The Guardian (USA)

McDonald’s and Uber to help encourage vaccine-hesitant Americans

- Edward Helmore

Incentivis­ing the vaccine-hesitant in America has reached the fast food and ride-share industries.

Burger chain McDonald’s has announced it is partnering with the White House to promote vaccinatio­n informatio­n on its coffee cups.

Separately, Joe Biden announced on Tuesday a new program with Lyft and Uber which will offer free rides to anyone going to a vaccinatio­n site to get vaccinated.

Starting in July, US customers will see redesigned McCafé cups and delivery-box seal stickers featuring an upbeat message of “We Can Do This”, a slogan created by the US health department.

McDonald’s also said it will unveil a billboard in New York’s Times Square this month displaying vaccine informatio­n.

Xavier Becerra, the health secretary, said in a statement the public-private partnershi­p “will help more people make informed decisions about their health and learn about steps they can take to protect themselves and their communitie­s”.

As part of Biden’s goal to get 70% of the US adult population vaccinated with at least one shot by 4 July, the ride-share giants Uber and Lyft will promote rides to and from tens of thousands of vaccinatio­n sites through their apps, the White House said.

“People will be able to simply select a vaccinatio­n site near them, follow simple directions to redeem their ride, and then get a ride to take them to and from a nearby vaccinatio­n site free of charge.”

The vaccine promotion scheme is expected to start in about two weeks and last until the Fourth of July holiday.

The new campaigns join a range of consumer-focused incentives unveiled in recent days, including a micro-brewery in Buffalo, New York offering beer to patrons who accept a vaccine shot.

Vaccinatio­n rates across the US have slowed as officials encounter vaccine-hesitant segments of the population.

There is now an increasing­ly fervent public- and private-sector effort to meet drops in vaccine demand headon. Unilever added free ice cream, including popsicles and Klondike shakes, to health workers and people getting vaccinated at several vaccinatio­n sites.

According to a recent Kaiser Family Foundation survey, 47% of people who said they want to “wait and see” before being vaccinated also said paid time off to get it would make them more likely to get the shot. Thirty-nine pe cent said a financial incentive of $200 from their employer would work.

 ?? Photograph: Pascal Guyot/AFP/Getty Images ?? McDonald’s also said it will unveil a billboard in New York’s Times Square this month displaying vaccine informatio­n.
Photograph: Pascal Guyot/AFP/Getty Images McDonald’s also said it will unveil a billboard in New York’s Times Square this month displaying vaccine informatio­n.

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