The Standard Journal

Panel: Overcoming vaccine hesitancy is key to getting past COVID-19

- By Dave Williams

ATLANTA — Georgia and other states with low COVID-19 vaccinatio­n rates are in a race against time with fast-replicatin­g variants of the virus, a faculty member at the Morehouse School of Medicine said Thursday.

The various coronaviru­s vaccines now available are effective against the Delta variant, now responsibl­e for the most new infections. But other variants could spring up soon unless more residents of low-vaccinatio­n states get vaccinated, Dr. Michelle Nichols, associate dean of family medicine at Morehouse, warned during a panel discussion sponsored by the school and the Peach State Health Plan.

“These variants are smart. They’re dangerous,” she said. “There’s a point at which variants will overtake us.”

Faculty members from Morehouse, state agency heads, representa­tives of Peach State Health Plan and educationa­l, religious and nonprofit leaders spent an hour talking about what can be done to overcome vaccine hesitancy in Georgia.

As of Thursday, COVID-19 had hospitaliz­ed 914,984 Georgians, while the virus had resulted in 21,593 confirmed and probable deaths. The state’s vaccinatio­n rate of 38% trails the national average.

Nichols said a key factor in why so many Georgians are reluctant to get vaccinated is the amount of misinforma­tion being spread about the shots. She said COVID-19 vaccinatio­ns will not affect a woman’s fertility, will not alter a person’s DNA and will not cause a person to contract the virus.

Dr. Kathleen Toomey, commission­er of the Georgia Department of Public Health, said another argument against getting the shot is that it won’t protect the recipient from contractin­g the virus.

“You can still acquire an infection,” she said. “But you’re less likely to become seriously ill or die. … Nothing is more dangerous than a serious case of COVID.”

Wade Rakes, president and CEO of Peach State Health Plan, said events such as Thursday’s panel discussion are important to getting out the word about the safety and efficacy of the various vaccines.

“When people are informed, they choose to join the group of people who are vaccinated,” he said. “That’s going to be the way for us to get up to the goal of (a) 70% (vaccinatio­n rate).”

 ?? ♦ Jeremy stewart ?? Laura Guzman shuts her eyes as she is given the first dose of the Pfizer COVID-19 vaccine by Redmond EMS technician Ricky Cooper during a vaccine clinic at the Nathan Dean Community Center in Rockmart on Wednesday, March 17, 2021.
♦ Jeremy stewart Laura Guzman shuts her eyes as she is given the first dose of the Pfizer COVID-19 vaccine by Redmond EMS technician Ricky Cooper during a vaccine clinic at the Nathan Dean Community Center in Rockmart on Wednesday, March 17, 2021.

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