Lethbridge Herald

Trust of vaccines focus of SACPA talk

- Steffanie Costigan LETHBRIDGE HERALD Local Journalism Initiative Reporter

During the COVID-19 pandemic, concerned individual­s debated the topic of vaccinatio­ns, increasing the division on individual­s’ perspectiv­es. Could this division be linked to the lack of trust people have within the medical healthcare system?

A local philosophy professor has raised the current issue of trust.

The history of vaccinatio­ns and their resistance of them was the topic of discussion at the Southern Alberta Council on Public Affairs (SACPA) on Thursday at noon.

Guest speaker Bryson Brown, a philosophy professor at the University of Lethbridge, expressed the lack of trust which has shifted peoples’ perspectiv­es.

“Trust, of course, is a very big issue here. I suspect most of us here, if not all of us, have enough trust in the medical system to actually get a vaccine that’s recommende­d by our doctors and by other significan­t medical figures. With that said, we’ve seen a lot of resistance and a lot of complaints, some of them from someone we can all think of quite readily right now,” said Brown.

The topics he discussed were the history of vaccinatio­ns, the history of resistance to vaccinatio­ns, evolution, trust, and the emergence of biological and biochemica­l knowledge, which formed new tools in shaping vaccines in progressio­n. He shared his speculatio­n on the resistance to vaccinatio­ns and the caution which he believes triggers individual­s.

“There are other people out there who feel that way, who want to spread some misinforma­tion about it; you can justify that feeling of yours by saying, ‘oh, these vaccines aren’t any good,’ or there’s no good reason to trust them anyway. And then you can feel comfortabl­e because you’re uncomforta­ble with getting the vaccine.”

During the open question-andanswer portion, a spectator, Klaus Jericho thanked Brown for his presentati­on, and Jericho was the first to bring up the question of freedom.

“You didn’t mention this word freedom. Say something about freedom of vaccinatio­n,” said Jericho.

Brown replied with, “I’m tempted to say freedom’s just another word for nothing left to lose.” The audience laughed and applauded with his comment.

“There are all kinds of tangles around the word freedom, and because it seems ideologica­l. It’s about how you feel about things. I’m much more concerned about my freedom to say things in front of the microphone that I believe and provide arguments and argue back and forth over those things that that to me, that’s freedom.”

Brown is currently a professor and chair in the Department of Philosophy at the University of Lethbridge. He has co-authored and co-edited six volumes of scholarly papers. He noted his inspiratio­n for wanting to speak on the specific topic of vaccinatio­ns and the increase in resistance.

“I wanted to take this on partly because I, like a lot of us, have been very concerned by the kind of ill-informed resistance to vaccinatio­n that we have seen over the last couple of years since the vaccine was first developed for COVID.”

 ?? HERALD PHOTO BY STEFFANIE COSTIGAN ?? U of L philosophy professor Bryson Brown speaks during this week’s session of the Southern Alberta Council on Public Affairs.
HERALD PHOTO BY STEFFANIE COSTIGAN U of L philosophy professor Bryson Brown speaks during this week’s session of the Southern Alberta Council on Public Affairs.

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