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Yale J Biol Med. 2014 Dec 12;87(4):417-22. eCollection 2014.

Understanding vaccines: a public imperative.

Author information

  • 1Yale Graduate School of Arts and Sciences, Biological & Biomedical Sciences, Immunobiology Graduate Program, Yale University, New Haven, Connecticut.

Abstract

Though once a discovery greatly celebrated by the nation, the vaccine has come under fire in recent decades from skeptics, critics, and a movement set into motion by fraudulent scientists and fueled by frustrated parents looking for answers to the autism conundrum. There is enough denialist resistance to vaccination to bring upon renewed fear of young children and infants becoming infected with diseases, the threats of which had been functionally eradicated from the United States. In more recent years, the surge in independent online journalism and blogging has invited many to rapidly share their opinions with millions of readers and, importantly, has appeared to open the door for opinion to be portrayed as fact. As a result, many parents are inundated with horror stories of vaccine dangers, all designed to eat away at them emotionally while the medical and scientific communities have mounted their characteristic response by sharing the facts, the data, and all of the reliable peer-reviewed and well-cited research to show that vaccines are safe and effective. It has become clear to me that facts are no match for emotion, but perhaps an understanding behind vaccine methodology will help parents overcome these fears of vaccinating. By helping those who doubt vaccines better understand what vaccines really are and how they work in such an incredibly engineered fashion, we may have a stronger weapon than we realize in battling the emotional arsenal that comes from the fear and skepticism of vaccinating.

KEYWORDS:

anti-vaccination; public understanding; vaccines

PMID:
25506276
PMCID:
PMC4257029
[PubMed - indexed for MEDLINE]
Free PMC Article
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