Sawbones: A Marital Tour of Misguided Medicine - How to Talk About Vaccine Hesitancy
Episode Date: January 26, 2021The COVID-19 vaccine has finally arrived and there are, dishearteningly, too many that are on the fence about getting it. This week on Sawbones, Dr. Sydnee and Justin provide a guide for talking with ...those who are vaccine hesitant and how using a kind, empathetic approach can help them see the light (and the antibodies).Music: "Medicines" by The Taxpayers
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Alright, talk is about books.
One, two, one, two, three, four. Hello everybody and welcome to Salbones,
a mayoral clerk of misguided medicine.
I'm your co-host, Justin McAroy.
I'm a
the vaccine to COVID-19, but a large percentage of them not just not doing it, not getting it. Yes.
I've seen it in teachers in West Virginia, healthcare professionals.
I've heard in the rumor mill.
I have to.
Unfortunately, there are a lot of people who are concerned about the vaccine and are refusing it.
I think the thing that is most worrisome about that at this point is that a lot of people
who have been offered the vaccine have some level of medical knowledge varying degrees,
but not everyone.
But a lot of that first group of those offered the vaccine are healthcare workers.
And so if there are large percentages of healthcare workers, and I shouldn't say, let me clarify
something before we move forward. The majority of healthcare workers are taking the vaccine.
Yeah. The majority of doctors, nurses, scientists, everybody who is in the medical field and has
some knowledge on this, the vast majority do take it.
It's also worth...
I think, well, I think that's important to set the stage.
Right.
Most experts, the vast majority of experts agree this vaccine is safe and effective.
The people who are nervous and not taking it are in the minority of those in the medical field.
There's also something of a confounding factor with the healthcare thing that you have mentioned
to me where a lot of the people who, not a lot, but a good number actually of the first
line responders and our front line against COVID have been infected with COVID. So on some level may not be
may think that they're doing a good thing by not getting it right now or you know,
think it's less essential than other people getting the vaccine.
That is absolutely true. And not only might they be making that personal decision,
there are areas where the health departments, the local health departments might be recommending that if you have had
COVID in the last 90 days, don't get the vaccine yet, not
because it would be dangerous or ineffective or anything, but
because to the best of our current knowledge within 90 days
of having COVID, you should still be immune to getting it
again, and quite possibly longer.
But those 90 days, we feel very good about.
And so if we're dealing with a vaccine
that's in limited supply,
if you've just had it and gotten over it,
maybe you're not top of the list to get the vaccine
when someone else who hasn't had it is more vulnerable.
Does that make sense?
So part of it is just rationing the resources
we have to the most vulnerable population.
The reason though that we're talking about this is that if there is hesitancy among those
who have been offered it so far, the concern is will there be more hesitancy as we move forward.
And is there so much hesitancy with this vaccine that we won't be able to achieve that that
mythical herd immunity that has been much discussed. I shouldn't say mythical.
It is actually a real thing, but it feels mythical. It does well in the way that
it's been used during this pandemic with some people claiming that we could
achieve it without the use of a vaccine. Right. That is mythical. That is a
mythical form of herd immunity.
That's not happening.
No, you have to have a vaccine for herd immunity.
But I recently did a talk for some medical students about how to advocate better for vaccines,
how to use the knowledge you have to help ease the fears of those around you and increase
uptake of not just this
vaccine but all vaccines but right now more than ever it's critical and a lot of
the tools that are used anybody can use to help
quell those fears you don't have to talk about the vaccines like anybody can
pick up a syringe and just jam it in somewhere it's fine no I wouldn't say that
at all I will say that giving a vaccine is not incredibly difficult,
but you have to be trained.
You have to know what you're doing.
And then, of course, you also have to know, like, what's in it,
and what could happen, and all those other things,
they, I guess, taught me in school, you know.
But I thought that talking a little bit
about how you might be able to have these conversations with your own friends and family or colleagues or whoever and then always knowing
that you should direct people to go speak with their own, you know, doctor about it as well.
I'm not saying, hey, listen, don't talk to your doctor, talk to me, your buddy.
Right.
I mean, we know we're sort of contradicting my dad,
which I have made a career of,
but in this specific instance,
we are doing it intentionally.
This is advice, but be all end all of this,
still reverts back to like, talk to your doctor about it.
Right.
Well, there's good science behind that too,
because at the end of the day,
you like having coffee with your friend at Starbucks
are probably not gonna be able to talk them in
to getting a vaccine if they're nervous,
but you might be able to talk them in
to going back to their doctor and discussing it
and saying like, I had questions and fears
and my friend got me to a point
where I wanna come talk to you more about it.
