context. Reich believes
it is unsurprising that some people do treat vaccines like a consumer
choice and disregard that when they decline a vaccine, they endanger others
too.
Another
take on COVID vaccine refusal comes from Zakiya Whatley and Titilayo Shodiya, who
are both women of color with PhDs in natural sciences. They focus on Black,
Latinx, and indigenous communities, who often distrust doctors. Their suspicion
is not unfounded, given how much racism in medicine has harmed people of color,
historically and in the present.
Consider the power relations within medicine:
When a patient goes to the doctor because they are ill, the doctor assesses
their symptoms, makes a diagnosis, and prescribes a treatment.
Scientists
determine what is recognized as a diagnosis and which treatments are available.
Powerful financial interests (like pharmaceutical and insurance companies) play
a major role too. The patient’s power is more limited: they can look up their
symptoms on WebMD, accept or refuse the treatment prescribed, or go to a
different doctor.
Sometimes
lay people react to being on the less powerful end of the relationship by
simply refusing to believe scientists. They might resist by embracing conspiracy theories or “barstool biology” that uses the language of
science but not the scientific method.
Natural
scientists have done their part by creating vaccines that are safe and highly
effective. To get people to take the vaccine, we need social science. We must
learn how to rebuild trust with people who have lost it. And we will do that by
listening to them and understanding them, not by calling them stupid.
Jill
Richardson is the founder of the blog La Vida
Locavore and a member of the Organic
Consumers Association policy advisory board. She is the author
of "Recipe for America: Why Our Food System Is Broken and
What We Can Do to Fix It" (2009).