Experts and U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention hope so.
“I definitely think the public health burden carries some weight,” infectious disease epidemiologist Jessica Malaty Rivera told CNN. “The help of the flu vaccine has become iconic. Something similar to the Covid-19, such as a button or sticker, would be something I would personally take pride in and encourage others to do. -ho “.
“There’s definitely psychology,” Malaty Rivera said. “The ‘I have the flu vaccine’ sticker for healthcare providers certainly gives patients and people who come to hospitals some confidence to enter safe and secure places.”
“Today I feel hopeful, relieved. I hope this marks the beginning of the end of a very painful moment,” he said at a news conference.
The vaccine stands for “hope, healing, restoring public health and safety,” and is a “step in the right direction,” said Lindsay, a nurse in the intensive care unit at Long Island Jewish Medical Center. .
Wearing a sticker can even give people the feeling they expect us to go in the right direction, Malaty Rivera said.
“If people just walk around with their masks on, it’s normal for 2020,” he said. “If you start to see a growing trend of people wearing stickers, you might start to get excited that things are happening, people are protecting themselves and we may be getting closer and closer to the end.”
“Manufacturing, distribution and administration still pose challenges, but the biggest threat that remains is people’s willingness to get vaccinated,” he said.
Some people wonder if the vaccine is safe because it came out much faster than the typical vaccine, which takes years to create.
“I don’t think the stickers will do much to change people’s minds about their preconceived notions about the vaccine,” Malaty Rivera said. “I think we need to focus on vaccine vaccination through very specific communications.”
“The vaccination of the vaccine predates the Covid-19 vaccine and we have a long history here in this country, and how to curb this: dispel myths, discredit misinformation and provide people with information. and accurate data to help them have confidence in the process, ”she said.
Regardless of how people feel about the vaccine, its development, and how scientists worked around the world to research and help it come together, it makes Malaty Rivera proud.
“I’ve never been more proud of science than I am now and I think we should all be,” Malaty Rivera said.
The goal of public health is for people to do things to take care of each other, he said. Getting a vaccine is the same idea: you do something for the “good of others,” he said.
“Just as we say we wear masks for others, we also vaccinate for others,” he said. “Helping each other will get us to the goal.”