And that conversation, we know evidence tells us
could lead to that person getting the vaccine.
Or maybe you're on Facebook.
You see someone dropping some nonsense
and you wanna quell their fears a little bit.
You know, one thing to keep in mind is that,
and there's a lot of talk about how you can't logic people
into getting vaccines if they're against them.
I've seen that written before.
I think it's important to know who we're talking about.
When we're talking about people who are vaccine hesitant, I'm not talking about the about
3% of people who are absolutely anti-vaccine. And that's what, when you look at the American
Academy of Pediatrics, they do a lot of studies to see how many parents are in the various sort of attitude toward vaccine categories.
Like people like, I would say us who are the very strong advocates
for vaccines, very pro vocal vaccine
and do not need any talking to.
We're there, we're for it, you don't have to, we're fine.
All the way to the other end of the scale,
which are the parents who are absolutely not
getting those vaccines, and there's nothing
you can do about it.
That number is really low.
Like I said, it's estimated to be about 3%.
And I would say that when you come across those people,
you're probably not gonna get anywhere.
I'm not saying so give up.
But this is not where you can expend a ton of energy
if you only have so much time and energy
and make a real difference.
There is a huge percentage of people who are in the middle.
They're like 59% who are pretty much all on board
with vaccines, either very, very strong advocates
or yeah, they're gonna get them.
Maybe they don't go around preaching about them yeah, they're gonna get them. Maybe they don't, you know, they don't go around preaching about them,
but they're gonna get them.
There's like 25% who just need a little reassurance, and they're gonna get them.
And like I said, there's like that 3% who just have made up their minds.
It's part of who they are.
They don't get vaccines.
Their kids don't get vaccines.
It is their personality.
It is their identity.
That's that.
You're not through convinced Adjacula, the blood sucking is bad, but you may be able to
convince the local townspeople that blood sucking is bad.
Yes, exactly.
Don't waste your time with Dracula.
But there is a chunk in the middle here that like just a few words from you or maybe
a little bit of a conversation that's really how close these people are to getting vaccines.
They just have some questions and there's some stuff that nobody's ever explained to
them, and it's that simple.
And that is where you can really make a difference.
It's interesting because if you want to think about the politics of anti-vaxxers or people
who are vaccine hesitant even, there is no one like political realm.
You and I have talked about how it's like this weird. There's a weird place where people like
if it's a curving, curving line of political affiliation, there's this weird place where they overlap.
Yes, I would say they like bend back to meet in the middle on the very, very, very, very far. And
of sort of like, I always say it's the left, but what I'm talking about are people who kind of
have really bought into the natural fallacy,
the idea that if anything is like made in a lab
or that it is intrinsically bad for you
and you shouldn't put it in your body.
So I think that it's a far cry from someone like myself
who would say, eat plenty of vegetables
to I don't put anything in my body that is made by science. It's a far cry from someone like myself who would say, eat plenty of vegetables to,
I don't put anything in my body that is made by science.
Then, on the far right,
you get the, I don't want anybody telling me what to do with my body,
libertarian freedom of choice to not get vaccines or give my kids vaccines kind of place.
It's funny.
We did a whole episode about the history of vaccines and we talked about this a little
bit, but the history of the anti-vaccine movement is as old as the history of vaccines.
Almost as soon as Jenner started inoculating people with cowpox in order to prevent them
from getting smallpox, which
was our first, you know, real widespread effort at vaccines.
Obviously, the smallpox vaccine that would be used to eliminate smallpox was not that.
It was not cowpox.
That's where it started.
As soon as that began, there were anti-vax leagues formed.
Sure.
Yeah.
Within just a couple decades of that.
And their concerns with their
groups and their protests and their parades and the court cases that followed, it's funny. If you
look at why they were hesitant or anti-vax, it's the same reasons that people bring up today.
There is nothing new under the sun. Everybody says the same thing than that they say now,
which is, well, you can't trust the doctors
for whatever reason
you can't trust us now.
It's usually money now, right?
We're all in the pocket of big pharma.
That's the reason you can't trust us.
Back then, to be fair,
you can't trust the doctors
because they just bleed everybody
and that was bad.
Hey, listen, I get it back then.
Old timey people.
Either way, you can't trust the doctors.
You don't.
Good instincts.
Just not in this particular case.
You don't know what's in the shot.
Who knows?
It could be poison.
It could be chemicals.
It could do something to us.
It could be a microchip.
It could track us.
Again, same stuff.
It could be, get back then.
It could be ghosts.
We have no idea.
Back then it was, we don't think that smallpox is something you can catch anyway.
And also if you do, it's not that big a deal.
That was a lot of the early hesitancy with vaccines
was really that big a deal.
