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How to talk to your friends and family about COVID-19 vaccines

Do connect with their values Even if you are feeling frustrated, it is important to be empathetic. Make them feel heard,” advises Dr. Omer. Attempt to connect with their underlying sentiment. For example, if they are tired lockdowns, or of missing out on certain holidays or activities, connect with them over the fact that celebrations and usual events will be able to resume once we are all vaccinated. Dr. Omer also suggests talking about COVID-19 and how devastating it has been. If you only speak about vaccines “it’s not a full picture, and has somewhat lower chances of succeeding,” he explains. When the discussion comes back to COVID-19, it places the focus on the trade-offs we have all had to make such as physically distancing ourselves from loved ones and missing out on normal daily activities.

An army of Big Biotech companies is using psych tactics to create vaccine demand

https://www.afinalwarning.com/518123.html (Natural News) The U.S. is awash in a surplus of coronavirus vaccines as there has been a sudden in drop in demand for them; most Americans who want the shots have had them. Now an army of Big Biotech’s agencies set up to address “vaccine hesitancy” are turning up their mass marketing to “create demand” using surveillance, rapid data analysis, media control, and host of behavior control strategies they’ve outlined in their playbooks. (Article by Celeste McGovern republished from LifeSiteNews.com) Demand plummets About 40% of the total adult population has been fully vaccinated, according to data from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC). Uptake plummeted 25% after a peak in mid-April, and 56.4% of adults have had at least one dose of a coronavirus vaccine.

COVID: How many parents will actually vaccinate their kids? | Science| In-depth reporting on science and technology | DW

COVID: How many parents will actually vaccinate their kids? The early data makes a clear case for vaccinating adolescents. But it s also true that humans have an extremely difficult time making a medical choice on another person s behalf and sometimes default to doing nothing. Parents are likely facing a big choice soon: To vaccinate or not to vaccinate My child is not a lab rat. The words are from a 25-year-old woman, Susan, and they re in reference to her three-year-old twin girls. While she speaks to DW, her eyes flicker between them as they begin to meander away first together, then in different directions in a large, open park in Bonn, Germany.

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