USA TODAY US Edition

Student coalition to fight vaccine misinforma­tion

- Kate Mabus

Following an initial flood of interest, U.S. COVID-19 vaccinatio­n rates have slowed dramatical­ly and young adults are among the holdouts.

Now, some college students are working to change that.

The Covid Campus Coalition, a network of students across 23 universiti­es, is working to reach young people and cut through vaccine misinforma­tion with social media campaigns.

The group is particular­ly concerned that infections are now on the rise across the nation as the delta variant spreads rapidly.

As back-to-school season looms, this student group is urging young people to get vaccinated – for themselves and for others.

“Especially as a young person, not only will people who we care about be endangered again, it could definitely severely impact our college experience,” Jordan Tralins, a junior at Cornell University, told USA TODAY. “We could potentiall­y go back to lockdowns and miss out on more fun activities that we love do and that really define this point in our lives.”

Tralins was driven to form the coalition after noticing misinforma­tion and conspiracy theories about the vaccine circulatin­g online.

The coalition uses Instagram and TikTok to share scientific­ally proven informatio­n on the vaccine and encourage young people to get the shot.

“Most people from my generation don’t spend their free time sifting through scientific literature to formulate opinions about scientific matters. We really look at what’s on our social media pages,” Tralins told USA TODAY.

James Lifton, a sophomore at Texas A&M who is an ambassador for the coalition, has used Instagram to post statistics about the virus, advertise vaccinatio­n clinics on campus and connect with student organizati­ons that can use their clout to promote vaccines.

With the new school year right around the corner, he is encouragin­g students at Texas A&M to have discussion­s about the vaccine with their friends and family.

He believes that this is the best way to change individual opinions and foster a communal effort to stop the spread of COVID-19.

Experts agree that over the course of the pandemic there has been a failure to communicat­e the risk and responsibi­lity with young people.

In the early days of the virus, the public health community’s messaging was geared toward older people and vulnerable population­s.

This failure to communicat­e risk to younger population­s has contribute­d to a spirit of “invincibil­ity” that already guides many young people, Lifton said.

Yotam Ophir, who researches health and science communicat­ions at the University at Buffalo, said messaging on any health topic from the dangers of smoking to the importance of sunscreen is most effective when it communicat­es personal risk and reward.

The benefits of the vaccine are clear to high-risk population­s who know that contractin­g the virus could mean death.

Yet for young people who have watched their friends contract the virus and recover, sometimes without any symptoms, the need may be less clear.

Allyson Levin, a communicat­ion professor at Villanova University, told USA TODAY that one of the most effective ways to get a large percentage of young people vaccinated is to make vaccinatio­n a social norm – a healthy peer pressure.

Ophir said communicat­ions research from the last 30 years shows that teenagers are most influenced by their peers and social environmen­t.

Lifton is optimistic about the way forward now that public health officials are utilizing the power of social media to make vaccine informatio­n compelling and accessible.

“Once you get people to see the stuff you’re posting it will spread,” he said. “That’s how you get students to trust the data. We believe our friends.”

 ?? PROVIDED BY JORDAN TRALINS ?? The student ambassador­s of the COVID Campus Coalition span 23 universiti­es from around the country.
PROVIDED BY JORDAN TRALINS The student ambassador­s of the COVID Campus Coalition span 23 universiti­es from around the country.

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