I mean these illnesses like,
I had it and I'm fine, right?
Which, you know, it's funny because that problem, I would say, is even worse now because
one of the things that happens with vaccines is that once everybody's vaccinated against
measles, nobody gets measles.
And then everybody forgets what it was like to get measles.
And now you have all these people who go, what's the big deal?
So you get some spots and you
stay home from school for a few days and you feel in whatever who cares. And that's not what measles is.
But nobody knows that because vaccines. Those were some of the reasons, of course, personal freedom.
Oh, yeah. I just don't want to get them because I shouldn't have to. Hey, I love vaccines. I think
they're great, but I shouldn't have to. So I don't want them.
Religious objections have always been part of it, and that varies different members of
different faith.
It's not any one faith.
That's specific sort of sex of different faith.
People who don't believe it work, like they just don't work.
That's probably the most common I hear with the flu shot.
And then they hear it can hurt you. And I would say that that has morphed over time
into very specific considerations,
like the lie, the vaccines cause autism,
which is a, of course, a complete lie,
complete fabrication that is still...
Has it improved in time and time again?
That is a lie, but...
But it's still something that is hard to fight,
especially for that hardcore 3%,
you're not really gonna be able to logic them.
The Dracula's.
Because it has moved beyond a rational thing at that point.
It is not like I've looked at all the evidence
carefully considered and made a decision.
No, it's not.
It's one of the most dangerous things in the world is someone who is defined their identity
by something harmful.
Like you can't, that it gets down to like base levels of our like psyche.
Like it's not, it's not something you can talk someone out of, I think usually.
But the vast majority of people who are somewhere in the middle,
and I would say that this percentage of people who are in the middle
is probably bigger for the COVID vaccines than it is for just vaccines in general.
There are gonna be a lot of people who have easily gone and gotten all their vaccinations
who are still gonna be a little nervous about this one.
And those people, they do want to hear the facts.
They do want to hear the science.
They do want to hear what the logical answers are
to their concerns.
But if you only approach it that way,
you're not going to move the needle as much
as you are with empathy.
And that's one approach that I think is almost easier
if you're talking to a friend or family
member than it might be in a doctor's office where this could just be one order of business
among a whole list of things that you're trying to get through in that day where you can
really take the time to say, tell me really what you're, like, what are you really afraid
of?
What is your fear?
What do you think's gonna happen?
Oh, I understand that.
Oh, I can understand why that would be scary.
Yeah, I get that.
Those kind of conversations take time.
And if you're really in it to help somebody see
that this vaccine is okay, like being vulnerable
and being open and having an emotional exchange
can be very impactful.
And I think that's something we can all do
because you don't have to have medical knowledge
to say to someone, I care about you,
I care about your fears, I have shared these fears,
I want to help you because I care about you
and I want you to see how I see things.
And it's also worth noting that not every doctor
is like my wife, one of the greatest
science communicators in the nation, if not the world. Some, there's a good number of medical
doctors out there who maybe with the best of intentions who just aren't great at this exact aspect
that you're talking about. So there's no guarantee that they're going to get that level of
empathy or
clear focused communication from their
primary care position. Well, I appreciate you saying that.
But I do think it is whether all that other stuff you said was true or not. It is. It is very true that especially I think right now you're dealing with a lot of
Gosh the term that is used sometimes
is compassion fatigue.
Sometimes I like the terms that we come up with
in medicine to say like,
people are just kind of worn out.
But you're experiencing a lot of compassion fatigue
among especially a lot of frontline medical workers
who have been terrified for a lot of this past year of getting it,
of having to pronounce one more patient,
of having to say goodbye to one more person,
of bringing it home to their loved ones.
And so you have this kind of subset of people
who have been traumatized by the past year in this one way.
And I know a lot of people have in many ways,
but in this one specific way,
who have been
just desperate for this vaccine and maybe aren't going to be their best selves in explaining
to someone who's like, well, but I heard about this microchip thing are not going to have
the patience and compassion that you need to have to say, yes, I have seen that too.
Let's talk about why that is not true at all.
And instead, I mean, I've heard this among some of my colleagues, like, this is just ridiculous.
What is wrong with people?
And as soon as you have that attitude, you've lost someone, like you've lost them.
So you really have to squash that.
So there's some specific techniques, and I'm going to name all the places where you can
go and find, this is all free information to find
But before we do that what what what we're going to we're gonna go to the building oh
Okay, see I was all right. I have people line out the door for me to talk to so I feel ill equipped
Oh, but I'm gonna try to do it during the break anyway. No wait. We're the break. That's right. We'll still be talking
But after that this has gotten complex. Let's go to the building bar. Let's go. The medicines, the medicines that I skill at my God for the mouth.
