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Sen. Lindsey Graham tests positive for Covid-19

squeezer

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Lindsey the RAT Graham tests positive and thanks his lucky stars he's fully vaccinated.

 

jcpro

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Jan 31, 2014
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There goes the lefty theory that Republicans are anti vaxers. Of course the other side is facing a terrible dilemma. On one hand wishing for Lindsey to assume room temperature while, on the other hand, praying fervently to Gaia to preserve his life, so not to shake the faith in the vaccine. Absurd, but hilarious.
 

Butler1000

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Oct 31, 2011
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Squeezer this qualifies as attempting to politicize the pandemic. He is a supporter of Vaccinations. Every single politician who does has the potential to reach more.

That's all that counts on this one topic.
 

kherg007

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May 3, 2014
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There goes the lefty theory that Republicans are anti vaxers. Of course the other side is facing a terrible dilemma. On one hand wishing for Lindsey to assume room temperature while, on the other hand, praying fervently to Gaia to preserve his life, so not to shake the faith in the vaccine. Absurd, but hilarious.
They are the highest percentage. It's not 100-0....But the "never" vax 9% Dem 30% Repub.
Thus I think I saw 50% Repub vax 90 % Dem vax. So a difference, but you're right JC - not all repubs are anti vax, and these numbers suggest its a minority of them.
 

jcpro

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Jan 31, 2014
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They are the highest percentage. It's not 100-0....But the "never" vax 9% Dem 30% Repub.
Thus I think I saw 50% Repub vax 90 % Dem vax. So a difference, but you're right JC - not all repubs are anti vax, and these numbers suggest its a minority of them.
And over 60% of blacks and Hispanics also are thus far unvaccinated. They can't all be Republicans, can they?
 

squeezer

Well-known member
Jan 8, 2010
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Squeezer this qualifies as attempting to politicize the pandemic. He is a supporter of Vaccinations. Every single politician who does has the potential to reach more.

That's all that counts on this one topic.
I'm not criticizing Lindsey the Rat Graham for taking the vaccine. Actually, I posted it to show the righties that many of their own support the vaccine, just don't make it public so I give Lindsey the rat props for this statement. He's still a snake in my books but in this case I have no issues with the little rat.
 

ShockNAwww

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Jan 14, 2020
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Forbes - Here Are The Republicans Most Likely To Refuse The Covid-19 Vaccine, Poll Finds

Alison Durkee

Updated Jul 28, 2021, 02:45pm EDT


TOPLINE

Nearly 40% of Republicans are still hesitant about getting the Covid-19 vaccine or refuse to get it, a new Public Religion Research Institute (PRRI)/Interfaith Youth Core (IFYC) poll finds, though certain subsets of the GOP appear notably more likely to accept or refuse the shot based on their religion, media consumption and whether or not they believe in the QAnon conspiracy theory.

KEY FACTS

The poll, conducted June 7-23 among 5,123 U.S. adults, found 64% of Republican respondents are Covid-19 “vaccine accepters” who have been or plan to get vaccinated—up from 45% in March—while 18% are hesitant about getting inoculated and 19% refuse the shot (down from 32% and 23% in March, respectively).

The most likely group to refuse the Covid-19 vaccine are Republicans who consume far-right television news (46%, up from 31% in March), while 8% of those viewers are hesitant about the shot (down from 37% in March) and 45% accept it (up from 32% in March).

The Republicans who are most likely to get vaccinated are those who reject the QAnon conspiracy theory and those who consume mainstream news, with 79% and 77% of those groups identifying as “vaccine accepters,” respectively.

Republicans who are white evangelical Protestants were more likely to be against the vaccine than those of other religions, with 55% accepting the vaccine versus 67% from other religions, while 24% of evangelicals refused the shot and 21% are hesitant about it (versus 16% and 17% for other religions, respectively).

Republicans who don’t consume any television news at all were more likely to reject the Covid-19 vaccine than those who watch Fox News: Only 53% of non-news viewers accept the vaccine and 24% reject it (23% are hesitant), versus 63% of Fox viewers who accept the vaccine, and 18% each who reject it and are hesitant.

