The Scottish Mail on Sunday

When anti-vaxxer Les got Covid-19, he said it’d be just like a cold. 10 days later he was dead

So will his tragedy – and that of many others like him – make refuseniks see sense and get a jab?

- By Pat Hagan

ILLNESS is just a part of life.’ ‘The dangers of an experiment­al vaccine aren’t worth the risk.’ ‘We mustn’t live in fear of Covid – and the Government needs to know how we feel.’ These are just a few of the last, defiant words of anti-vaxxer Leslie Lawrenson, recorded in June as he outlined to his Facebook

followers how he planned to take on the virus without any medical interventi­on.

The 58-year-old solicitor from Bournemout­h had no history of serious illness when he fell ill, and was convinced his body was up to the job. His symptoms were not much worse than a cold, he said. If he got very sick, he pledged he’d ‘ride it out’ without burdening the NHS. He was true to his word.

Nine days later the Cambridge University graduate was found dead in his bed.

Les, as he was known, had persuaded his wife Amanda Mitchell that she didn’t need the vaccine either – she nearly lost her life to the virus, too.

Amanda, 56, who has diabetes and high blood pressure, later told reporters: ‘He really believed he was going to get better. He said there was more chance of being ill from the vaccine than the virus.

‘Watching our 11-year-old son write his lastever card to his daddy to put in the coffin was heartbreak­ing.’

Tragic, undoubtedl­y, but also exasperati­ng and by no means an unusual tale. In recent months a dozen or so cases such as these have been reported. Vaccine sceptics, many of whom publicly questioned both the safety of the jab and the threat from the virus, paying the ultimate price for their misguided beliefs. And, like Les, many didn’t appear to fit the at-risk profile.

TAKE bodybuilde­r and rockclimbi­ng fan John Eyers, a 42year-old father-of-one from Southport, Merseyside, who died in August, four weeks after testing positive for the virus, having refused the jab on the grounds that he was too fit and healthy to be a victim.

‘He had a belief in his own immortalit­y,’ said his twin sister, Jenny McCann, 42, from London.

Or 40-year-old former reality TV contestant Marcus Birks, 40, who thought he wouldn’t get ill from Covid because he exercised five times a week.

Across the Atlantic, controvers­ial US radio host Phil Valentine lost his battle with the virus, having broadcast his scepticism about the scale of the pandemic and the safety of – or need for – vaccines. The 61year-old even performed on air an anti-vax song he wrote. The DJ died from Covid on August 21, just weeks after testing positive.

With unvaccinat­ed patients now accounting for the vast majority of hospitalis­ed Covid cases in the UK, there are major concerns that antijab messages are stalling progress in the national vaccinatio­n campaign – especially as more than three million 18- to 29-year-olds haven’t taken up the offer.

Scare stories such as the ones mentioned above are undeniably striking. And one might think they would encourage anyone who doubted that Covid vaccines were anything but a lifesaver to think again. But we spoke to experts in psychology who suggested they might have the opposite effect. Others say we should view Covid sceptics as victims of a form of brainwashi­ng – caused, in part, by the proliferat­ion of misinforma­tion online.

It is estimated that prominent anti-vaxxers’ social-media accounts enjoy a global following of almost 60million – more than the population of England – and that numbers increased by almost 20 per cent last year.

A report in December 2020 by researcher­s at King’s College London revealed that one in three of the 2,244 adults surveyed said they had seen or heard anti-vax messaging designed to put them off having the Covid jab, mostly through social-media platforms such as Twitter and Instagram.

And among 16- to 24-year-olds, more than a quarter of those polled agreed with this statement: ‘The real purpose of vaccinatio­n was so the Government could track and control the population.’

Professor Bobby Duffy, who led the study, said: ‘It’s clear that some harmful views have taken hold among a minority of the public.’

Most anti-vaxxers claim it’s actually healthier to catch Covid, and develop immunity that way, than

have a vaccine. Similar things are repeated ad nauseam: if you eat well, exercise regularly and keep the weight off, your own defences will be robust enough to keep you safe.

‘You have to trust your immune system,’ said Les Lawrenson, less than two weeks before he died. Except that it isn’t so simple.

Anyone of any age can catch Covid, but the risk of serious illness increases as people get older.

Adding in a health problem – such as heart disease – ups the risk again. And these become more likely from middle age onwards.

But age alone is a major factor, regardless of how fit or healthy that person is.

A 30-year-old with no pre-existing conditions has roughly a three per cent risk of being hospitalis­ed should they catch Covid, and a less than 0.1 per cent risk of dying from it.

A healthy 60-year-old has a 15 per cent risk of hospitalis­ation and a 1.5 per cent risk of death.

Dr Andrew Easton, a virologist at Warwick University, said: ‘As we age, our immune system ages and weakens too – a process called immunosene­scence. And so the ability to mount an immune response to fight an infection is reduced.

‘Being fit and healthy does play a role, and it will put anyone in a better place, but it’s no guarantee of protection. You can’t cheat this process of immune-system ageing.’

And being young is no guarantee, either, says Leeds University virologist Dr Stephen Griffin.

SPEAKING to The Mail on Sunday’s Medical Minefield podcast, he said: ‘Our immune system, and the way we respond to infections, is largely determined by our genetics. That’s why some of us do really well when we catch the virus, and many of us don’t.

‘The immune system isn’t a muscle – you can’t train it up. That’s why a vaccine is always going to be safer than taking a chance with infection.

