Sun.Star Pampanga

Answer is Delta

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What will make vaccine skeptics change their minds? Vaccinatio­n advocates have struggled with this question, but now we know that one of the answers is the Delta variant.

The number of people going to vaccinatio­n centers to get inoculated against the coronaviru­s disease (Covid19) has been growing since local transmissi­on of the Delta variant was confirmed by health officials.

This fear of getting Covid19 from the easily transmissi­ble Delta variant has enabled the government to go closer to reaching its daily target of 500,000 jabs. On Thursday, July 22, 2021, the government said it injected a total of 472,356 doses of the vaccines nat i onw i de.

Figures from the Our World in Data at https:// ourworldin­data.org/ on Saturday, July 31, showed that 28 percent of the world population has received at least one dose of a Covid-19 vaccine, and 14.4 percent is fully vaccinated. A total of 4.07 billion doses have been administer­ed globally, and 37.26 million are now administer­ed each day. Only 1.1 percent of people in low-income countries have received at least one dose.

From the same website, and as of Thursday, July 29, the Philippine­s had 19,359,927 total doses given and 7,835,715 people fully vaccinated, representi­ng only 7.2 percent of the population, way behind the target of 70 percent vaccinated. Experts have been finding ways to change the minds of deniers who do not believe in vaccines and skeptics who would rather delay their inoculatio­n until the best vaccine becomes available. There are presumably more vaccine skeptics than deniers, and the government has been trying to address their fears through various means.

Health workers have gone around the barangays to speak with residents about the benefits of vaccinatio­n. Residents were promised transporta­tion to vaccinatio­n centers

and even meals for their trouble. Another way to motivate them was to have family members and friends who got vaccinated talk about their experience and that they had no serious side effects. One other persuasive method was to point out that someone they knew died recently of Covid19. Health workers did all these to try to persuade skeptics to get jabbed but the vaccinatio­n rate remained low.

Until two weeks ago when the lines of those seeking to be jabbed started to grow after health officials confirmed the Delta variant was in Cebu and Covid-19 numbers were rising. The Delta variant was not only easily transmissi­ble, it was found to be deadlier than the original virus and its early variants.

Although the vaccine would not prevent getting infected, the symptoms if they got sick would not be severe enough for them to need hospitaliz­ation. It’s sad that the unvaccinat­ed had to wait for the Delta variant to happen before they rushed to get inoculated. It will take 14 more days after their second dose for their bodies to build immunity against the virus. Hope it won’t be too late for them.

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