I'm going first.
It's me, Jackie K. K.
Shit.
Man, she's always this bossy.
I'm Laura Kilhart.
We're a bunch of stand-up comics and we've been doing comedy
like 60 years total. We both love the most but we look amazing.
We drop every Monday on Max Fun and it's called the Jackie Laurie Show and you
could listen to it and learn about comedy and learn about anchor management and
all the things. And Jackie is married but childless and I'm unmarried but child full.
So together we take one complete woman.
Is that just what's going on?
Yeah.
And we try to make Kyle laugh just like that and say, oh my God, every episode.
It's a good job.
Jackie and Laurie show, Mondays, only on Maximum Fun.
And Jackie and Laurie show, Mondays, only on Maximum Fun. Okay, said, I've got my nanny on hold.
I'm getting ready to talk to her.
I'm just kidding.
My nanny already got it.
She told us that the vaccine can give you the flu.
But, and then she said the vaccine gave her the flu.
But I think the doctor told her it could give you flu-like symptoms.
Yes. But not the flu, because that think the doctor told her it could give you flu-like symptoms, but not the flu,
because that would be a wild doctor. Yeah, I doubt that. Yes, the vaccine cannot give you the flu.
There is not a vaccine that can give you the flu, because the flu vaccine also cannot give you
the flu. We haven't talked as much about the flu vaccine this year as we normally do.
It's still good. Yeah.
Still love that.
I love that.
Hey, listen, if you can't get your COVID vaccine, the next best thing, just go get a flu vaccine.
You know, you could tell you, I mean, if you're, if you haven't gone one, you should get
it while you're waiting to get the COVID vaccine.
Yeah, go get that vaccine.
You'll be a little safer.
And then when you go to get your COVID vaccine, you won't get to flu it.
They do recommend two weeks in between them, actually, though, is a good one. In between the COVID vaccine and any vaccine.
So if you think you're going to get the call up, maybe
a lot for a second.
Yeah.
It's interesting, speaking of the flu vaccine,
as I was looking into some specific techniques
that you can use to help encourage people to get vaccines.
And some of these are a little more specific to health care
professionals, but in general, this is a good way
to think about it.
The flu vaccine, it occurred to me one of the things that you're supposed to do, I feel like maybe
even now I'm still not perfect at doing it. It's something I can still work at, which is to use
presumptive language. If you'll notice, especially if like you're a caregiver and you have children
who need vaccines, the doctor probably doesn't say,
so what do you think, do you want to get them vaccinated?
They say, you're going to get these vaccines today.
Today your child is going to receive
whatever, the MMR and whatever else.
And that is the way it's phrased
because it's been shown that a lot of times
just presumptive language,
especially coming from somebody
with some degree of expertise, it shows the
assumption, like, well, this is the rational decision that we would all be making.
Yeah.
You're winning less credence to doubt.
Yes.
And I think that that's a good way to talk about the COVID vaccine, which is, when are
you getting it?
What phase do you think you'll be getting it in?
When how long until you be able, are you able to get yours?
Or when your phase has been called up, hey, have you gone, have you signed up yet? When are you going?
As opposed to, do you think you're going to get the COVID vaccine? I'm not saying that everybody's
going to go, well, I don't know, they assumed I should get it, so I will. But it is a good way to tell.
Every one of these, right, is not, there's no silver bullet. No. It's just things you can build off of.
No, and this is something that they teach us in medical school and residency is every
conversation you have with a patient about something in preventive medicine, but like
vaccines in this example, your lane more groundwork, your calming more fears.
So even if you don't like achieve success by the end of that visit with getting the patient vaccinated,
you have built more on where you're going.
It's the same with actually smoking cessation.
Every patient that I have that smokes,
I tell the quit smoking every time I see them.
And they know and they laugh at me
because it's not like they haven't heard that before.
This is the same program that your mom used to get us to watch shits Creek.
Yes.
Exactly.
I said that as a joke, but it is a hundred percent true.
So did you guys, how far are you guys into shits Creek?
Presumptive language.
We actually still have not watched shits Creek.
I think you guys are really, really like it.
You've got to.
Next Sunday.
Next Sunday.
So how shits Creek? How are you liking it? it. You've got to. Next Sunday. Next Sunday. So how should it create?
How are you liking it?
We haven't started it yet.
Wow.
You've got, for no other reason, for Dan Lobby,
for no other reason.
So that's one thing you can do.
And that's something I could always do better
with the flu shot.
And I think I do this because it is one of the ones
that I see a lot of hesitancy with.
And I don't know why.
