Chattanooga Times Free Press

Talk radio host with COVID regrets his vaccine hesitancy

- BY TRAVIS LOLLER

“For those listening, I know if he were able to tell you this, he would tell you, ‘Go get vaccinated. Quit worrying about the politics. Quit worrying about all the conspiracy theories.’”

– MARK VALENTINE ABOUT HIS BROTHER, PHIL VALENTINE

NASHVILLE — A conservati­ve talk radio host from Tennessee who had been a vaccine skeptic until he was hospitaliz­ed from COVID-19 now says his listeners should get vaccinated.

Phil Valentine’s brother, Mark Valentine, spoke at length on WWTN-FM in Nashville on Thursday about his brother’s condition, saying he is in a critical care unit on supplement­al oxygen, but not on a ventilator. Phil Valentine has had an afternoon talk radio show on the station for years.

“First of all, he’s regretful that he wasn’t a more vocal advocate of the vaccinatio­n,” Mark Valentine said of his brother. “For those listening, I know if he were able to tell you this, he would tell you, ‘Go get vaccinated. Quit worrying about the politics. Quit worrying about all the conspiracy theories.’”

Mark Valentine took exception to the idea that Phil Valentine was anti-vaccinatio­n, labeling him “pro-informatio­n” and “pro-choice” on the vaccine but adding, “he got this one wrong.”

After Phil Valentine tested positive for COVID-19 but prior to his hospitaliz­ation, he told his listeners to consider, “If I get this COVID thing, do I have a chance of dying from it?” If so, he advised them to get vaccinated. He said he made the decision not to get vaccinated because he thought he probably wouldn’t die.

Phil Valentine also said that he was “taking vitamin D like crazy” and had found a doctor who agreed to prescribe ivermectin, a drug primarily used to treat parasites in animals. The U.S. Food and Drug Administra­tion warns against taking ivermectin for COVID-19, advising that it is not an anti-viral drug and can be dangerous. With regards to vitamin D, the National Institutes of Health says, “There is insufficie­nt evidence to recommend either for or against the use of vitamin D for the prevention or treatment of COVID-19.”

Mark Valentine said he got vaccinated against COVID-19 after his brother became ill. Realizing that he has a family he is responsibl­e for, he said not getting vaccinated “is just a selfish position to have, and, absent any concrete evidence to the contrary in terms of side effects and negative effects of the vaccine, I have a duty to do that.”

Mark Valentine’s comments came the same day Tennessee’s Republican Gov. Bill Lee defended his administra­tion’s firing of the state’s vaccinatio­n chief and rollback of outreach for childhood vaccines, both of which sparked national scrutiny over Tennessee’s inoculatio­n efforts against COVID-19.

Former state vaccine chief Michelle Fiscus has repeatedly said she was terminated to appease some GOP lawmakers who were outraged over state outreach for COVID-19 vaccinatio­ns to minors. Some lawmakers even threatened to dissolve the Health Department over the marketing.

Tennessee continues to have some of the lowest vaccinatio­n rates in the country even as cases are rising. As of Thursday, 12,666 people in Tennessee had died from COVID-19.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States