Believers in the QAnon conspiracy—that “the government, media, and financial worlds in the U.S. are controlled by a group of Satan-worshipping pedophiles who run a global child sex-trafficking operation”—were significantly more likely to oppose the vaccine than those who doubt or reject QAnon: 37% of QAnon believers reject the Covid-19 vaccine (45% accept it), versus 15% of those who doubt QAnon and 5% of those who reject the conspiracy.

BIG NUMBER

71%. That’s the total percentage of poll respondents in the PRRI survey who said they’re either vaccinated or will get the shot as soon as possible, up from 58% in March. A further 15% are hesitant about the shot and say they’ll “wait and see how [it’s] working for others” or only get it if they have to (10% and 5%, respectively), while 13% of all respondents refuse to get vaccinated entirely.

TANGENT

The poll found Republicans were one of the biggest demographic groups overall to refuse or be hesitant about the vaccine, along with Americans under 50 and rural Americans. Women are also statistically slightly more likely to be opposed to the vaccine than men, the poll found.

Across religious groups, the PRRI survey found most religious groups are largely in favor of the Covid-19 vaccine—with large increases recorded since the poll was last conducted in March—and the only religious groups that registered less than 60% support for the vaccine are white evangelical Protestants and Hispanic Protestants (both at 56% acceptance). Jewish Americans, by contrast, are the most in favor of the vaccine, with 85% saying they’ve been vaccinated or would get inoculated as soon as possible.

CONTRA

Though the PRRI showed a large increase in Republicans’ support for the vaccine—their vaccine acceptance increased by 18 percentage points between March and June, more than among Democrats or Independents—other polling has not shown similar progress. A recent Morning Consult poll found the percentage of Republicans who said they’re unwilling to get vaccinated is still unchanged from mid-March, with 28% both then and now refusing the vaccine.

KEY BACKGROUND

The high rates of vaccine hesitancy among Republicans has become a greater issue in recent weeks as the highly transmissible Delta variant has fueled new Covid-19 outbreaks across the country, as polling has consistently showed Republicans are the most likely demographic to refuse the shot and right-leaning states largely have lower vaccination rates. A growing number of high-level Republicans have made more vocal endorsements of the shots in recent days as a result: Alabama Gov. Kay Ivey said “it’s time to start blaming the unvaccinated folks” for the state’s Covid-19 surge and Fox News hosts Sean Hannity and Steve Doocy encouraged viewers to get vaccinated, while Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis said the shots are “saving lives” as his state records one in five of all Covid-19 cases nationwide. Other Republicans, including far-right lawmakers like Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene (R-Ga.) and Lauren Boebert (R-Colo.), have continued to be opposed to the shots.

WHAT TO WATCH FOR

The PRRI survey suggested religion could play a role in encouraging more Americans who are opposed to or hesitant about the shot to get vaccinated. The poll found 19% of vaccine refusers think faith-based approaches would help encourage them to get vaccinated—such as appeals from trusted faith leaders or communities, or making vaccines available at places of worship—as well as 32% of white evangelical Protestants who regularly attend church services and are hesitant about the vaccine. The recent rash of entreaties from Republican leaders encouraging the vaccines, which largely took place after the PRRI poll was conducted, could also have an effect. A recent study published in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America found vaccine endorsements from Republican Party “elites”—in this case, former President Donald Trump—made unvaccinated Republicans 5.7% more likely to signal their intention to get vaccinated than if they hadn’t seen any endorsements, or 7% more likely to signal their vaccination intentions than if they saw an endorsement from President Joe Biden.
 

Leimonis

Well-known member
Feb 28, 2020
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There goes the lefty theory that Republicans are anti vaxers. Of course the other side is facing a terrible dilemma. On one hand wishing for Lindsey to assume room temperature while, on the other hand, praying fervently to Gaia to preserve his life, so not to shake the faith in the vaccine. Absurd, but hilarious.
1628011703053.png
 

HungSowel

Well-known member
Mar 3, 2017
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There goes the lefty theory that Republicans are anti vaxers. Of course the other side is facing a terrible dilemma. On one hand wishing for Lindsey to assume room temperature while, on the other hand, praying fervently to Gaia to preserve his life, so not to shake the faith in the vaccine. Absurd, but hilarious.
You have often said that the problem with C19 was that it was politicized so much and here you are politicizing shit with a strawman that the left want graham dead.