I don't know why we other the flu shot.
It's just another great vaccine.
You just have to get it all out.
Because it feels like it's coming in hot every year.
It doesn't feel like something your grandpa came up with.
It feels like something somebody just like,
and it's done quick everybody.
I just finished it.
And this year, ooh, this is a good one.
Wait till you get this one.
And it gets a lot of bad press if it's not
as protective one year as it was the previous year or whatever.
I think what they should always be saying is,
do you know, even if it wasn't a hundred percent effective,
which, I mean, no vaccine ever is,
do you know how many people didn't die of the flu
because of this?
Do you know how many people only got a mild case of the flu
because of the flu shot this year?
That's why we should be talking about it. And endorsement is always a big thing.
So if you say like, Hey, did you get your COVID vaccine yet? No. I'm getting mine. I got mine.
You know, I signed up for that COVID vaccine because the truth is the majority of people
do want to get this and with other vaccines, the vast majority of people want to get them.
Depending on where you live and who you talk to, you can feel like you're in the minority,
but you're not.
Most people know the vaccines are safe and effective.
And then we move on to addressing specific concerns and giving info, which I would say
if you're not in the medical field, you're going to get to a point where you say, you should really go talk to your doctor about it. I really, I know that this vaccine is safe
and effective. I've talked to experts. I've listened to these things. I've read these things,
but you should go talk to somebody, you know, because it's hard to put yourself in the position
of being an expert. It's hard when you are the expert, because like I think I said when we were
doing COVID vaccine
question and answer, the infertility question that myth that is out there that is a complete
lie, there's zero evidence that these vaccines cause infertility, there is no evidence of
that. It has been completely debunked. When that question came up, I thought, what? I
don't even know how to rebut this because I didn't. Can't prove a negative.
All right, you can't prove that it doesn't.
And it's hard because there are people
who are just going to say whatever,
well, the vaccine can do.
I mean, really, when you look at like that terrible lie
about autism and vaccines,
we still associate that.
We still have to disprove that. Those two things are not
linked. We shouldn't have to say that. We shouldn't have those two. We shouldn't have
conversations about autism and conversations about vaccines at the same time, but we do
because one guy lied about it. And that's so frustrating.
It's actually, you don't want to learn, reminds me of the episode we did about hiccups, where
this idea that when your hiccups, where this idea that when
your hiccups stop, whatever you did, they're going to stop no matter what and whatever you
did right before that, you assume is a hiccup cure.
And I feel like a lot of people do that with vaccines where it's like, I got the vaccine
and then I won the lottery.
So the vaccine gives you lottery powers. Like that idea of connecting the two
just because they happen to happen near each other.
Yeah, it's very frustrating when I,
I've sat and thought about if that paper had never been published,
nobody would ever ask you about vaccines and autism
because they have nothing to do with each other
and we wouldn't have those conversations.
But for, I mean, how long are we gonna be fighting this lie?
I don't know.
So frustrating.
And then some things, again, that this is an acronym
that we're taught like a way to talk to people about.
If somebody says to you, I don't know,
I heard that the COVID vaccine was rushed.
And maybe it's not safe.
The first thing that's easy to do is to corroborate that.
Yeah, you probably heard that too.
I've heard that.
I heard that it was rushed and that it wasn't safe.
I can understand why that would cause concern.
I mean, that's a very rational thing to think.
What? The vaccine was rushed.
They didn't do all the things they normally do.
That seems unsafe to me. What? The vaccine was rushed. They didn't do all the things they normally do. That seems
unsafe to me. These are rational thoughts. When someone says that, I wouldn't dismiss that. I would say,
yeah, I heard that too, and I can understand why that would give you pause. For me, at that point,
what I can say is about me. That's the acronym here's case, and so the A is about me. And what I would
say is, I'm actually a physician, and I've looked into what exactly allowed us
to move faster with this vaccine.
I've read some articles and you can reference
there's all kinds of like lay media articles about this.
You don't have to speak science to read
a Washington Post article or a New York Times article
that tells you this is what they did
to make the vaccine happen faster.
Maybe if you're a layman, you could say,
I heard this really smart layman on a medical podcast say
to think about it like rush delivery,
where you don't expect it to be bad,
it's just prioritized.
Yes.
I said that.
I know.
Justin MacDonald.
Did you use that when you talked to your doctors?
I did.
Did you?
Yeah, I did.
Did you cry to me?
Yeah, I did.
Did you give them a link to my Twitter? Guess they want more or? No, Justin. I didn't. What's important
to give them? Tell the action. Call the action about your Twitter. No, the next thing is the science.
