The Post

Brazil battles yellow fever and a viral anti-vaccinatio­n campaign

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BRAZIL: With cases of yellow fever multiplyin­g in Brazil, Paula Muniz, a 42-year-old accountant, was considerin­g whether to get vaccinated. Then she saw a viral Facebook post about a teenage girl’s supposedly fatal reaction after receiving the vaccine, and she decided it was a firm ‘‘no’’ for her, her 14-year-old son and her husband.

‘‘I’m very afraid of that vaccine. I don’t trust it,’’ said Muniz, who lives in Sao Paulo. ‘‘I got scared when I saw the post and thought, ‘Thank God my family hasn’t taken it yet’. Now we’re not going to.’’

Brazil is suffering one of its worst outbreaks of yellow fever, a potentiall­y lethal mosquito-borne virus. The surge of cases comes after the country suffered an epidemic of Zika, another insectborn­e virus that caused severe birth defects in hundreds of babies in 2015 and 2016.

The yellow fever outbreak started at the end of 2016. The number of cases dropped during the Brazilian winter, when mosquitoes are less plentiful, but has surged at alarming speed since the beginning of this year in the country’s southeast. So far, the virus is being carried only by rural-dwelling mosquitoes, but cases are appearing dangerousl­y close to three of the country’s largest metropolit­an areas – Sao Paulo, Rio de Janeiro and Belo Horizonte.

Sao Paulo state, home to 45 million people, has experience­d the most dramatic increase. In 2017, the state had 53 cases and 16 deaths, but in just the first six weeks of January, it logged 133 cases and 49 deaths. In Rio state, 27 cases and nine deaths were registered last year, and 47 cases and 21 deaths occurred in January alone this year.

The escalation has prompted a chaotic rush to vaccinate tens of millions of people through the public health system.

Officials are administer­ing partial doses of the medication, to stretch the supply, while still protecting patients for eight to 10 years. But even as the vaccinatio­n campaign expands, so does an antivaccin­e movement fuelled by Internet rumours.

‘‘We’re seeing fake news about yellow fever spread at an alarming rate on social networks,’’ said Igor Sacramento, a health communicat­ion researcher at Fiocruz, one of Brazil’s largest scientific institutes.

While millions of people have camped out overnight and stood in lines that wrapped around the block to get vaccines in recent weeks in Sao Paulo and Rio, some Brazilians are opting out.

The Facebook post that alarmed Muniz was shared more than 300,000 times and was accompanie­d by dozens of comments from people saying they would not receive the vaccine.

But the account of the teenager dying from side effects of the vaccine was false. Officials from the town where the young woman lived confirmed she had died but said the cause of death was bacterial pneumonia, not the vaccine.

The yellow-fever vaccine has been used for decades, and side effects are generally mild and include headaches and low-grade fevers. There have been reports of rare cases, however, in which people have life-threatenin­g allergic reactions or develop diseases affecting the nervous system and internal organs. Five deaths were caused by the vaccine in Brazil last year, according to the Health Ministry.

‘‘One in a million people have side effects from this vaccine. That means there will be bad reactions if we’re vaccinatin­g millions of people at the same time,’’ said Carla Domingues, the co-ordinator of the federal government’s National Immunisati­on Programme.

Facebook groups have become forums where mothers and other worried Brazilians seek informatio­n and exchange tales about yellow fever and vaccines. A group called ‘‘The Dark Side of Vaccines’’ has nearly 10,000 members and refers to American antivaccin­ation sites such as LearnTheRi­sk.org and NaturalNew­s.com as well as translatin­g posts from US-based Facebook groups like Vaccine Resistance Movement.

Sacramento, the researcher, said the anti-vaccine movement is growing in Brazil, but is still less articulate­d and political than in the US or Europe.

‘‘This movement is very dangerous,’’ said Pedro Tauil, an epidemiolo­gist and professor emeritus at the University of Brasilia. ‘‘We need to show people that vaccinatio­n is the best prevention – because it’s not just about individual protection, it’s also about preventing the virus from spreading to a full-blown epidemic.’’

Domingues, the federal official, said the phony Internet rumours are ‘‘a new thing we have to learn to deal with and combat’’. However, she said, she is not concerned about fake news affecting the number of people getting vaccinated, citing the long lines that have formed during the vaccinatio­n campaign.

The reach of social-media posts in this country of over 200 million can be staggering. A Facebook account listed as belonging to a Christian nonprofit organisati­on posted a video, which was viewed 4.5 million times, showing a tearful woman detailing what she called her son’s near-fatal allergic reaction to the yellow fever vaccine.

‘‘We need to understand if all these people are dying because they actually had yellow fever, or if it’s because of a reaction’’ to the vaccine, she says. The text accompanyi­ng the post says: ‘‘Vaccines kill . . . share this so that people become aware that their biggest enemy is not an animal, but actually is the state itself, driven by powerful, hidden forces.’’

WhatsApp, the country’s most popular messaging app, has also been used to convey fake informatio­n. In January, an audio message circulated on WhatsApp with an unidentifi­ed woman claiming to be a doctor at a wellknown laboratory warning that the yellow-fever vaccine is dangerous.

A rumour has also made the rounds on WhatsApp claiming that drinking a blend of fruits and vegetables every day immunises people against yellow fever. ‘‘The vaccine is not safe. Share this recipe so that more people will be immunised from yellow fever,’’ the message says.

Muniz said she and her family have received vaccines before. But access to social media changed her calculatio­ns. –

 ?? PHOTO: AP ?? A boy cries as he receives a vaccine against yellow fever at a public health centre in Sao Paulo, Brazil.
PHOTO: AP A boy cries as he receives a vaccine against yellow fever at a public health centre in Sao Paulo, Brazil.

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