Saturday, 23 November 2024

Healthcare workers reject COVID, flu shots amid 'tremendous erosion of trust' in health agencies


covid flu
The number of healthcare workers receiving COVID-19 and flu vaccines declined during the 2023-24 cold and flu season, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC).

Only 15.3% of acute hospital workers and 10.5% of nursing home personnel received a COVID-19 vaccine during the 2023-24 season — down from 17.8% and 22.8% respectively, the CDC said in its Oct. 31 Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Report.

Based on data from the CDC's National Healthcare Safety Network, flu vaccine rates for the same healthcare worker groups were higher than COVID-19 vaccine rates — 80.7% for acute care hospital personnel and 45.4% for nursing home personnel.

However, the rates remained "persistently below the levels during the prepandemic period." For example, the flu vaccine rate for hospital workers in 2019-20 was 91%.

The CDC figures also showed that nearly 1 in 100 healthcare workers reported "a medical contraindication" to receiving either the COVID-19 (0.71%) or flu (0.89%) vaccine. The CDC figures did not provide information on the rate of vaccine side effects reported by healthcare workers.

The CDC said more research is needed "to identify effective strategies to improve vaccination at a time when health care personnel are susceptible to low vaccine confidence."

Such studies would also seek to improve "confidence about the safety and effectiveness of vaccines among health care personnel through, for example, providing additional education about the safety and effectiveness of vaccination to health care personnel."

Dr. Jane Orient, executive director of the Association of American Physicians and Surgeons (AAPS), told The Defender the data didn't surprise her.

"It is no longer possible to deny safety signals and lack of effectiveness," Orient said. "A large percentage [of healthcare workers] have themselves had several episodes of COVID, had adverse reactions themselves, or know someone who did."

Pulmonologist Dr. Pierre Kory, founder of the Leading Edge Clinic and president emeritus and co-founder of the Front Line COVID-19 Critical Care Alliance, said the CDC figures represent "a welcome trend" that he hopes will continue. He said:

"Regardless of the reasons for the decline, the data shows healthcare workers' tremendous erosion of trust in our regulatory agencies. Allowing this distrust to continue will further undermine the public's confidence in our healthcare agencies."

Kory noted the symbolism of healthcare workers turning their backs on the COVID-19 vaccine in particular. "If the vaccine is not for us, it is certainly not for them," Kory said.

Danielle Baker, a certified hospice and palliative care registered nurse injured by the Pfizer-BioNTech COVID-19 vaccine, agreed.

"With the current state of public healthcare, I am not surprised by the figures. In healthcare, there were positions where you agreed to some annual vaccinations upon hire, but the events of 2021 forever shook the core of even that practice," Baker said.

Dr. Mary Talley Bowden, an ear, nose and throat specialist who was suspended by Houston Methodist Hospital for treating COVID-19 patients with ivermectin, said, "85% of healthcare workers are opting not to get the COVID shots because they know these shots are all risk and no benefit."

'Why should we trust you?'

Dr. Marty Makary, a public health researcher at Johns Hopkins University and author of "Blind Spots: When Medicine Gets it Wrong, and What It Means for Our Health," said the disparity between the CDC's COVID-19 vaccination recommendations and the actual coverage rate "is telling."

"It's also embarrassing for the CDC director [Dr. Rochelle Walensky], who has made pushing the new COVID booster a leading priority of her tenure," Makary said.

Orient said that doctors and other healthcare personnel who stood up to vaccine mandates and pressure from their employers to get vaccinated "are vindicated" by the CDC's data "and should be applauded."

"The message to the public should be obvious," Orient said. "Why should we trust you?"

Others, though, do not feel vindicated. Sarah Choujounian, co-founder of the Canadian Frontline Nurses, told The Defender that while "many have been awakened to the fact that vaccines are not safe," she and other nurses who opposed vaccine mandates are still facing professional repercussions.

"This news does not bring vindication as I, amongst many others, am still in court being dragged through a disciplinary hearing for standing up to the corruption and standing up for what is best for our communities," Choujounian said.

Dr. Danice Hertz, a retired gastroenterologist who was "horribly injured" after receiving the Pfizer-BioNTech COVID-19 vaccine, said lawmakers and policymakers need to open their eyes to the growing distrust of the COVID-19 vaccines by the medical community.

Hertz said:
"I personally have been injured by the Pfizer COVID vaccine. I believed what I was told by our agencies, that these vaccines are safe and effective. I learned the hard way that they were not telling the truth."
Bowden said that doctors haven't done enough to speak out. She said:
"Why are physicians not speaking out? Our profession has veered off course, and physicians today are more concerned with protecting their jobs over upholding the Hippocratic oath.

"We have an abundant amount of data showing adverse events from these shots, but we don't have anyone in authority who will look at the data. Physicians need to get vocal and stand up to the government doctors who have taken over our healthcare system."
Orient said more doctors are starting to speak out, but "intense indoctrination, financial incentives and fear of ostracism and licensure are huge barriers to overcome."

Kory said if the medical establishment and the government are to have any hope of reestablishing trust, they need to "recognize the truth about the COVID-19 vaccines. Until that happens, no message from them will be taken seriously, and the little public trust left in these institutions will eventually be gone."

Baker said he believes the public has reached a point where they no longer need to look to healthcare professionals for an answer when it comes to COVID-19 vaccination. He said:
"People pay attention. The mass media messages, governmental overstep, blanket mandates, lack of agency support for those adversely affected and unwillingness to see and hear responses to these things have caused an implosion.

"Enough of the general public has reached a consensus when it comes to this particular shot from the collective set of experiences over the past years."
CDC data leave unanswered questions

The CDC data — self-reported by hospitals and nursing home facilities — also demonstrated regional differences in vaccine uptake. COVID-19 vaccine update was highest in the Pacific region and lowest in the Mountain and Southern states.

For the flu vaccine, uptake was highest in the Mountain region and lowest in the Pacific region for acute care hospital employees, while for nursing home personnel, uptake was highest in the Northeast and lowest in the South.

Figures for the current respiratory illness season are not yet available.

Pediatrician Dr. Michelle Perro told The Defender the data still leaves some unanswered questions.

"One criticism is that it did not delineate which types of healthcare employees were opting out of the flu and COVID vaccines. It appears that this data may not have been readily available," Perro said.
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