And if you know the science, describe the science. That's a good opportunity to show off
and tell people the science. In this case, the science is we didn't rush the science. No. We just
gave the effort, all the money, and will it needed.
Science has been right about the other parts of this.
Science said don't go to family gatherings
when the holidays and people did,
and then COVID went way up.
It's like, well, you believe in science of that part.
Like, what other parts of your life do you not trust science in?
You trust it when you get on an airplane.
You trust it when you eat like a twinkie. You trust it when you get on an airplane, you trust it when you eat like a twinkie,
you trust it when you get in your car,
like almost every other aspect of your life,
you trust a science.
Well, and you can think about like,
if you really wanna get in the weeds with different vaccines,
some of the things that people will bring up are things like,
well, I heard that they have aluminum in them,
or I heard that they have formaldehyde in them,
or mercury, or those kinds of things.
And then you can get into the science science,
where you say things like, well, yes,
some, no, not the COVID vaccine,
but some vaccines do have aluminum in them.
It's actually less aluminum than a baby
would get in breast milk.
So I mean, if it's a natural kind of,
and I mean, I guess I'm, I mean, I breastfed,
so I don't know, my natural, whatever.
And there's a real crunchy seed, that's what I said about it.
I'm not exactly, but if that,
but I mean, that might speak to them.
If it's about the, from out of hide,
there's more from out of hide, I think it a pear.
I don't think pears.
Well, a lot of people eat pears.
You got any other fruits or?
Well, I mean, it's just a good example. I don't know. You Well, a lot of people you don't care. You don't have any other fruits or... Well, I mean, it's just a good example.
I don't know.
You just get a good example of...
And the mercury is, I think we've been over this repeatedly.
It was in thymarousol.
It was in some flu vaccines, like that had multidoest files.
It's not in any of the childhood vaccines now.
It's not in the COVID vaccine, and it doesn't matter.
And it was not enough to ever affect you biologically anyway.
But I don't know.
You can get into the science on all these things if you want to,
or you can just tell them at that point, go ask your doctor about it.
Before you just say no to a vaccine that could save your life,
why don't you go talk to somebody who knows the science?
That's a rational thing to do.
And explain and advise based on that.
When you're advocating for vaccines on a large scale,
positive language is always important. One-on-one, I know on the show we address a lot of these things because we get
the questions about it specifically. One-on-one, I'm not going to bring up every concern people
have ever thrown at me about vaccines unless you ask me, right? Because how easy is it to
sell a vaccine to say like, now I know you may have heard and then list like
50 myths about vaccines that are scary.
Now let's wait and see what you've actually heard.
You've heard the tail thing.
Let's talk about that, okay.
I don't know where the tail thing got started.
I, you know, it's good to show that you've done your homework.
A lot of the stuff you can find really,
like again, a lot of this,
all these things I'm telling you are free on the internet
to read about from the CDC,
from the World Health Organization,
the immunization action coalition,
that is a ton of the information that I use comes from them.
And they have, I would highly recommend
going to the immunization action coalition website
because they have stuff for healthcare professionals, yes. have, I would highly recommend going to the immunization action coalition website because
they have stuff for healthcare professionals.
Yes, a lot of resources that really get into the nitty-gritty details of the science and
all that stuff, which is great for me, but they also have information for lay people.
Like, read this if you're concerned.
Read what other parents are worried about with vaccines.
Read what people are asking about the COVID vaccine.
And you can read this, you can share this.
Have you pulled up that website?
Yeah, if you go to immunize.org, there's all kinds, I mean, it's laid out, there's like
a tab that says before the public, right, up there at the top.
And there's basics, there's information, there's information for babies.
I don't know why babies are using the internet,
they shouldn't be, but if there's babies on there,
there's all kinds of information for you,
immunization schedules and all kinds of great stuff.
Wonderful, wonderful website.
Generally speaking, I mean, of course,
whenever you're trying to understand someone's point of view
that's
different from yours, and I'm not getting, I'm not talking about someone whose point of
view negates your right to exist.
I mean, someone who is just saying, I'm a little nervous about vaccines, which is a very
different point of view from which I approach vaccines, but it's not offensive to me as a
person.
Judging them will not get you anywhere, right? You have to hear them out,
listen to what they're thinking and feeling. Someone who I was not, I mean, I was raised in a household
where my parents took me and got every one of my vaccines when they were due. There was never any
concern raised about vaccines. If my parents had been very vocal anti-vaxxers, I probably would
feel very different, or at least I would have when I was younger, and I would have been a lot more nervous
about it.
So you don't know where people are coming from, helping to find the root of what is their
concern and be able to get to that level of like compassion and understanding and humanity
is a lot more impactful than just throwing a bunch of numbers at them and getting frustrated
when they don't listen to you.
