Covid-19 vaccinations will kick off within days but it
seems some people need a sharp dose of facts first. In an article published in the Daily Mirror, Matt Roper and I debunk some of the common myths and misconceptions about vaccines.
Scepticism about vaccines has been growing throughout the pandemic and a recent survey found that one in five British adults may refuse to take a coronavirus jab – even though it is probably our only hope of a return to normality.
1. MYTH: A vaccine produced so quickly can’t be safe
Most vaccines take years to develop, test and approve for
public use but, says Dr Majeed, a global effort has meant scientists have been
able to work at record speed.
He says: “Covid-19 vaccines have to go through the same process of approval as other vaccines. Funding was made available immediately and studies set up rapidly.
"There have been a lot of technological developments that allow vaccines to be developed much more quickly.”
2. MYTH: I might be allergic but won’t know until I get
it
Azeem Majeed is professor of primary care and public health
at Imperial College London
“Allergies to vaccines are very rare,” says Dr Majeed. “They
are given safely to millions of people every year.”
The odds you’ll have a severe reaction to a vaccine is about one in 760,000.
Being struck by lightning next year is higher at one in 700,000.
Most reactions are because of some other component of the vaccine, such as egg protein, if the person is severely allergic.
3, MYTH: There haven’t been enough tests for people with
underlying conditions
Dr Majeed says: “There are many vaccine trials taking place
and they are being tested in people with different characteristics, such as
age, sex, ethnicity and medical history.
"Results show they are safe in all groups they have
been tested in.”
4. MYTH: Vaccines can overload your immune system
In 2018 the myth was debunked by American researchers who
examined the medical records of more than 900 infants from six hospitals.
5. MYTH: The vaccine could actually give me coronavirus
Some vaccines contain the germs that cause the disease they are immunising against but they have been killed or weakened to the point they don’t make you sick.
In the case of a coronavirus vaccine, “none that are in development contain a live coronavirus,” assures Dr Majeed, “and they therefore can’t give you a coronavirus infection”.
6. MYTH: If everyone around me is immune, I don’t need a
vaccine
“It’s essential to achieve a high vaccine coverage so we
create herd immunity,” says Dr Majeed. “If people refuse to be immunised, we
will continue to get outbreaks of Covid-19.
"If you decline to be immunised, you may get infected and also infect the people you come into contact with.”
7. MYTH: It’s better to be immunised by catching Covid
Dr Majeed says: “Vaccines have been shown to be very safe, whereas illnesses such as measles and Covid-19 can lead to serious long-term medical complications.
8. MYTH: Vaccinated children experience more allergic,
autoimmune and respiratory diseases
This is another unfounded claim that has led some parents to
delay or withhold vaccinations, says Dr Majeed.
9. MYTH: Some of those taking part in trials died
Stories that Dr Elisa Granato, one of the first participants
in the human trials of the Oxford vaccine, died shortly after being injected,
were shared millions of times.
10. MYTH: The swine flu vaccine left people with side
effects, so why would this one be safe?
A mass vaccination programme against swine flu in the US in
1976 led to increased chances of people developing Guillain-Barre syndrome, a
rare neurological disorder.
11. MYTH: Vaccines cause autism
12. MYTH: The Spanish Flu vaccine led to 50 million
deaths
During the 1918 pandemic it was the fact there was no
vaccine that caused it to infect a third of the world’s population.
Comments
Answer: no. It cannot and will not. It is just an instruction booklet for your body to create an immune response so you can fight off Coronavirus if you are exposed