NEW: How vaccine hesitancy has morphed into outright hostility, cheered on by some conservatives and amplified by their media echo chamber. With @KnowlesHannah@tylerpager.
Attendees at CPAC applauded comments that the U.S. missed its vaccine goal. GOP officials are reining in state vaccination efforts.
Trump-aligned media also continues to stir up vaccine doubts. Here’s an excerpt from a 7-min coronavirus vaccine “fact-check” posted by OANN today.
The message appears to be resonating — and America’s red-blue gap is widening.
@KFF found last week that nearly 47 percent of residents in counties won by Biden were fully vaccinated, compared to 35 percent of residents in Trump counties.
“We always ask, what will be the last straw? What will be the moment that we lose the ability to communicate and cooperate?” longtime GOP pollster @FrankLuntz told The Post.
White House launching “surge response” teams to deploy around nation and tackle fast-moving Delta variant. washingtonpost.com/health/2021/07…
At White House briefing, @CDCDirector says that “99.5%” of coronavirus deaths in past six months have been in unvaccinated Americans, based on preliminary data.
We’re 18 months into the pandemic, and the auto-transcriber still struggles to spell Dr. Fauci.
One of those workers, a nurse named Jennifer Bridges, said she’s already found work at a firm and is planning a protest at Houston Methodist this weekend.
She excused herself from an interview with The Post to take a protest-planning call from InfoWars founder Alex Jones.
Bridges also led a much-watched lawsuit against Methodist, alleging its vaccine mandate was unlawful.
But a federal judge this month dismissed the case.
“Methodist is trying to do their business of saving lives without giving them the COVID-19 virus,” Judge Lynn Hughes wrote.
Breaking: Houston hospital system suspends 178 workers for not getting vaccinated.
"I know that today may be difficult for some who are sad about losing a colleague who’s decided to not get vaccinated,” CEO Marc Boom wrote in email shared with The Post.
Wrote last month about the conflict brewing at Houston Methodist, which announced one of nation’s first coronavirus vaccine mandates — and largely succeeded, with nearly 25,000 workers now vaxxed — but drew legal threats and walkouts from some staff.
BREAKING: Mastercard Foundation is donating *$1.3 billion* to buy vaccines for more than 50M people in Africa, expand vaccine distribution and manufacturing on the continent, boost Africa CDC. washingtonpost.com/health/2021/06…
The @MastercardFdn gift — one of the largest during pandemic — goes toward areas of great need.
Africa CDC aiming to vaccinate 60% of continent by end of 2022. So far, fewer than 2% of population has gotten shots.
(In United States, we are over 50% with at least one dose.)
First, there’s a clear split, as @dtkeating has chronicled
- Thirteen mostly coastal states have already vaxxed 70% of adults w at least one dose (the July 4 goal)
- An additional 15 states, plus DC, are over 60% and will likely hit the goal
- But the rest are lagging behind
Second, even in places where most people still aren’t vaxxed, demand has cratered (and forced new tactics).
In Hamilton County, Tenn. — where more than half of the county’s 370,000 residents remain unvaccinated — officials are pivoting away from mass sites, @moody found.
NEW: Meet the vaccine skeptics who changed their minds. (And why they did it.)
Public health experts — and White House officials — are studying their conversions, hoping to learn how to win over millions of Americans who are still in the “no” camp.
Also NEW: the @deBeaumontFndtn and @GOPDoctors teamed up on a series of pro-vaccine public service announcements, set to go out today and shared with The Post.
Here’s @RepMMM, former Iowa state health director, making the case to her constituents.
The former skeptics rattled off the exact moments when they changed their minds, crediting doctors’ messages or turning points like:
— an episode of @BrianLehrer’s show
— @DrPaulOffit going on CNBC
— the NY Yankees requiring fans to show proof of vaccination (or a negative test)