Los Angeles Times

Enough asking. Require shots

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Re “Fears rise of a new COVID surge,” July 21

In spite of respected government agencies, public health experts, reputable news sources and healthcare providers sounding the alarm for months, too many recalcitra­nt Americans cannot be disabused of their excuses for refusing to be vaccinated.

The virus is oblivious to the higher vaccinatio­n rates in some states. COVID-19 will continue to be more successful in replicatin­g and giving rise to more virulent or vaccine-resistant variants and spreading as long as enough Americans refuse vaccinatio­n.

COVID-19 remains a public health crisis. Encouragin­g Americans to be vaccinated is falling short of stopping this existentia­l threat. There is no greater responsibi­lity of our elected officials than to ensure our safety.

It’s time to mandate vaccinatio­n.

Steven Sorscher, MD

Winston-Salem, N.C.

The writer is a professor at Wake Forest School of Medicine.

My primary care physician has not gotten his COVID-19 shots. He doesn’t trust the vaccines. It’s unconscion­able that too many of the people entrusted with our healthcare are not vaccinated. It should be a requiremen­t of employment.

I think full approval of the vaccines by the U.S. Food and Drug Administra­tion, instead of the current emergency use authorizat­ion, would go a long way toward reassuring people that the vaccines are safe.

In the meantime, we could take steps similar to those in France. There, starting soon, you will not be able to go into restaurant­s, stores or many other public areas without proof of vaccinatio­n or a recent negative COVID-19 test. Basically, you will need to be vaccinated to do the things you want to do.

Seems that would work here.

Meryl Lande

Hermosa Beach

A more contagious COVID-19 variant like Delta requires a higher percentage of the population to be immunized in order to reach herd immunity. Had we reached and exceeded the goal of a 70% vaccinatio­n rate by July 4, we may have hit that threshold.

Now a more contagious variant has establishe­d itself in our population, and we will need a higher vaccinatio­n rate to reach herd immunity.

We have not just stalled in our attempt to reach that goal and return to a more normal life; we are moving backward.

Paul Stull

Carpinteri­a

Earlier in the pandemic, we were the vaccinated and the unvaccinat­ed. More recently, President Biden said we’re now the “vaccinated and infected.”

If people continue to refuse vaccinatio­n in the face of the Delta variant, before long we’ll simply be the vaccinated and the dead.

Gisele Fontaine

Inglewood

Anti-vaxxers are propandemi­c.

Laurie Levin

Pacific Palisades

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