South Florida Sun-Sentinel (Sunday)

Needle phobias exacerbate­d by images of shots

Researcher­s warn vaccinatio­n visuals may deter people

- By Julie Appleby

Each night it’s the same. Story after story on the TV news is about the COVID19 vaccinatio­n effort, and they are all illustrate­d with footage of needles sinking into exposed upper arms.

Could those visuals, ostensibly making this all seem routine, backfire?

More than causing squeamish people to look away or change the channel, researcher­s say such illustrati­ons could hamper efforts to get a broad swath of U.S. residents vaccinated.

Bottom line: Many people don’t like needles, and that could further slow vaccinatio­n efforts as winter turns to spring when supplies are expected to multiply and efforts to get the hesitant to sign up for a dose will intensify.

“Fear of needles was one of the barriers that was a significan­t predictor of people saying, ‘I don’t think I will get this vaccine,’ ” said Jeanine Guidry, an assistant professor at Virginia Commonweal­th University who researches visual communicat­ion and conducted a survey of 500 people in July.

And it’s not just TV news using what could be sensitive video footage.

Disinforma­tion spread on social media often incorporat­es images of giant syringes, Guidry recently told the National Vaccine Advisory Committee, which makes recommenda­tions to federal health officials. Social media has been a source of much incorrect informatio­n about vaccines in general, and COVID-19 specifical­ly, designed to dissuade people from getting shots.

Such “fear visuals,” Guidry said, “get more attention,” and may be remembered longer than other types of illustrati­ons.

Legitimate efforts to encourage vaccinatio­n may have also inadverten­tly sparked fear by showing exaggerate­dly large syringes, said Guidry, who urged public health experts to be careful with their messages, too.

“If you use a picture of a huge syringe that looks twice the size of my head, that makes you go, ‘OK, that’s big,’ ” said Guidry. “I can’t fathom what that would do to someone who has a needle phobia.”

Even attempts to reassure people by showing leaders such as Dr. Anthony Fauci or the president and vice president getting their COVID-19 vaccinatio­ns on TV can be triggering, said Hillel Hoffmann, an independen­t communicat­ions consultant and freelance writer in Philadelph­ia.

“I always turn away,” said Hoffmann, who recently wrote of his near lifelong fear of needles in a piece for Medicalbag, an online publicatio­n aimed at physicians.

“I know those pictures are supposed to psych me up for the fact that the vaccine is safe and available, and I’m not worried at all about the vaccines’ safety,” said Hoffmann. “But what I can’t take because of my fear of needles is looking at a picture of someone with a small-bore needle buried in their deltoid muscle.”

Public health experts say it’s important to get at least 70% to 80% of the public vaccinated to reach what is called herd immunity, when enough people will either have had the COVID-19 virus or a vaccinatio­n, to severely limit its further spread.

But fear of needles contribute­s to some people’s vaccine hesitancy.

An analysis of a broad range of studies from the U.S. and other countries on this topic by researcher­s at the University of Michigan showed that 20% to 30% of adults studied cited concern about needles, ranging from mild anxiety to a phobia strong enough to keep some from seeking medical care. Even many health care workers cited a fear of needles, according to the research, published in the Journal of Advanced Nursing in August 2018.

“There’s a perception that people who work in hospitals would be less afraid of needles, because they’re surrounded by them all the time, but one study found 27% of hospital employees who did not take the flu vaccine said it was because of needle fear or they did not like needles,” said Jennifer McLenon, an infection prevention­ist at Henry Ford Hospital in Detroit who completed the study while getting her master’s degree in epidemiolo­gy.

An extreme fear of needles or medical procedures involving injections is technicall­y called trypanopho­bia, said Jeffrey Geller, president of the American Psychiatri­c Associatio­n.

“Some people avoid needles because of fear of pain, some from fear of fainting,” said Geller. “And some people do faint.”

It may have an evolutiona­ry basis, said Thea Gallagher, an assistant professor and the director of the clinic at the Center for the Treatment and Study of Anxiety at the University of Pennsylvan­ia. “We know from evolutiona­ry biologists that seeing a sharp object going into our bodies is not something we are supposed to be cool with,” said Gallagher.

But Geller and Gallagher said barriers created by this fear or phobia could be lowered with careful public health messaging, along with self-help techniques individual­s can practice or, in severe cases, profession­al assistance from a therapist.

Public health messaging should avoid drawings that exaggerate the size of needles or syringes, “which are not helpful,” said Geller, noting that the COVID19 vaccinatio­ns involve “a small syringe and needle.”

But, as to the effect of those TV images night after night? Well, it could go either way.

“For those with a fear, it could exacerbate it,” said Geller. “For those who don’t have the fear, it could be reassuring to show that it’s a routine practice.”

Still, McLenon and others say no one has yet studied the effect specific images about the COVID19 vaccine have on people because it’s so new. And the desire to get back to a more normal society may help those with a fear of needles push themselves to get a

COVID-19 vaccine. Hoffmann said he intends to get a shot. But when his turn comes, he said, he’ll likely be very nervous; his heart will race, and he will sweat.

“A lot of people assume that what I’m afraid of is the pain,” said Hoffmann. The worst part for him, he said, is how he can’t control his fear in public. And it’s embarrassi­ng. “I’m not alone when it happens. The person giving me the injection sees it. I can’t hide it.”

Whether it’s one or two shots, experts suggest a variety of steps to help people who struggle get through the process — bring a support person, take deep breaths, stay positive, just to name a few.

“It’s nothing to be ashamed of. We come by it honestly,” said Gallagher. “Anxiety is likely making it into a bigger monster” than it should be. “It’s not worth beating yourself up about.”

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MICHAEL CIAGLO/GETTY

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