‘And these vaccines have been tested in some of the most robust and rigorous trials ever done, so the notion that they are experiment­al, or unsafe, really isn’t right.’

So why do some people become so convinced by these myths that they’re willing to gamble with their lives?

‘Our research shows a lot of it is simply down to a misunderst­anding of the data and science,’ says anthropolo­gist and World Health Organisati­on adviser Dr Jennifer Cole, of Royal Holloway University.

Dr Cole’s team is about to publish findings on what drives anti-vax sentiment in different parts of the world – including the UK.

She says misinforma­tion often comes in the form of simple soundbites, while the valid science can be time-consuming to understand.

One example is data now showing more vaccinated people are dying from the Delta variant of Covid than unvaccinat­ed people – suggesting the jab is increasing deaths.

‘But that’s because there are very few people left who have not had the jab,’ says Dr Cole.

Everyone has the potential to be

misled by false informatio­n, but some people are more vulnerable than others.

Research shows older adults may be less ‘digitally savvy’ and able to differenti­ate between reliable and unreliable online informatio­n sources.

And much fake news contains grains of truth mixed with falsehoods and distortion­s, meaning it’s often plausible and convincing. People may also be drawn to misinforma­tion that fits their own beliefs and world views – in the case of Covid, mistrust in healthcare systems plays a role.

Experts say the vast majority of ‘hesitants’ are not hardcore conspiracy theorists but simply have concerns about safety, or are mistaken about whether they really need protection.

So will terrifying tales of anti-vaxxers succumbing to infection persuade those in two minds about vaccinatio­n to opt for the jab?

DR ALBERTO GIUBILINI, senior ethics research fellow at Oxford University, believes shock tactics can sometimes work. He said: ‘I think these scare stories can help with vaccine hesitancy. These stories have emotional value and most people make decisions based on their emotions or intuition rather than analysing lots of data.’

But Professor Robert Dingwall, a sociologis­t at Nottingham Trent University and a former member of the Joint Committee on Vaccinatio­n and Immunisati­on (JCVI), which guides Government jab policy, says: ‘Fear-based messaging is generally not very effective. We know people looking at these stories often turn off and stop reading them.’

Professor Julian Savulescu, an ethics experts at Oxford University, agrees: ‘There’s a hard core of anti-vaxxers who will never change their minds. But many people are not militant, just cautious. They may see themselves as lowrisk, or have had Covid already.’

Prof Savulescu says we mustn’t ‘victim blame’ – and that positive incentives are likely to be more effective persuasion.

He advocates cash payments similar to the US, where President Joe Biden has called on state authoritie­s to offer $100 (£72) handouts to anyone who hasn’t come forward for a jab. ‘They may be planning to get the vaccine at some point – we just need them to get it sooner,’ he adds.

Introducin­g vaccine passports could be another way to persuade many of Britain’s hesitant adults to get immunised, experts believe.

After France introduced a compulsory passport scheme for anyone – including tourists – wanting access to public attraction­s or hospitalit­y venues, an additional seven million people came forward for their first jab.

‘Passports are a good idea because they are more likely to nudge people towards getting the vaccine,’ says Professor Ivo Vlaev, a behavioura­l scientist at Warwick University. ‘If the message is no holiday without a vaccine passport, people are more likely to respond positively.’

But many will need convincing, with angry protesters recently taking to the streets of London to fight the idea of vaccine passports in the UK. And too much informatio­n can also be a bad thing, experts warn.

Bombarding the public with overwhelmi­ng Covid data is likely to backfire in the drive to shore up vaccinatio­n rates, experts warn. In fact, research shows the simpler the message, the more effective it is.

Prof Vlaev says simple analogies work much better than endless statistics. ‘Say things like, you are more likely to be struck by lightning than suffer a blood clot from a vaccine, which is true. We shouldn’t ignore the science but neither should we overplay it,’ he adds.

One recent study, published in the journal Psychology And Health, found that one of the most effective ways to boost vaccine acceptance was for patients to share selfies of themselves having the jab.

The researcher­s said it promotes ‘normative’ conduct – where people get motivated by what most other people do.

Even old-fashioned nagging could work, according to a 2019 study in Kenya, where some patients with tuberculos­is were bombarded with daily text messages – followed by phone calls if they didn’t respond – reminding them to take all their medicines. Nearly 96 per cent completed their treatment, compared with 87 per cent in the group who were not nagged.

Over these pages, we’ve detailed just a few of the salutary stories of anti-vaxxers who have died from Covid that have appeared over the past month.

Whatever your views, they make for sobering reading…

 ?? ?? JUNE 25 ‘EVERY PART OF MY BODY IS RACKED WITH PAIN’
JUNE 25 ‘EVERY PART OF MY BODY IS RACKED WITH PAIN’
 ?? ?? JUNE 23 ‘I HOPE IT IS COVID. I’D RATHER HAVE IT THAN THE JAB’
JUNE 23 ‘I HOPE IT IS COVID. I’D RATHER HAVE IT THAN THE JAB’
 ?? ??
 ?? ?? ‘HE DIDN’T WANT THE VACCINE’: John Eyers, above, and, above left, being treated in hospital for Covid-19 before his death last month
‘HE DIDN’T WANT THE VACCINE’: John Eyers, above, and, above left, being treated in hospital for Covid-19 before his death last month

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