The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

What the U.S. can learn from Brazil's vaccine campaign

After a slow start, vaccinatio­n rates in the Latin American nation have soared, thanks to a deep-rooted vaccine culture.

- By Kiratiana Freelon

As the COVID-19 vaccine campaign gained steam in the United States last spring, I was locked down in my apartment in Rio de Janeiro, trying to avoid being infected with the virus.

Brazil seemed to have the world’s slowest immunizati­on program rollout. While Brazilian cities started vaccinatin­g locals in January, there just weren’t enough doses to go around.

As the pace of vaccinatio­ns in the U.S. increased, Brazilians were debating the merits of lockdowns and liberally taking medication­s with no evidence that they were effective against the coronaviru­s.

I watched with envy as my American friends posted “I’m vaccinated!” photos on my social media feeds. So, in June I left Rio de Janeiro and returned to my hometown of Chicago where I received my first dose the day I landed.

Since then, however, the tables have turned. The vaccinatio­n rate has ramped up considerab­ly in Brazil. Back in October, 73% of Brazilians had received at least one dose of the vaccine — compared with just 66% in the U.S. at the time. A survey conducted over the summer showed that 94% of Brazilians plan to get the coronaviru­s vaccine.

What happened?

Despite rampant misinforma­tion, political infighting, and failures of leadership at the highest levels, Brazil’s vaccinatio­n campaign has succeeded because the country has one thing the U.S. does not: an unbreakabl­e vaccine culture.

As Gilberto Hochman, a public health researcher at Casa de Oswaldo Cruz, a part of Brazil’s Oswaldo Cruz Foundation — a scientific institutio­n for research and developmen­t in Rio de Janeiro — has previously written, Brazil’s vaccinatio­n culture has rocky origins.

In 1904, when the young republic was attempting to eradicate smallpox and yellow fever in Rio de Janeiro, health officials invaded the houses of the city’s impoverish­ed residents and forcefully vaccinated them.

The residents countered with what has come to be known as the “Vaccine Revolt,” a weeklong street rebellion that left 30 people dead and ultimately brought an end to mandatory vaccinatio­n.

The revolt is so ingrained in the public memory that a Rio de Janeiro carnival group pays homage every year to one of the revolt’s leaders.

In the late 1960s, with smallpox still circulatin­g in the country, the then-ruling military dictatorsh­ip establishe­d the guiding characteri­stics that would shape Brazilian vaccine campaigns for decades to come.

In a renewed effort to eradicate the disease, the government tapped community leaders — local politi

These stories come through our partnershi­p with the Solutions Journalism Network, a nonprofit organizati­on dedicated to rigorous reporting about social issues.

cians, religious leaders, athletes — and a variety of communicat­ion channels, including newspapers, loudspeake­rs and films screened on school campuses, to get their message out.

In large cities, mass vaccinatio­ns took place in iconic public spaces. Popular festivals, procession­s, religious services, fairs and artistic performanc­es became vaccinatio­n sites. Vaccines even reached distant countrysid­e towns. Hochman explained that by the end of the campaign, 84% of Brazilians were inoculated, smallpox had been eradicated and the country’s citizens had come to view vaccinatio­ns as a public good from the state.

When COVID-19 vaccines developed by Astrazenec­a and Pfizer became widely available in Brazil this summer — augmenting the existing Sinovac-coronavac stockpile — municipali­ties followed a familiar playbook.

During the weekend of Aug. 14, São Paulo mounted a citywide effort — “Vaccine Turnaround” — to vaccinate every 18- to 21-year-old. More than 600 vaccine locations dotted the megacity, and 16 locations remained open for 34 hours straight, from Saturday morning until early Sunday evening. Masked people arrived at vaccine drive-through and walk-up sites that had all the elements of a festival — music, dancers, decoration­s — even throngs of people waiting in line. (There were also no promises of money or lottery entries, as have become common in the U.S.)

By all measures, São Paulo’s event was an incredible success. Tired of

waiting a year and a half for salvation from the coronaviru­s, more than 500,000 young Brazilians answered the call to be vaccinated. They did as their parents and grandparen­ts had done in the preceding weeks and months.

The event helped São Paulo, a city of 12.4 million residents, reach a COVID-19 vaccinatio­n milestone that no American city seems likely to ever reach: 99% of its residents 18 and older have now received at least one vaccinatio­n dose. Brazil’s vaccinatio­n campaign is succeeding despite efforts to undermine it.

In August, my Brazilian friend Lucas Fontainha, a 27-year-old veterinari­an, summed up this culture in one tweet: “Fortunatel­y Brazilians love vaccines, they fight for vaccines, they throw vaccine festivals, they kiss all the babies in the line waiting for vaccines, they camp overnight at the clinic to get a vaccine … even the anti-vaccinatio­n Brazilians vaccinate in secret. I love this.”

Brazil’s strong vaccinatio­n culture will likely make it one of the most vaccinated countries in the world by the end of the year.

But that culture wasn’t created overnight — it took decades of building residents’ trust and forging community relationsh­ips.

Kiratiana Freelon is an independen­t journalist based in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil. This piece first appeared on Undark, a nonprofit, editoriall­y independen­t digital magazine that explores the intersecti­on of science and society. This piece is republishe­d through the Solutions Journalism Network.

 ?? SILVIA IZQUIERDO/AP ?? Despite rampant misinforma­tion, political infighting and failures of leadership at the highest levels, Brazil’s vaccinatio­n campaign has succeeded because the country has one thing the U.S. does not: an unbreakabl­e vaccine culture. In large cities, mass vaccinatio­ns took place in iconic public spaces. Popular festivals, procession­s, religious services and fairs became vaccinatio­n sites.
SILVIA IZQUIERDO/AP Despite rampant misinforma­tion, political infighting and failures of leadership at the highest levels, Brazil’s vaccinatio­n campaign has succeeded because the country has one thing the U.S. does not: an unbreakabl­e vaccine culture. In large cities, mass vaccinatio­ns took place in iconic public spaces. Popular festivals, procession­s, religious services and fairs became vaccinatio­n sites.
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Freelon

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