Disgusting.
 

jcpro

Well-known member
Jan 31, 2014
24,673
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You have often said that the problem with C19 was that it was politicized so much and here you are politicizing shit with a strawman that the left want graham dead.

Disgusting.
Yeah, I went out on a very fragile limb. LOL!
 

jcpro

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Jan 31, 2014
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Forbes - Here Are The Republicans Most Likely To Refuse The Covid-19 Vaccine, Poll Finds

Alison Durkee

Updated Jul 28, 2021, 02:45pm EDT


TOPLINE

Nearly 40% of Republicans are still hesitant about getting the Covid-19 vaccine or refuse to get it, a new Public Religion Research Institute (PRRI)/Interfaith Youth Core (IFYC) poll finds, though certain subsets of the GOP appear notably more likely to accept or refuse the shot based on their religion, media consumption and whether or not they believe in the QAnon conspiracy theory.

KEY FACTS

The poll, conducted June 7-23 among 5,123 U.S. adults, found 64% of Republican respondents are Covid-19 “vaccine accepters” who have been or plan to get vaccinated—up from 45% in March—while 18% are hesitant about getting inoculated and 19% refuse the shot (down from 32% and 23% in March, respectively).

The most likely group to refuse the Covid-19 vaccine are Republicans who consume far-right television news (46%, up from 31% in March), while 8% of those viewers are hesitant about the shot (down from 37% in March) and 45% accept it (up from 32% in March).

The Republicans who are most likely to get vaccinated are those who reject the QAnon conspiracy theory and those who consume mainstream news, with 79% and 77% of those groups identifying as “vaccine accepters,” respectively.

Republicans who are white evangelical Protestants were more likely to be against the vaccine than those of other religions, with 55% accepting the vaccine versus 67% from other religions, while 24% of evangelicals refused the shot and 21% are hesitant about it (versus 16% and 17% for other religions, respectively).

Republicans who don’t consume any television news at all were more likely to reject the Covid-19 vaccine than those who watch Fox News: Only 53% of non-news viewers accept the vaccine and 24% reject it (23% are hesitant), versus 63% of Fox viewers who accept the vaccine, and 18% each who reject it and are hesitant.

Believers in the QAnon conspiracy—that “the government, media, and financial worlds in the U.S. are controlled by a group of Satan-worshipping pedophiles who run a global child sex-trafficking operation”—were significantly more likely to oppose the vaccine than those who doubt or reject QAnon: 37% of QAnon believers reject the Covid-19 vaccine (45% accept it), versus 15% of those who doubt QAnon and 5% of those who reject the conspiracy.

BIG NUMBER

71%. That’s the total percentage of poll respondents in the PRRI survey who said they’re either vaccinated or will get the shot as soon as possible, up from 58% in March. A further 15% are hesitant about the shot and say they’ll “wait and see how [it’s] working for others” or only get it if they have to (10% and 5%, respectively), while 13% of all respondents refuse to get vaccinated entirely.

TANGENT

The poll found Republicans were one of the biggest demographic groups overall to refuse or be hesitant about the vaccine, along with Americans under 50 and rural Americans. Women are also statistically slightly more likely to be opposed to the vaccine than men, the poll found.

Across religious groups, the PRRI survey found most religious groups are largely in favor of the Covid-19 vaccine—with large increases recorded since the poll was last conducted in March—and the only religious groups that registered less than 60% support for the vaccine are white evangelical Protestants and Hispanic Protestants (both at 56% acceptance). Jewish Americans, by contrast, are the most in favor of the vaccine, with 85% saying they’ve been vaccinated or would get inoculated as soon as possible.

