Coronavirus vaccine: As U.S. plans to inoculate, social media becomes key

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The development of new coronavirus vaccines is crucial to life returning to normal amid a pandemic that has infected over 10 million Americans and killed more than 245,000.

Pfizer (PFE) recently announced that its COVID-19 vaccine candidate was found to be more than 90% effective in preventing COVID-19, the disease caused by coronavirus. And on Monday, Moderna (MRNA) announced that its vaccine was 94.5% effective in trials and could be distributed even more widely.

States and health departments must now plan for “a timely, comprehensive, and equitable vaccine distribution campaign” while waiting for Congress to provide more than $8 billion in new funding for the herculean initiative.

“The speed at which we vaccinate the population in Maine is directly dependent on the funding,” Dr. Nirav Shah, director of the Maine Center for Disease Control and Prevention, told The New York Times. “We will still get the job done, but it will take longer if I can’t train the people to give it.”

Another variable that could hinder the inoculation of the roughly two-thirds of Americans required to reach herd immunity with 90% effective vaccines: internet users spreading misinformation about the viability of vaccines, including the anti-vaccine community.

Facebook deemed the post "false information." (Screenshot: Facebook)
Facebook deemed the post "false information." (Screenshot: Facebook)

Social media could ‘make it more difficult for the vaccines to be adopted’

Vaccine skepticism has already been an issue in the U.S. for years, and Operation Warp Speed — the expedited timeline of testing various coronavirus vaccines — has made some very wary about the safety and efficacy of a vaccine. Social media has made it easier for people to share their worries.

“Unfortunately, there is a very realistic potential for various social media platforms to become a vehicle to propagate and amplify misinformation and, as a result, to make it more difficult for the vaccines to be adopted,” Dr. Richard A Stein, an adjunct professor at NYU Tandon School of Engineering, adjunct assistant professor at CUNY, and a senior editor with the International Journal of Clinical Practice, told Yahoo Finance.

As of late September, according to Gallup, only 50% of Americans said they are willing to get a coronavirus vaccine — a stark 11-point decline from August.

(Gallup)
(Gallup)

Stein noted that there is “absolutely” a chance that these groups could pose a risk to a full recovery from the pandemic.

"Ultimately, it comes down to people obtaining their information from reliable sources while at the same time constantly being exposed, in a lot of places, to information that may be incomplete, fabricated, misinterpreted, or distorted,” he said. “I learned that there are many different types and levels of misinformation and, over the years, in the context of various infectious diseases, I increasingly realized how incredibly dangerous this can be for individuals and for public health.”