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Morning Briefing

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Thursday, Apr 7 2022

Full Issue

Different Takes: How To Get More Children Vaccinated Against Covid; Covid.gov Is A Failure

Opinion writers tackle these covid topics.

Almost a year ago, when the Covid vaccine first became available for teenagers, I talked to parents who had received the vaccine themselves, but were hesitant about their kids getting the shot. Most parents I spoke to cited concerns that were based in misinformation or disinformation, like the idea that the vaccine might damage their daughters鈥 future fertility, a notion not backed up by evidence. (Jessica Grose, 4/6)

More than two years into a global pandemic that has claimed millions of lives, the U.S. government has finally launched what it calls a 鈥渙ne-stop shop鈥 website for resources on Covid-19 services, mitigation and treatment options. While the page 鈥 Covid.gov聽鈥 links to the existing tool for ordering rapid test kits, it mostly just aggregates information. That鈥檚 a far cry from the one-stop shop the Joe Biden administration聽led us to believe was in the offing. But even as an information tool, Covid.gov gets a failing grade. (Scott Duke Kominers, 4/6)

Congressional negotiators have reportedly decided to remove foreign aid from their bipartisan emergency covid funding package. If they do not correct this error, they will be choosing to prolong the pandemic, leading to needless suffering and death and harming the global economy 鈥 and our own. (Gavin Yamey and Boghuma Kabisen Titanji, 4/6)

Twice before, just when it began to look as if we were past the worst of the pandemic, a new strain of the coronavirus sent us back home, looking for our masks as hospitals filled. With cases rising in parts of the country once more, some health officials are warning that another season of danger could be just ahead. That鈥檚 why Senate negotiators鈥 decision this week to strip $5 billion in funding for international vaccinations from a COVID relief bill is so alarming. That money is needed to maintain the nation鈥檚 important work to slow the spread of the virus by helping some of the world鈥檚 poorest countries speed up efforts to vaccinate their residents. (4/5)

For two years, China鈥檚 leadership has bragged to anyone who would listen that its authoritarian system did a better job of fighting the pandemic than the undisciplined and chaotic democracies. Pointing to the towering death toll in the United States, Beijing expressed pride that its policy of clamping down mercilessly whenever an infection was discovered, a policy called 鈥渮ero covid,鈥 was working. For the most part, it did, and China鈥檚 population was spared the sacrifices and misery seen elsewhere. (4/6)

Last fall, a group of researchers conducted a vaccine promotion experiment: They showed an advertisement to millions of U.S. YouTube users highlighting Donald Trump鈥檚 support for Covid-19 vaccines, using news footage in which the former president urged people to get vaccinated. This was a randomized controlled trial, comparing counties that were exposed to the ads to counties that weren鈥檛, and in a new paper, the researchers claim the ads worked: Over the course of the two-and-a-half-week experiment, the 1,014 counties that were part of the campaign saw an estimated 104,036 additional vaccinations overall. (Ross Douthat, 4/6)

This is part of the Morning Briefing, a summary of health policy coverage from major news organizations. Sign up for an email subscription.
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