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Mediaplanet Publishes Vaccine Awareness Campaign to Combat Vaccine Hesitancy During Pandemic

Mediaplanet Publishes Vaccine Awareness Campaign to Combat Vaccine Hesitancy During Pandemic PRWeb FacebookTwitterEmail NEW YORK (PRWEB) February 05, 2021 Mediaplanet launches December print and digital campaign entitled “Vaccine Awareness.” This campaign will provide readers with a greater awareness and understanding of the process of how vaccines are made, approved, distributed, and administered. It will also serve as a platform to create solutions and initiatives to improve immunization rates in the United States and globally. Vaccines help to prevent national and global infectious disease outbreaks and save between 2-3 million lives every year. However, many people around the globe and in the United States are not vaccinated and more than 1.5 million people die from vaccine-preventable diseases each year. Intensified by the COVID-19 pandemic, vaccine hesitancy was named by the World Health Organization in 2019 as one of the top ten leading threats to global health, citin

Decades later, infamous Tuskegee syphilis study stirs wariness in Black community over COVID-19 vaccine

Decades later, infamous Tuskegee syphilis study stirs wariness in Black community over COVID-19 vaccine Kurtis Lee © (Julie Bennett / For The Times) Omar Neal, whose uncle Freddie Lee Tyson was a victim of the Tuskegee syphilis study. (Julie Bennett / For The Times) Omar Neal often thinks back on the calculated betrayal of hundreds of Black men and how it still shapes so much about this rural Alabama community. He remembers the mechanic who went from house to house fixing cars and the sharecropper who lived off a narrow dirt road. He thinks too of his uncle Freddie Lee Tyson, a carpenter, and how the betrayal shaped his life.

COVID-19 Vaccine Hesitancy Among Black Americans

Need further assistance? Please call Member Services at 1-800-333-0663 Addressing COVID-19 Vaccine Hesitancy Among Black Americans Communities are taking steps to remove obstacles, including distrust of the medical system and unequal access to healthcare By Brian Vines  SHARES

Experts spent months on a fair COVID-19 vaccine distribution plan, only to witness a chaotic free-for-all

Experts spent months on a fair COVID-19 vaccine distribution plan, only to witness ‘a chaotic free-for-all’ Stacey Burling, The Philadelphia Inquirer © HEATHER KHALIFA/The Philadelphia Inquirer/TNS Dr. Faith Peterson administers a COVID-19 vaccine to a patient inside the Liacouras Center in Philadelphia on Feb. 02. The Black Doctors COVID-19 Consortium has been vaccinating Philadelphia residents. From last April to December, José Romero met weekly with other vaccine and infectious disease experts to discuss how the nation should dole out early doses of lifesaving COVID-19 vaccines in the most effective and fair way. He and other members of the Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices (ACIP), which advises federal health officials, knew there wouldn’t be enough vaccine for everyone who wanted it. So they spent untold hours devising a phased vaccination system that would slowly increase eligibility for shots as manufacturing ramped up.

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