CONTRA

Though the PRRI showed a large increase in Republicans’ support for the vaccine—their vaccine acceptance increased by 18 percentage points between March and June, more than among Democrats or Independents—other polling has not shown similar progress. A recent Morning Consult poll found the percentage of Republicans who said they’re unwilling to get vaccinated is still unchanged from mid-March, with 28% both then and now refusing the vaccine.

KEY BACKGROUND

The high rates of vaccine hesitancy among Republicans has become a greater issue in recent weeks as the highly transmissible Delta variant has fueled new Covid-19 outbreaks across the country, as polling has consistently showed Republicans are the most likely demographic to refuse the shot and right-leaning states largely have lower vaccination rates. A growing number of high-level Republicans have made more vocal endorsements of the shots in recent days as a result: Alabama Gov. Kay Ivey said “it’s time to start blaming the unvaccinated folks” for the state’s Covid-19 surge and Fox News hosts Sean Hannity and Steve Doocy encouraged viewers to get vaccinated, while Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis said the shots are “saving lives” as his state records one in five of all Covid-19 cases nationwide. Other Republicans, including far-right lawmakers like Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene (R-Ga.) and Lauren Boebert (R-Colo.), have continued to be opposed to the shots.

WHAT TO WATCH FOR

The PRRI survey suggested religion could play a role in encouraging more Americans who are opposed to or hesitant about the shot to get vaccinated. The poll found 19% of vaccine refusers think faith-based approaches would help encourage them to get vaccinated—such as appeals from trusted faith leaders or communities, or making vaccines available at places of worship—as well as 32% of white evangelical Protestants who regularly attend church services and are hesitant about the vaccine. The recent rash of entreaties from Republican leaders encouraging the vaccines, which largely took place after the PRRI poll was conducted, could also have an effect. A recent study published in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America found vaccine endorsements from Republican Party “elites”—in this case, former President Donald Trump—made unvaccinated Republicans 5.7% more likely to signal their intention to get vaccinated than if they hadn’t seen any endorsements, or 7% more likely to signal their vaccination intentions than if they saw an endorsement from President Joe Biden.
Now, the pollsters need to ask the black base and the Hispanics why the vaccination rates are so low among them. Can they be secret Qanon followers?
 
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ShockNAwww

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Now, the pollsters need to ask the black base and the Hispanics why the vaccination rates are so low among them. Can they be secret Qanon followers?
Healthline - Why Some Black and Latinx People Are Reluctant to Get the COVID-19 Vaccine

Written by Brian Mastroianni on December 18, 2020 — Fact checked by Maria Gifford
  • In the past, racist, and sometimes dangerous, health policies and clinical experiments have targeted particularly vulnerable Black and brown communities.
  • In addition to this history, a lot of mistrust around the COVID-19 vaccine has also been generated by the overall chaotic messaging around the pandemic.
  • Experts say we need to work directly with community leaders and amplify the voices of people of color to ease fears, build trust, and disseminate proper information about the vaccines.

By the end of 2020, we find ourselves at an important inflection point in combatting the COVID-19 pandemic.

As of publication, the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) has granted emergency approval for distribution of the Pfizer-BioNTech COVID-19 vaccine in the United States.

A similar approval is expected shortly for Moderna’s vaccine.

While this is positive news, there are some communities that might not automatically embrace or feel at ease over the announcement of a population-wide, mass inoculation program.

In the past, racist, and at times dangerous, health policies and clinical experiments have targeted particularly vulnerable Black and brown communities.

From the Tuskegee experiments — one of the most disturbing parts of American medical history — to the economic and cultural inequities in the U.S. healthcare system that disproportionately harm Black and Latinx communities, there are very real reasons why some people might look askance with skepticism and fear at the new vaccines.

Experts say this requires a great deal of nuance.

Public health and medical officials, media figures and politicians alike have to communicate clearly to these communities how important the vaccine is, that it is vetted and safe, and make it accessible to everyone who needs it.

How do we reckon with the past while ensuring that these new vaccinations are safely distributed in a way with outreach that is intersectional and inclusive?