Removing the politics from it as much as you can is helpful.
I will say that I think with this COVID vaccine stuff, the politics become almost moot because
I have heard just as many people who probably would self identify as Democrats who were nervous about the vaccine
because it was the, because they associated it with Donald Trump as Republicans who are
nervous about the vaccine because of Fauci.
Oh, sorry.
I mean, I think that this pandemic has, I don't know, it's been used against all politics on all sides. So I have seen a wide range of people, but it has nothing to do with that.
The vaccines are safe and effective and it doesn't matter who you voted for in terms of whether or not the vaccine would work.
That actually has nothing to do with voting. The vaccines just work and are safe. And then of course, please encourage them to go talk
to the doctor they know and trust,
because I can tell you that I had patients
who maybe the first time I talked to them about
like a Gartisill vaccine or a flu vaccine,
they weren't on board with it,
but after multiple conversations, they got their vaccines
because they just, they got to know me and they trusted me.
And we built that rapport and eventually they saw
that I have their best interest at heart
and the science is solid and they were able to do that.
So send them back to the person they trust
to talk to them more about it.
We should be able to do this.
And I feel like it's actually gonna be easier to do this
once they're a little more widely available.
I feel like a lot, I know the demographics for our show
and a lot of them are not,
I assume able to get the vaccine currently.
Yeah.
I think once that becomes a little more widely available,
stuff like posting on social media,
when you get the vaccine,
making a Facebook post or Twitter post like,
hey, I got this today, just normalizing it,
I think would be really helpful.
And if you know how to make a fun TikTok about it,
just like a great TikTok about getting your vaccine.
A couple of things that specifically have come up recently,
there have been some reports of people
who have passed away in close proximity
to having received their COVID vaccine.
What I would point out to people is that the age groups
that we started vaccinating first
are people who are closer to the end of their natural life.
And so you are going to, like if you look at the numbers of people above that age,
who we expect to pass away within the next whatever weeks, months, you know,
that it is not exceeding that.
People will get this vaccine and then die of things that are completely unrelated.
And that doesn't, correlation is not causation.
But every time that happens, it's going to be in the news.
And right now everything is under a microscope.
Everybody is and people are scared, not even because of vaccine.
They're just scared to his life has been really fricking scary for a while.
And everybody's on earth pretty much is traumatized to different degrees.
It's a rough time out there. So I would just encourage people to
remember that that like if they started by vaccinating everybody over 90 and
then someone passed away statistically that is likely and it had nothing to do
with the vaccine because the vaccines don't do that. Sydney's trying to find a
delicate way of saying that's what old people do they die
I would not say that it's a quote from my favorite movie old school. I don't know if you've seen it
But it's this great movie. It's basically my favorite move. It's the best movie that's ever made. No, we
Tweet at me. It's not if listen if you disagree at Travis McElroy tweet at me if you think old. If listen, if you disagree,
at Travis McAroy, tweet at me,
if you think old school's not the best movie I've ever made.
And then the other thing that I have been trying to do
is not call.
It's the same guy that made the Joker,
so you know he's twisted.
Oh gosh, okay.
Not call the symptoms of a robust immune reaction
to the vaccine side effects.
I think maybe we've even run some of this.
And I'm really trying to reformat the way I talk about that
because if what you are feeling
after receiving the vaccine are just the signs and symptoms
of your immune system responding to something. Those are effects. Those aren't
side effects. Those are just hmm. Okay. I mean think about it. Obviously the goal is that you will
be immune to COVID, not that you will have some body aches. But this is just part of it. And
it's part of the immune response. Yes. It is not it is nothing going wrong. Now,
that being said, if you don't have those sort of symptoms, that doesn't mean nothing happened.
Everybody's immune system will react a little differently. Some people will experience more
of that immune reaction. Other people won't feel it as much, but it is not a dysfunction of the vaccine.
dysfunction of the vaccine. It is the function. It is activating your natural immune system, your own body to do the thing, your body supposed to do when an invader comes in. That is what
it does. It is natural and crunchy and organic as it gets. Is all that stuff that's happening
to you after you get the vaccine? I mean, not anaphylaxis, obviously, but...
No, but that's rare.
Yes, that's incredibly rare.
But my point is that that's okay, and it's still worth it if you are immune to COVID,
and if eventually we achieve herd immunity, and then at that point, we can all hug each
other again, and we can all get
together for holidays.
And tell me if I'm wrong, but I feel like this is not something that we, it's something
you talked about in the hesitancy part, but not necessarily in the conversation part.
Like, I think there's an angle you can make the sort of appeal to a higher calling or
appeal to, you know, a person's sort of like, I don't wanna say civic duty, but that's kind of what I mean.
