I do wonder whether getting vaccinated at school helps normalise the idea early, regardless of how batshit your parents are on the subject.
Kinda hard to see them as a conspiracy when you're getting jabbed between Maths and Science, then dodging Year 8s trying to punch your arm.
Does the US do booster vaccinations at schools as a standard? I'm guessing not.
Mind you, I don't know if we do that anymore either. If not, I suspect we're fucked next time a pandemic rolls around.
Doing this shit in a peer group, in a place of trust is important I suspect.
Because the most effective counter to "someone on Facebook says vaccines are dangerous" is remembering that you got a bunch of them at school, it was SUPER boring and the worst thing that happened was some dick from 8CE punched you in the arm afterwards.
Pain is a memory booster
BCG!
I remember being amused at how many of the Spartans in the film 300 had apparently had their BCG jabs.
In seriousness, if anyone knows of published papers on what builds vaccine trust, which covers this, do chuck me references and I'll greedily hit up the university library to consume.
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As a Labour Party member I very much wish that BOTH Jeremy Corbyn and Tony Blair would fuck off out of the public discourse.
Being in Labour is like your mum got divorced twice, but both exs keep showing up at family BBQs.
You don't invite them but SOMEONE in the family keeps leaking the date.
"Tony's turned up. His Mercs blocking the street"
"Jez is making a scene cos the potato salad isn't vegan"
Meanwhile Gordon, who she dated for a bit between them and you kinda liked, always politely turns down your invites because he "doesn't want to cause a scene"
Which is a shame, because that one time he DID turn up he brought an absolute STACK of burgers from a proper butcher.
BTW, if you're wondering what the real price attached to this current TfL settlement by the government is, then a big part of it is killing off TfL/SK's efforts to increase the social housing stock in London.
That's how vindictive this government is.
TfL Business Plans are, essentially, one of the few real things over which the Mayor of London has near-absolute control.
i.e where he gets to set policy as he likes AND wield TfL's significant budget, fund raising and market pressure to facilitate meaningful change.
Both this settlement and the one before it are really about clipping that power and forcing the DfT (for which read 'Cabinet Minister') into the TfL planning and budgeting process.