Beth
Philosopher
- Joined
- Dec 6, 2004
- Messages
- 5,598
They are not ineffective short term. But there are long-term costs to such strategies. One long-term cost is a loss of credibility. Such tactics are used by fanatics and, while fanatics often have a core point that's true, that point tends to get lost in the overall din of all the different fanatics in our society yelling about their particular cause. Fanatics don't have as much credibility as messengers as people who are not. Since my perception is that much of the 'cause' of lowered vaccine uptake is perceived credibility of the people advising them, it doesn't strike me as a particularly effective approach.Specific recommendations:
1) People interested in communicating these issues should stay in touch with reality, and not claim frustration, anger, and loudness are ineffective.
Again, short term approach versus long-term approach. I think it would be better to acknowledge the validity of some complaints out the way policies are made and implemented and fix those core problems (like the fact that the CDC committee tends to be biased towards, rather than away from, vaccines) and fix that problem.2) People interested in communicating these issues should understand that emotion trumps data. We should not shy from using emotional appeals to further the message. (Yes, it is virtuous to teach people to think critically. That is a lot easier to do once you've convinced them it is important to think.)
I don't have a problem with discussing the very real and dangerous aspects of diseases like polio, mumps and measles. But, on the other hand, I don't think it's reasonable to apply the same sort of pressure to people who decline the seasonal flu shot or chicken pox.3) People communicating on these issues should be showing graphic and disturbing pictures of the worst outcome of diseases like polio, mumps, measles, etc. Part of the problem is that vaccination became part of our culture when parents where justifiably frightened by these kinds of scenes surrounding them. Vaccination has successfully reduced such scenes to extreme rarity, which has encouraged the anti-vacc movement.
I also think that vaccines for sexually transmitted diseases should be left up to the parents. The society risk of general contagion of such diseases is not sufficient to justify the same sorts of mandates. I'm bothered by the tendancy to lump all people who critisize vaccine policy as 'anti-vax'.
4) Anti-vaccination nuts should be frontally attacked as people who seek to harm children. Other parents should be told that such peoples' teachings pose a physical danger to their children.
This is just unwarranted. A free society tolerates the free flow of dissenting ideas on almost all subjects. There are reasonable restrictions on free speech with ideas that do pose an actual physical danger to anyone, not just children. But people who promote anti-vaccine ideas are not in the same class as terrorist or sexual predators. They don't need to be treated as such and advocating doing so makes me think that you are a fanatic. Guess what that does to my estimate of your credibility?
5) The medical community should lobby to pass laws to bar unvaccinated children from public places like schools, day-care centers, airliners, and similar opportunities to become a vector.
How about we just make them wear a yellow star so others can identify them and avoid them, or maybe a pink triangle depending on what vaccines they haven't had yet?
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