From Tuskegee to now: A complex history of medical racism

A recent report from UnidosUS, the NAACP, and COVID Collaborative revealed that just 14 percent of Black Americans and 34 percent of Latinx Americans say they have trust in the safety of a new COVID-19 vaccine.

The study also found that 18 percent of Black and 40 percent of Latinx respondents say they trust COVID-19 vaccine effectiveness.

Additionally, 28 percent of Black participants said they have trust in “culturally specific testing and safety” practices. The number among Latinx people was higher, at 47 percent.

Why are these numbers relatively low? Just looking at the recent 20th century past offers some reasons why.

The realities of how Black and brown people have been treated by the U.S. medical establishment is one that is, at many times, bleak.

One of the main examples often pointed to is the Tuskegee experiments, which ran for 40 years, from 1932 to 1972.

The goal was to track the natural progression of syphilis. Researchers initially recruited 600 Black men — 399 with the disease, 201 without it — and conducted the study without the informed consent of these participants.

According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC)Trusted Source, researchers justified the study by telling these men they were being treated for “bad blood,” which referred to conditions like anemia and fatigue as well as syphilis.

What happened? The men never received treatment to cure syphilis.

This example of using Black patients as medical guinea pigs, if you will, putting their bodies and health on the line, is just one of the reasons why members of these communities might be apprehensive about new vaccines, said Diana Grigsby-Toussaint, PhD, an associate professor in the department of behavioral and social sciences and the department of epidemiology at the Brown University School of Public Health in Providence, Rhode Island.

“If you think historically for African Americans in the U.S. in terms of what the history has been with respect to their interaction with the healthcare system, of course we know the Tuskegee study. Tuskegee was not that long ago. The last surviving member died in 2004. It’s not something that is far removed. It’s still in people’s memory,” Grigsby-Toussaint told Healthline.

She also cited “the eugenics movement” that “saw African Americans sterilized in places across the country,” as well as birth control pill trials in Puerto Rico that were “not performed in a way that would stand up to the standards we have today in respect to clinical trials.”

In the case of the latter example, she said side effects exhibited in women studied weren’t properly monitored, leading to actual deaths of some participants.

Grigsby-Toussaint added that all these examples point to a dehumanization and commodification of people who were essentially used and discarded by medical officials.

Rather than having value placed on their lives, the emphasis was on expedience, data, and experimentation, not human life.



A year of COVID-19 confusion and chaos

According to Steven Lopez, director of health policy at UnidosUS, a nonpartisan advocacy group for the greater Latinx community, a lot of mistrust around the vaccine is also generated by the overall chaotic messaging around the pandemic from early in the year to today.

Demonizing of protective masks, confusing mixed messages over lockdown protocols and the need to adhere to physical distancing contributed to an environment where even the most informed and health-literate person in the country might not know quite what to make of the seriousness of the new coronavirus.

This was especially true in the early days of COVID-19, and of course, it doesn’t help that a lot of this stemmed directly from President Donald Trump and his administration’s approach to the health crisis.

Lopez told Healthline that this didn’t necessarily make Latinx Americans comfortable with efforts to fight the pandemic to begin with.

But coupled with community-specific concerns, it created something of a perfect storm of mistrust and confusion right as the vaccine rollouts begin.
“There are maybe two key words to focus on: transparency and trust,” Lopez said.

He said it’s important to first have transparency when it comes to data on the virus and a vaccine itself, helping the greater public know “how we get from point A to point Z” in vaccine development, and be honest about any possible side effects.

Lopez added that while this would normally appear to be a no-brainer for a public health crisis like this one, “unfortunately, transparency has not been a hallmark” when it comes to COVID-19.

Lopez explained that signs are hopeful that we’re moving to a period of more transparency with the public, especially as we transition from a Trump response to a President-elect Joe Biden responseto the pandemic.

He said “trust” is the other important word because Black and brown communities have been hit hard by the virus.

Statistics have shown just how heavily affectedBlack communities have been, while Lopez pointed to the fact that “Latinos are among the sick and the dying disproportionately,” standing at about 1 in every 4 cases of COVID-19.

Lopez said another crucial issue at the top of mind for many Latinx households is immigration.

