highflyer
Well-known member
- Jan 21, 2016
- 2,553
Getting vaccinated is to protect yourself. The difference it makes to others is marginal in comparison. I'm standing next to an unvaccinated person, I'm double jabbed. Who is at increased risk in that situation?
It's just a way for people to raise their own self esteem by saying "look at me, I help others".
A separate point, you mention anti vax sentiment, yes anyone spreading it or protesting outside clinics is a stain on society.
(continued discussion from Good news thread)
That's such an individualistic perspective.And also wrong.
You are double jabbed and standing next to someone that is vulnerable, but (let's imagine) couldn't get jabbed for medical reasons.
Yes, you are protected from them and that's good for you. But you are also less of a risk to them having been jabbed. So obviously it helps them as well.
The overall impact of many individuals getting jabbed is to significantly reduce the overall impact of the pandemic across the whole of society. It's not a coincidence that the UK is now the most open society in Europe and has one of the highest vaccination rates.
Of course it's partly about protecting yourself. But vaccination programmes are public health programmes. They are about more than the individual. If it was only about the individual, public health experts woudn't be pressing for younger people get get jabbed.
The main reason we vaccinate younger people who are at low risk, is to protect others. If was only about self esteem why would public health officials be so keen to get younger people vaccinated?