Like, even if they're on the fence for themselves,
like, or hesitant about it, like,
it's something we're all doing to make it better for everybody.
There's people who will never be able to get this vaccine,
right? I mean, that's the truth.
And there's people who can't get it right now.
Like, you or anybody who gets it
now is protecting the people that are surrounding them. Like, it's not just your body that is in question
here. It is like all of us together that you're making safer. Yes. Yeah. I mean, I definitely think
that's one aspect to it because I very much felt even though we were in a study with my parents
and my parents didn't get, they got placebo, they didn't get the real thing.
And we got the real thing.
And that felt a little bit guilty about that.
But it's said the science folks, it's a lot of the draw double blind for a reason.
But I try to remember that we are protecting our kids and them by being immunized ourselves. And I think, you know, that sort of argument,
maybe this is one of the reasons why,
even if you're not like in the medical community
and so fluent in the science of this,
encouraging people to just on a person to person human level
that you know can be really effective,
because maybe you know that it's the kind of person
that that argument would ring true to.
You know, I mean, that,
because that is, and not everybody's gonna respond to that,
especially right now, there seem to be,
I mean, times have been very scary,
and a lot of people have kind of focused on
kind of their personal safety and security
and freedom throughout this, it seems, not everybody,
but a lot of people.
And maybe not a lot of our listeners
would connect with that, but a lot of people have.
And so it's funny, I told the med students,
I didn't know how effective that argument would be,
that this is a thing you are doing
for the good of all, that is a thing you're doing for others.
But you know if the person you're talking to,
because you know that, you know if that,
you know if they're a dirt bag or not.
I'm trying to think of a nice way to say it,
but not everybody.
I mean, some people are dirt bags.
Well, for some people it really is,
this is how you get to eventually stop wearing a mask,
not now, but eventually stop wearing a mask
and go back to life.
This is how you get there. Get the there. You can even say to them like,
this is how Justin gets to the mall.
You know what I mean?
Like, there's malls all over this great nation
that are in trouble because of this,
and we've got to do everything we can to save the malls.
I do want to emphasize that you're not immune
until two weeks after your second dose.
Okay.
I just want to emphasize that again.
I feel like that has not been said enough.
If you're not immune the moment you get the vaccine, you should still be wearing masks dose. Okay. I just want to emphasize that again. I feel like that has not been said enough.
You're not immune the moment you get the vaccine. You should still be wearing masks and distancing
and hand washing and all that stuff you've been doing. Please just keep washing your hands.
I mean, like, don't ever stop with that one, you know. I'm into it. I never really was into
it before this, but I might keep up with it for a while. But everybody can be an advocate for this. Like really, everybody can do part of this work
to protect those around us who can't get the vaccine yet
or who will never be able to get the vaccine.
This is something we can all take part in.
That address again, just to hit it back there,
immunize.org,
that is an organization, the
immunization action coalition that we have been using, working
with for years at this point, a lot of the solbones,
merchandise, profits for them go to support, like we have a
Pro Max bumper sticker and pin and t-shirt and proceeds
from that, I'll go to immunization action coalition. They are a group that we know personally,
the people that work there and they are good eggs,
as they say.
So well worth checking out.
Also, macrorymerch.com, the website I just mentioned,
if you wanna do a little bit of proselytizing for vaccines,
there's some merchandise there.
Advocacy. What? Okay. Well both
You there's merchandise there that you can get which seems so severe. So if we don't make any of it
It goes to the musician actually coalition so I can you know say what a straight face
Support their good work. Yeah, also I wanted to say we're we're releasing this episode on January 26th and
We have a new book.
My brother's and I with contributions from Sydney
and Travis and Griffin's wives, Theresa and Rachel,
the hosts of Shamanners and wonderful.
It's about podcasting.
It's like I have to book on podcasting.
It's called Everybody Has a Podcast Except You.
It came out today, so go buy it.
Go get it.
Please go get it at a bookstore.
It would really, really mean a lot to us.
And we would appreciate it.
And we really think it's a helpful guide.
And it's also fun to read, even if you're not planning
to get into podcasting.
It's, I think it's fun and interesting,
especially Sydney's parts there They're the best.
Thank you, the taxpayers, for these are some medicines
as the Intro and Outro program.
And thanks to you for listening.
Get out there, spread the good word.
Stay safe.
Be, you know, do all the stuff you're supposed to do,
wear your mask, stay distance, et cetera.
And we'll be with you in next time.
Until then, my name is Justin McRoy.
I'm Sydney McRoy.
And as always, don't drill a hole in your head! Alright!