“Some underlying community hesitancy might be among our immigrant families and families who have mixed immigration status in their households,” he explained.

“The past few years have been incredibly toxic in both rhetoric and policy, and there’s been a level of fear and anxiety among those in immigrant households around the process of going for a vaccine, and if health data is collected, how will it be used?” Lopez said.

Lopez stressed that there has to be messaging and distribution efforts that ensure everyone who needs a vaccination “gets an equitable opportunity” to get it.

A big part of this has to be reassurances to families that might have members who have concerns over their immigration status that they will be safe.

“This is especially important given so many of our immigrant families are on the front lines as essential workers, of keeping our country going,” he added. “We have to make sure we are sensitive and responsive to their unique circumstances.”

Reaching out to Black and brown communities

For Ernest Grant, PhD, RN, FAAN, president of the American Nurses Association, it’s been crucial that we effectively get the word out about the new vaccines, especially as COVID-19 diagnoses and deaths continue to skyrocket domestically.
Grant finds himself in an interesting position. Not only is he a leading medical figure in the United States, but he also participated in the Moderna vaccine trial.

As a Black man, he said it was also crucial that he lent his voice behind the vaccine development process, demystifying it for those who might be concerned and raising awareness about why vaccinations are important.

“For me, I feel I’m contributing to science and an important body of work,” Grant told Healthline.
“First, I knew there was a need for more Black and brown people to participate in the clinical trials. If it proved that the vaccines were effective, I could use my testimony to build a bridge for the Black and brown community that the vaccine is safe and they shouldn’t have anything to fear about,” he said.

Grant said he hasn’t experienced any side effects. As the president of an organization that represents more than 4 million registered nurses, he said it’s also important that he’s visible to the nurses who put their lives on the line every day.

“I wanted to stand in solidarity with my colleagues to alleviate any concerns and issues they may have, to see that their national leader has put his life on the line, who didn’t know at the time how effective the vaccines would be, who didn’t know if he would get the vaccine or a placebo,” Grant said. “I wanted to step up and do my part.”

Grant wanted to also emphasize that given there is a slow rollout, which means healthcare workers and high-risk older adults will be among the first groups to receive the vaccine, it will take a bit of time before life goes back “to normal.”

Everyone will need to get two doses of the vaccine, and everyone will still have to wear masks and physically distance to get society anywhere close to “normal.”

There are other Black medical leaders who are also putting themselves out there in the public sphere right now in addition to Grant.

Grigsby-Toussaint pointed to the National Medical Association, an organization of Black doctors originally formed to counter white-dominated medical institutions that historically excluded African American physicians. The association created a committee to vet the science behind the new COVID-19 vaccines.

The committee’s creation was to specifically counter the concerns that history could repeat itself with another Tuskegee experiment.

She also spotlighted “A Love Letter to Black America” from Howard University, Morehouse School of Medicine, Meharry Medical College, Charles Drew University, the National Medical Association, the National Black Nurses Association, and the National Urban League as an effective campaign to respond directly to Black Americans and their concerns around COVID-19.

Lopez said that when it comes to Latinx people nationwide, it involves more than just having “Spanish voices” in translated materials or advertisements.

Officials have to interface directly with community leaders and amplify the voices and concerns of people of color, as well as provide needed resources to disseminate proper information about the vaccines.

Grigsby-Toussaint echoed that point, and also stressed that while seeing former President Barack Obama eventually receive the vaccine on camera or celebrating the accomplishments of Dr. Kizzmekia Corbett (who has been praised as one of the main researchers behind the vaccine development) will help this effort, those benchmarks in and of themselves won’t quell community concerns.

“It isn’t sufficient to just stop at, ‘There is a Black or brown person working on this, so it’s all OK.’ You have to still work to address and acknowledge people’s concerns,” Grigsby-Toussaint said.

“It’s not enough to just say people who look like you worked on this. What are the additional steps we can take to allay these fears? Are officials going to say, ‘We want you as partners as we roll out this vaccine?’ This is all important parts of the conversation,” she said.
 
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jcpro

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Ashley Madison
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